How do you view the assassination of Gaius Julius Caesar by Marcus Junius Brutus? Was it justified response to tyranny, or a profound betrayal of trust and love? Something in between?
We of course have the benefit of hindsight, and know that the assassination didn't accomplish what the conspirators had hoped. It led to Augustus consolidating power and becoming emperor. But Brutus didn't know that at the time, and believed he was doing the right thing to preserve the Republic against tyranny, or whatever his inner motives were.
We also know that Caesar spared Brutus, raised him up at every opportunity, intended for Brutus to succeed him, and it's very plausible that Brutus was his illegitimate son, which Caesar believed plausible too.
A summary of the timeline:
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~~~~~85 BCE - Marcus Junius Brutus is born. Although there is uncertainty about his paternity, it is often claimed that Julius Caesar might have been his real father, as Caesar had a relationship with Brutus' mother, Servilia.
78 BCE - Caesar begins his political career following the death of the dictator Sulla.
58-50 BCE - Caesar conducts the Gallic Wars, expanding his military power and political influence, while Brutus is being educated and starting his own political career.
49 BCE - Caesar crosses the Rubicon, igniting the Great Roman Civil War between him and Pompey the Great. Initially, Brutus aligns with Pompey, who is also his mother's brother-in-law.
48 BCE - After the Battle of Pharsalus, Caesar defeats Pompey. Despite Brutus fighting on Pompey’s side, Caesar pardons him, and this act is seen as the beginning of their closer personal relationship. Caesar is said to have trusted Brutus and valued his abilities.
46 BCE - Caesar appoints Brutus as the governor of Cisalpine Gaul. This is a sign of trust and a politically prestigious position.
45 BCE - Caesar defeats the remaining opposition in the Battle of Munda, and upon his return to Rome, he is appointed dictator perpetuo (dictator in perpetuity).
44 BCE, February - Caesar is named dictator for life, causing significant concern among the senators, who fear his power is becoming too great and that he may establish a monarchy.
44 BCE, March 15 (The Ides of March) - Julius Caesar is assassinated by a group of senators, including Brutus. The act is done under the banner of 'liberating' the Republic from a potential monarch and restoring traditional Roman values and institutions.
44 BCE, March-April - The immediate aftermath of the assassination is chaotic. Brutus and his fellow conspirators initially manage to stay in the city, thinking they will be hailed as liberators. However, the public reaction is mixed, and the political situation is unstable.
44 BCE, April - Marc Antony, Caesar's ally, delivers a stirring eulogy at Caesar's funeral, turning public opinion against the assassins. Brutus and the other conspirators are forced to flee Rome due to rising tensions and threats of violence against them.
44-43 BCE - Brutus and Cassius leave Italy and take control of the eastern provinces. During this time, they gather their forces for the inevitable conflict against Caesar's supporters, mainly Marc Antony and Octavian (the future Emperor Augustus), who have formed the Second Triumvirate along with Lepidus.
42 BCE, October - The forces of the Second Triumvirate and the armies of Brutus and Cassius meet in two engagements known collectively as the Battle of Philippi in Macedonia. The first battle is indecisive, but in the second battle, the Triumvirs' forces decisively defeat the Republican armies.
42 BCE, October 23 - Following the loss at the second battle of Philippi, Brutus commits suicide. His death is seen as the symbolic end of the Republic, as it extinguished the hopes of those wishing to restore the old ways of Roman governance without a dictator or emperor.
After Brutus' death, the Republic continued in form for several decades, but the real power increasingly lay with the emperors, starting with Octavian, who became Augustus, the first Roman Emperor, marking the end of the Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire.
No direct writing by Brutus survives, but Plutarch recorded a history of Brutus in his The Parallel Lives. I'll provide some relevant excerpts below.
Plutarch • Life of Brutus
An English translation. All of Plutarch's Lives are onsite; in turn part of a very large site on classical Antiquity.
penelope.uchicago.edu
5. It is said, moreover, that Caesar also was concerned for his safety, and ordered his officers not to kill Brutus in the battle, but to spare him, and take him prisoner if he gave himself up voluntarily, and if he persisted in fighting against capture, to let him alone and do him no violence; and that Caesar did this out of regard for Servilia, the mother of Brutus. 2 For while he was still a young man, as it seems, Caesar had been intimate with Servilia, who was madly in love with him, and he had some grounds for believing that Brutus, who was born at about the time when her passion was in full blaze, was his own son. 3 It is said also that when the great conspiracy of Catiline, which came near overthrowing the city, had come to the ears of the senate, Cato and Caesar, who were of different opinions about the matter, were standing side by side, and just then a little note was handed to Caesar from outside, which he read quietly. But Cato cried out that Caesar was outrageously receiving letters of instruction from the enemy. 4 At this, a great tumult arose, and Caesar p137 gave the missive, just as it was, to Cato. Cato found, when he read it, that it was a wanton bit of writing from his sister Servilia, and throwing it to Caesar with the words "Take it, thou sot," turned again to the business under discussion.6 So notorious was Servilia's passion for Caesar.
