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CSI: Caesar

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  • There are often myths and misconceptions surrounding historical figures like Julius Caesar. Caesar was a Roman general and politician who declared himself dictator of the Roman Empire, but that lasted less than one year before he was famously assassinated on the Ides of March 15th, 44 B.C. Among the myths that is not true is that he was born as the result of a cesarean section, and it is unlikely that's where the name of the procedure came from. It does spear to be true that Caesar was the subject of the first recorded autopsy in history. What does the autopsy tell us about his assassination?

    The day before his death, historians think Caesar had dinner with Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who apparently convinced Caesar to go to the Senate as usual the next day. Caesar was not feeling well, and his wife was concerned about rumors of a planned attack. Caesar entered the Senate via the Porticus of Pompey and took a seat on his specially built golden throne he used while attending the Senate.

    There were four leaders of the conspiracy to kill Caesar that day. There were 200 senators in the Senate chamber along with ten tribunes and slaves and secretaries. Lucius Tillius Cimber approached Caesar with a petition, then Cimber grabbed Caesar by his toga and Casca was the first to stab him. The attackers had chosen small double-edged daggers in planning their attack because they were easy to hide.

    Other conspirators joined in the attack, and Caesar died at the foot of a statue honoring one of his old enemies, Pompey. Modern recreations of the attack theorize that there were 5 to 10 attackers. Some historians think his last words were "Kai su, technon?" which translates into "You too, my child?" Most people know the phrase "Et tu Brute?" or "You too, Brutus?" which Shakespeare made famous in his play, but both refer to Brutus, who may have been Caesar's illegitimate child.

    The body lay in the Senate for three hours before servants took it home, where a physician named Antistius examined the body. He documented 23 stab wounds, only one of which would have been fatal. The fatal wound entered below his left shoulder blade and could have punctured the heart, a lung or a blood vessel. Regardless, the cause of death was blood loss.

    Antistius also presented his findings in the forum, the Latin forensis, from which the term forensics arose. This was the first recorded autopsy and gave a name to the field of studying a body after death to determine what may have caused it: forensic science. The original plan was that Caesar was to be burnt on a funeral pyre at the Field of Mars after his funeral on March 20th, but an angry crowd returned his body to the forum. Outraged by the killing of their leader and demanding justice for the killers, the crowd surrounded the senate house and burned it to the ground.

More Information

The Autopsy of Julius Caesar Explained
The story of Julius Caesar is a strange thing, as the version that many people are familiar with was written centuries after his actual reign and assassination. When Shakespeare wrote the play that's been performed countless times and read in countless schools, he was writing against the backdrop of potential political upheaval: Queen Elizabeth I didn't have an heir, and the potential of another devastating civil war was looming....

Was Julius Caesar Really Born by Cesarean Section?
Among the most notable generals and leaders of ancient Rome was one Julius Caesar, who is remembered both for his triumphant campaigns against the Gauls and his sudden, bloody death at the hands of a group of assassins on the Ides of March, 44 B.C. (per Britannica). Tales continue to be told of him centuries after his death, and it's widely believed that he was born by cesarean section - and even that the procedure's name is derived from Caesar's...

6 myths about the Ides of March and killing Caesar
This is what most of us know about the death of Julius Caesar, half-remembered from movies and plays: Some soothsayer said, "Beware the Ides of March." A few idealistic Romans decided to win back Rome for the people. Caesar got stabbed by Brutus with a big sword, said "Et tu, Brute?" and died nobly. All of that is wrong...

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