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The World Under Caesar Rome 50-44 BCE
You are the end point of an unbroken chain of survival. Every person who came before you - through plague, war, famine, and flood - lived long enough to pass forward what was necessary for you to exist. You did not begin when you were born. You began when humanity began. Everything that happened between that beginning and this moment is not the past in any abstract sense. It is the story of the making of you.
Rome. 50-44 BCE. A republic of one million people performing governance while its substance emptied. A Senate still voting. A dictator writing himself into history in the third person - while still alive. Caesar never once wrote I. He wrote Caesar. Already historical. Already permanent. The arguments about when the Republic died have never stopped.
Julius Caesar asks what it meant to be inside that moment. Not as a general. Not as a senator. But as the lictor - the man who carried the fasces before Rome's magistrates for thirty years and one morning felt the difference between the form of the Republic and what the form was built to protect.
The facts are extraordinary enough.
Caesar dictated to four secretaries simultaneously while riding. Cicero - who despised him - called his Latin a masterpiece.
Twenty-three men stabbed Caesar in the Theatre of Pompey on March 15, 44 BCE. The Senate voted him divine honours the following morning.
The fasces - rods and axe carried before Roman magistrates - still appears in the French Republic, the Italian state, and the United States Senate chamber today.
History is not a sequence of dates. It is billions of lives lived forward through a present as urgent as your own. The Forum smelled of bread before dawn. The money-changers arrived before the priests. The Vestal fire burned through every assassination, every civil war, every morning after. They built something that is still asking us questions. This book is the attempt of one ordinary man - who understood Rome by walking it - to answer.
For homeschooling families: You are already doing the most important thing - putting the story of humanity directly into your children's hands. The Beyond His Story We Stand series was written for you. Not a textbook. Not a syllabus. A story your child will not put down - and that will leave them asking the questions no curriculum can generate. The questions that only wonder produces.
Julius Caesar - part of the Beyond His Story We Stand series - a chronological journey through human history, told through the people official history forgot to record.
The Republic did not fall in a day. It emptied slowly, form by form, morning by morning. Someone carried it forward anyway.
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