6. After the defeat at Pharsalus, when Pompey had made his escape to the sea and his camp was besieged, Brutus went out unnoticed by a gate leading to a place that was marshy and full of water and reeds, and made his way safely by night to Larissa. 2 From thence he wrote to Caesar, who was delighted at his safe escape, and bade him come to him, and not only pardoned him, but actually made him a highly honoured companion. 3 Now, since no one could tell whither Pompey was fleeing, and all were in great perplexity, Caesar took a long walk with Brutus alone, and sounded him on the subject. 4 Certain considerations advanced by Brutus made his opinion concerning Pompey's flight seem the best, and Caesar therefore renounced all other courses and hastened towards Egypt. 5 But as for Pompey, he put in at Egypt, as Brutus conjectured, and there met his doom; as for Caesar, however, Brutus tried to soften him towards Cassius also. 6 He also served as advocate for the king of Africa,7 and though he lost the case, owing to the magnitude of the accusations against his client, still, by supplications and entreaties in his behalf he saved much of his kingdom for him. 7 And it is said that Caesar, when he p139 first heard Brutus speak in public, said to his friends: "I know not what this young man wants, but all that he wants he wants very much."8 8 For the weight of his character, and the fact that no one found it easy to make him listen to appeals for favour, but that he accomplished his ends by reasoning and the adoption of noble principles, made his efforts, whithersoever directed, powerful and efficacious. 9 No flattery could induce him to grant an unjust petition, and that inability to withstand shameless importunity, which some call timidity,a he regarded as most disgraceful in a great man, and he was wont to say that those who were unable to refuse anything, in his opinion, must have been corrupted in their youth.
8 1 However, even Caesar was not wholly without suspicion, nor free from the effects of accusations against Brutus, but, while he feared his high spirit, his great repute, and his friends, he had faith in his character. 2 Once, when he was told that Antony and Dolabella were plotting revolution, he said it p143 was not the fat and long-haired fellows that troubled him, but those pale and lean ones;10 meaning Brutus and Cassius. 3 And again, when certain ones were accusing Brutus to him, and urging him to be on his guard against him, he laid his hand upon his breast and said: "What? Think ye not that Brutus can wait for this poor flesh?" implying that no one besides Brutus was fit to succeed him in such great power. 4 And verily it appears that Brutus might have been first in the city with none to dispute him, could he have endured for a little while to be second to Caesar, suffering his power to wane and the fame of his successes to wither. 5 But Cassius, a man of violent temper, and rather a hater of Caesar on his own private account than a hater of tyranny on public grounds, fired him up and urged him on. 6 Brutus, it is said, objected to the rule, but Cassius hated the ruler, and among other charges which he brought against him was that of taking away some lions which Cassius had provided when he was about to be aedile; 7 the beasts had been left at Megara, and when the city was taken by Calenus,11 Caesar appropriated them. And the beasts are said to have brought great calamity upon the Megarians. For these, just as their city was captured, drew back the bolts and loosened the fetters that confined the animals, in order that they might obstruct the oncoming foe, but they rushed among the unarmed citizens themselves and preyed upon them as they ran hither and thither, so that even to the enemy the sight was a pitiful one.
10 1 Moreover, when Cassius sought to induce his p147 friends to conspire against Caesar, they all agreed to do so if Brutus took the lead, arguing that the undertaking demanded, not violence nor daring, but the reputation of a man like him, who should consecrate the victim, as it were, and ensure by the mere fact of his participation the justice of the sacrifice; 2 otherwise they would be more timid in doing the deed and more suspected after they had done it, since men would say that Brutus would not have declined the task if the purpose of it had been honourable. 3 After reflecting on this, Cassius made Brutus his first visit since the quarrel above mentioned,13 and when they were again on a friendly footing, asked him whether he had made up his mind to attend the meeting of the senate on the Calends of March; for it had come to his ears, he said, that Caesar's friends would then move to have him made king. 4 When Brutus answered that he should not attend, "What, then," said Cassius, "if we should be summoned?" "It would at once be my duty," said Brutus, "not to hold my peace, but to defend my country and die in behalf of liberty." 5 Then Cassius, elated, said: "But what Roman will consent to have thee die in such defence? 6 Dost thou not know thyself, Brutus? Or dost thou think that thy tribunal was covered with inscriptions by weavers and hucksters, and not by the foremost and most influential citizens? From their other praetors they demand gifts and spectacles and gladiatorial combats; but from thee, as a debt thou owest to thy lineage, the abolition of the tyranny; and they are ready and willing to suffer anything in thy behalf, if thou showest thyself to be what they expect p149 and demand." 7 After this, he embraced Brutus and kissed him, and thus reconciled they betook themselves to their friends.
