Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dec 16, 2009 · Mark Antony was a Roman politician and general known for his alliance with Julius Caesar, his rivalry with Octavian and his affair with Egypt's Queen Cleopatra.

    • Joshua J. Mark
    • Youth and Rise to Power. Antony was born 14 January, 83 BCE to Marcus Antonius Creticus and Julia of the Caesars (l. 104-c.39 BCE), Julius Caesar's cousin.
    • Antony as Tribune. In the senate, Antony was a fierce supporter of Caesar's policies. Antony's long-time friend, Curio, had moved away from the aristocratic party and aligned himself with Caesar's populist party, using his eloquence in oratory to convince others to do the same.
    • Antony and Octavian. In 44 BCE, after Caesar's assassination, Antony took the opportunity as speaker at the dictator's funeral to turn the tide of popular opinion against the conspirators and drive them from Rome.
    • Antony and Cleopatra. After defeating the armies of Brutus (l.23-42 BCE) and Cassius (l.c.85-42 BCE) at the Battle of Philippi in 42 BCE, Octavian returned to Rome and Antony went east where, at Tarsus in 41 BCE, he summoned the Egyptian queen Cleopatra VII to appear before him.
    • He Wasn’t Really Julius Caesar’s Right-Hand Man. If you’ve read anything at all about Mark Antony, you’ll have seen him referred to as Caesar’s right-hand man.
    • He Hated Cicero. Cicero’s speeches denouncing Antony are among the most famous in Roman literature. It is clear that the great orator hated Antony, but it was probably a case of mutual loathing.
    • He Loved Wine & Women. Although not a great deal is known about Mark Antony’s personal life, most sources agree that he was a womanizer with a love of wine.
    • He Had Numerous Wives. It wasn’t unusual to have more than one wife in Ancient Rome, but as he did with so many things in his life, Mark Antony overdid it.
  2. Antony is Caesar 's close friend. He desires to make Caesar king, and he brings about the undoing of the conspirators after Caesar's murder. Described as a passionate man who loves art and music, and teased by Caesar for staying out late at parties, Antony is the opposite of the coldly logical Brutus.

  3. THE WOMANIZING OF MARK ANTONY: VIRILE RUTHLESSNESS AND REDEMPTIVE CROSS-DRESSING IN ROME, SEASON TWO. Margaret M. Toscano. This essay explores the way Roman masculinity functions as a signifier for imperial potency and domination, vulnerability, and loss, in Season Two of the acclaimed HBO-BBC series Rome.

  4. People also ask

  5. Mark Antony was once the most trusted general of Julius Caesar and he came to wield immense power in Rome. It would be his political alliances that brought him to the pinnacle of Roman authority, but his personal choices led him down a path of betrayal and traumatic loss.

  1. People also search for