What would you do if you thought
your country was on the path to tyranny?
If you saw one man gaining too much power,
would you try to stop him?
Even if that man was one
of your closest friends and allies?
These were the questions haunting Roman
Senator Marcus Junius Brutus in 44 BCE,
the year Julius Ceasar
would be assassinated.
Opposing unchecked power
wasn't just a political matter for Brutus.
It was a personal one.
He claimed dissent
from Lucius Junius Brutus,
who had helped overthrow the tyrannical
king known as Tarquin the Proud.
Instead of seizing power himself,
the elder Brutus led
the people in a rousing oath
to never again allow a king to rule.
Rome became a republic
based on the principle that no one man
should hold too much power.
Now, four and a half centuries later,
this principle was threatened.
Julius Ceasar's rise
to the powerful position of Consul
had been dramatic.
Years of military triumphs
had made him the wealthiest man in Rome.
And after defeating his rival
Pompey the Great in a bitter civil war,
his power was at its peak.
His victories and initiatives,
such as distrbutting lands to the poor,
had made him popular with the public,
and many Senators vied for his favor
by showering him with honors.
Statues were built,
temples were dedicated,
and a whole month was renamed,
still called July today.
More importantly, the title of Dictator,
meant to grant temporary
emergency powers in wartime,
had been bestowed upon Caesar
several times in succession.
And in 44 BCE,
he was made Dictator Perpetuo,
Dictator for a potentially unlimited term.
All of this was too much for the Senators
who feared a return to the monarchy
their ancestors had faught to abolish,
as well as those whose
own power and ambition
were impeded by Ceasar's rule.
A group of conspirators
calling themselves the liberators
began to secretly discuss
plans for assassination.
Leading them were
the Senator Gaius Cassius Longinus,
and his friend and brother-in-law, Brutus.
Joining the conspiracy was not
an easy choice for Brutus.
Even though Brutus had sided with Pompey
in the ill-fated civil war,
Caesar had personally intervened
to save his life,
not only pardoning him,
but even accepting him as a close advisor,
and elevating him to important posts.
Brutus was hesitant to conspire against
the man who had treated him like a son,
but in the end,
Cassius's insistence and Brutus's own fear
of Caesar's ambitions won out.
The moment they had been
waiting for came on March 15.
At a Senate meeting
held shortly before Caesar was to depart
on his next military campaign,
as many as 60 conspirators surrounded him,
unsheathing daggers from their togas
and stabbing at him from all sides.
As the story goes,
Caesar struggled fiercely
until he saw Brutus.
Despite the famous line, "Et tu, Brute?"
written by Shakespeare,
we don't know Caesar's actual dying words.
Some ancient sources
claim he said nothing,
while others record the phrase,
"And you, child?",
fueling speculation that Brutus may have
actually been Caesar's illegitimate son.
But all agree that when
Caesar saw Brutus among his attackers,
he covered his face and gave up the fight,
falling to the ground
after being stabbed 23 times.
Unfortunately for Brutus,
he and the other conspirators
had underestimated Caesar's popularity
among the Roman public,
many of whom saw
him as an effective leader,
and the Senate as a corrupt aristocracy.
Within moments of Caesar's assassination,
Rome was in a state of panic.
Most of the other Senators had fled,
while the assassins baricaded themselves
on the Capitoline Hill.
Mark Antony,
Caesar's friend and co-Consul,
was swift to seize the upper hand,
delivering a passionate speech
at Caesar's funeral days later
that whipped the crowd into a frenzy
of grief and anger.
As a result, the liberators
were forced out of Rome.
The ensuing power vacuum
led to a series of civil wars,
during which Brutus,
facing certain defeat, took his own life.
Ironically, the ultimate result
would be the opposite of what
the conspirators had hoped to accomplish:
the end of the Republic,
and the concentration of power
under the office of Emperor.
Opinions over the assassination of Caesar
were divided from the start,
and have remained so.
As for Brutus himself,
few historical figures have inspired
such a conflicting legacy.
In Dante's Inferno, he was placed
in the very center of Hell,
and eternally chewed by Satan himself
for his crime of betrayal.
But Swift's "Gulliver's Travels"
described him as one of the most virtuous
and benevolent people to have lived.
The interpretation of Brutus as either
a selfless fighter against dictatorship,
or an opportunistic trader
has shifted with the tides
of history and politics.
But even today, over 2000 years laters,
questions about the price of liberty,
the conflict between personal loyalties
and universal ideals,
and unintended consequences
remain more relevant than ever.