So, according to Plutarch, the conspirators felt they needed Brutus as the figurehead of the assassination in order to legitimize it. After all, if the man Caesar trusted and loved the most had branded him a tyrant and killed him for the sake of justice, then it must have been earned.
Fast forwarding to the day of the assassination:
17 1 When the senate had preceded Caesar into the session-room, the rest of the conspirators stationed themselves about Caesar's chair, as if they intended to have some conference with him, 2 and Cassius is said to have turned his face towards the statue of Pompey and to have invoked it, as if it had understanding; p163 but Trebonius drew Antony into conversation at the door and kept him outside.21 3 As Caesar entered, the senate rose in his honour, but as soon as he was seated the conspirators surrounded him in a body, putting forward Tulliusº Cimber of their number with a plea in behalf of his brother, who was in exile. The others all joined in his plea, and clasping Caesar's hands, kissed his breast and his head. 4 At first, Caesar merely rejected their pleas, and then, when they would not desist, tried to free himself from them by force. At this, Tullius tore Caesar's robe from his shoulders with both hands, and Casca, who stood behind him, drew his dagger and gave him the first stab, not a deep one, near the shoulder. 5 Caesar caught the handle of the dagger and cried out loudly in Latin: "Impious Casca, what doest thou?" Then Casca, addressing his brother in Greek, bade him come to his aid. 6 And now Caesar had received many blows and was looking about and seeking to force his way through his assailants, when he saw Brutus setting upon him with drawn dagger. At this, he dropped the hand of Casca which he had seized, covered his head with his robe, and resigned himself to the dagger-strokes. 7 The conspirators, crowding eagerly about the body, and plying their many daggers, wounded one another, so that Brutus also got a wound in the hand as he sought to take part in the murder, and all were covered with blood.
According to the account, Caesar stopped defending himself when he saw Brutus among the conspirators with dagger in hand, resigned to his fate. There was a frenzy of stabbing and the conspirators wounded each other in the mess of it, eager to get their part of the murder in.
18 1 Caesar thus slain, Brutus went out into the middle of the session-room and tried to speak, and p165 would have detained the senators there with encouraging words; but they fled in terror and confusion, and there was a tumultuous crowding at the door, although no one pressed upon them in pursuit. 2 It had been firmly decided not to kill any one else, but to summon all to the enjoyment of liberty. 3 All the rest of the conspirators, indeed, when they were discussing their enterprise, had been minded to kill Antony as well as Caesar, since he was a lawless man and in favour of a monarchy, and had acquired strength by familiar association with the soldiery; and particularly because to his natural arrogance and ambition he had added the dignity of the consulship, and was at that time a colleague of Caesar. 4 But Brutus opposed the plan, insisting in the first place on a just course, and besides, holding out a hope of a change of heart in Antony. 5 For he would not give up the belief that Antony, who was a man of good parts, ambitious, and a lover of fame, if once Caesar were out of the way, would assist his country in attaining her liberty, when their example had induced him to follow emulously the nobler course. 6 Thus Antony's life was saved by Brutus; but in the fear which then reigned, he put on a plebeian dress and took to flight.
7 And now Brutus and his associates went up to the Capitol, their hands smeared with blood, and displaying their naked daggers they exhorted the citizens to assert their liberty. 8 At first, then, there were cries of terror, and the tumult was increased by wild hurryings to and fro which succeeded the disaster; 9 but since there were no further murders and no plundering of property, the senators and many of the common people took heart and went up to p167 the men on the Capitol. 10 When the multitude was assembled there, Brutus made a speech calculated to win the people and befitting the occasion. 11 The audience applauding his words and crying down to him to come down from the Capitol, the conspirators took heart and went down into the forum. The rest of them followed along in one another's company, but Brutus was surrounded by many eminent citizens, escorted with great honour down from the citadel, and placed on the rostra. 12 At sight of him the multitude, although it was a mixed rabble and prepared to raise a disturbance, was struck with awe, and awaited the issue in decorous silence. 13 Also when he came forward to speak, all paid quiet attention to his words; but that all were not pleased with what had been done was made manifest when Cinna began to speak and to denounce Caesar. The multitude broke into a rage and reviled Cinna so bitterly that the conspirators withdrew again to the Capitol. 14 There Brutus, who feared that they would be besieged, sent away the most eminent of those who had come up with them, not deeming it right that they should incur the danger too, since they had no share in the guilt.
Clearly Brutus was proud of himself and expected to be celebrated by the people as a champion of liberty, but that's not quite how it played out. Brutus took the side of the Republic, leading them into battle, but lost and committed suicide. Augustus became emperor, and the Roman Empire lasted ~500 years.
Did the ends justify the means? Justice, or betrayal? Share your thoughts.