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On March 15, 44 BCE, Julius Caesar was stabbed twenty-three times on the floor of the Theatre of Pompey by men who called themselves liberators — many of whom he had pardoned, promoted, or considered friends. The assassination was meticulously planned, yet its political consequences were precisely the opposite of what its architects intended. Rather than restoring the Republic, the killing of Caesar accelerated its final destruction. This book examines the Ides of March not as a single dramatic event but as the endpoint of a decades-long psychological and institutional crisis. Drawing on Plutarch, Suetonius, Cicero's letters, and contemporary archaeological and numismatic evidence, it reconstructs the inner lives of the key conspirators — Brutus, Cassius, Decimus — tracing how personal grievance, philosophical conviction, and political fear combined to produce collective action against the most powerful man in the Roman world. The narrative explores what the assassination reveals about the psychology of political violence: how men of education and principle convince themselves that murder serves justice, how loyalty fractures under institutional stress, and how the elimination of one leader can destabilize an entire system of power built around personal authority. It also examines Caesar himself — the calculated ambiguity of his behavior toward republican institutions, his deliberate cultivation of dependency among rivals, and the question of whether he understood, and perhaps accepted, the risk he was running.
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Liczba stron: 261
Rok wydania: 2026
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