............................................................................................
The
Ides of March
Julius
Caesar's Fateful Day
by N.S. Gill
The Ides of March ("Eidus Martiae" in
Latin) is a day on the traditional Roman calendar that corresponds to the date
of March 15th on our current calendar.
Today the date is commonly associated with bad
luck, a reputation that it earned at the end of the reign of the Roman
emperor Julius Caesar (100–43 BCE).
A Warning
In 44 BCE, Julius Caesar's rule in Rome was in trouble.
Caesar was a demagogue, a ruler who set his
own rules, frequently bypassing the Senate to do what he liked, and finding
supporters in the Roman proletariat and his soldiers.
The Senate made Caesar dictator for life in
February of that year, but in truth, he had been the military dictator
governing Rome from the field since 49.
When he returned to Rome, he kept his stringent
rules.
According to the Roman historian Suetonius (690–130 CE),
the haruspex (seeress) Spurinna warned Caesar in mid-February 44, telling him
that the next 30 days were to be fraught with peril, but the danger would end
on the Ides of March.
When they met on the Ides of March Caesar said "you
are aware, surely, that the Ides of March have passed" and
Spurinna responded, "surely you realize that they have not yet
passed?"
CAESAR to SOOTHSAYER: The Ides of March are come.
SOOTHSAYER (softly): Ay,
Caesar, but not gone. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
What
Are Ides, Anyway?
The Roman calendar did not number days of an
individual month sequentially from first to last as is done today.
Rather than sequential numbering, the Romans
counted backward from three specific points in the lunar month, depending on
the length of the month.
Those points were the Nones (which fell on the
fifth in months with 30 days and the seventh day in 31-day months), the Ides
(the thirteenth or the fifteenth), and the Kalends (the first of the following
month).
The Ides typically occurred near a month’s
midpoint; specifically on the fifteenth in March.
The length of the month was determined by the
number of days in the moon's cycle: March's Ides date was determined by the
full moon.
Why Caesar Had to Die
There were said to be several plots to kill Caesar and for
a multitude of reasons.
According to Suetonius, the Sybelline Oracle had
declared that Parthia could only be conquered by a Roman king, and the Roman
consul Marcus Aurelius Cotta was planning to call for Caesar to be named king
in mid-March.
The senators feared Caesar's power, and that he might
overthrow the Senate in favor of general tyranny.
Brutus and Cassius, the main conspirators
in the plot to kill Caesar, were magistrates of the Senate, and as they would
not be allowed to either oppose the crowning of Caesar nor remain silent, they
had to kill him.
A Historical Moment
Before Caesar went to the theater of Pompey to attend the
Senate meeting, he had been given advice not to go, but he did not listen.
Doctors had advised him not to go for medical
reasons, and his wife, Calpurnia, also did not want him to go based off of
troubling dreams that she had.
On the Ides of March, 44 BCE, Caesar was murdered, stabbed
to death by the conspirators near the Theatre of Pompey where the Senate was
meeting.
Caesar’s assassination transformed Roman history, as it was
a central event in marking the transition from the Roman Republic to the Roman
Empire.
His assassination resulted directly in the
Liberator’s Civil War, which was waged to avenge his death.
With Caesar gone, the Roman Republic did not last long and
was eventually replaced by the Roman Empire, which lasted approximately 500
years.
The initial two centuries of the Roman Empire’s
existence were known to be a time of supreme and unprecedented stability and
prosperity. The time period came to be known as “Roman Peace.”
Anna Perenna Festival
Before it became notorious as the day of Caesar's death,
the Ides of March was a day of religious observations on the Roman calendar,
and it is possible that the conspirators chose the date because of that.
In ancient Rome, a festival for Anna Perenna (Annae festum
geniale Pennae) was held on the Ides of March.
Perenna was a Roman deity of the circle of the
year. Her festival originally concluded the ceremonies of the new year, as
March was the first month of the year on the original Roman calendar.
Thus, Perenna’s festival was celebrated
enthusiastically by the common people with picnics, eating, drinking, games,
and general revelry.
The Anna Perenna festival was, like many Roman carnivals, a
time when celebrants could subvert traditional power relations between social
classes and gender roles when people were allowed to speak freely about
sex and politics.
Most importantly the conspirators could count on
the absence of at least a part of the proletariat from the center of the city,
while others would be watching the gladiator's games.
N.S. Gill
· Latin teacher
· Master of Arts in linguistics
· Freelance writer covering ancient history and the
classics
Experience
N.S. Gill is a former writer for ThoughtCo, who wrote about ancient
history in numerous articles over a 17-year period through 2014. Gill has
taught Latin and written articles on ancient history and classics and has
been interviewed by National Public Radio and National Geographic about
Valentine's Day and the Roman calendar. She has been a teacher's assistant for
classes in the age of Pericles, technical terms, classical culture, and
mythology.
Education
N.S. Gill has a B.A. in Latin and an M.A. in linguistics from the
University of Minnesota. She has done graduate coursework on classics at the
University of Minnesota and written two master's level papers, one on the
misdating of an Oxyrhynchus papyrus and another on Ovid.
ThoughtCo and Dotdash
ThoughtCo is a premier reference site
focusing on expert-created education content. We are one of the top-10 information
sites in the world as rated by comScore, a leading Internet measurement
company. Every month, more than 13 million readers seek answers to their
questions on ThoughtCo.
For more than 20 years, Dotdash brands
have been helping people find answers, solve problems, and get inspired. We are
one of the top-20 largest content publishers on the Internet according to
comScore, and reach more than 30% of the U.S. population monthly. Our brands collectively
have won more than 20 industry awards in the last year alone, and recently
Dotdash was named Publisher of the Year by Digiday, a leading industry
publication.https://www.thoughtco.com/ides-of-march-julius-caesars-fate-117542
No comments:
Post a Comment