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  1. This period begins with Pompey, the general and Roman Triumvir, rising to prominence and ends with Pompeii, the city, being destroyed in the eruption of Vesuvius. It contains such characters as Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony, Cleopatra, and the Roman emperors from Augustus to Vespasian and his son Titus.

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  2. Julius Caesar is the well—known Roman general who played a major role in the transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire. He was assassinated by a group of Roman senators. Born into the republic of Rome in approximately 100 B.C., Julius Caesar was one of the most successful war generals in history, having never lost a war.

  3. Feb 18, 2013 · Consul Julius Caesar was one of the greatest rulers of Rome. During his reign, he had set the stage for transferring the Roman Republic into a worldwide empire. Caesar was born in 100 B.C. and ruled Rome for 5 years starting in 49 B.C., which is where he appears on the Bible Timeline with world…

  4. Jan 2, 2015 · Several Roman emperors are mentioned in the New Testament, although not all of them are named in the text. Augustus (Octavian) Caesar. Caesar Augustus was the Roman emperor at the time of Jesus’s birth in c.5 or 6BC.

  5. He was born in 63 B.C. and was adopted by his great uncle, Julius Caesar. Julius Caesar, dictator of Rome, famously attempted to set himself up as the supreme leader of the Roman Republic but was stabbed to death by the senators. Octavian took up Julius Caesar’s mantle at the age of only eighteen and completed Rome’s transition once and for ...

  6. Jun 11, 2015 · In regard to Julius Caesar, the key sources are his own accounts of the Gallic Wars, the speeches of Cicero, Sallust’s account of Catiline’s War, Suetonius’s section on Caesar in Twelve Caesars, and Plutarch’s section on Caesar in Plutarchs’s Lives.

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  8. This significant difference in translation, of importance for the Catholic sacrament of penance and the theological notion of satisfaction for sins, occurs numerous times in the Rheims New Testament and nineteen times in Shakespeare's plays.