No. Julius Caesar had only one daughter and she died in childbirth. (so did the baby). Octavian/Augustus, who was his closest relative and was a Julian, also had only one daughter, and although she had five children, all their deaths are recorded.
Actually i think i might be a living descendant of Julius Caesar. My mom is going though this crazy genealogy phase at the moment. recently she found a few websites made by famous people who have actually bothered to go and do the research about the family trees of different people, as well as historians that have posted the family trees of different European royalty. she basically took pieces of family trees and put them together like a puzzle and found out if we go back about 60 generations or so, that we are direct descendants of Julius Caesar, or at least someone named Julius Cesar. we're not sure which one or whether the research we found is even true but there is a possibility. he just happens to be one of the 3600 60-great-grandparents that we have. Its actually kinda cool!
As far as we know according to historical sources the bloodline had all but vanished before the year 200. So we don't really know for sure, but it seems likely that the bloodline died out a long long time ago.
Yes. I can faithfully confirm that Julius Caesar has many living descendants, due to the fact that he had many documented and many more undocumented extramarital affairs. Additionally, he had affairs with women in every corner of the Roman Empire, as well as at least one in a coastal town of the Italian peninsula. Many of his offspring died or were killed, some were hidden, but I'd venture to say most living ancestors of Julius Caesar know who they are. Some actually bear quite a resemblance to his documented appearance as well. Hope this helps!
Julius Caesars only direct descendant was his daughter, who died in childbirth.
No, Caesar died before he could have kids. He has no descendants.
i am you can trace it
No, Julius Caesar never lost any body part in battle.
Caesar adopted Octavian, his grandnephew, because he had no male heir (not counting the son he had had with Cleopatra since the Romans would have never accepted him as ruler). Caesar needed an heir because he wanted his descendants to rule after him (he wanted to be an emperor)
Julius Caesar did not succeed any emperor, he was not an emperor, he was going to be an emperor but before absolute power he was killed by a group of conspirators. The first emperor of the Roman empire was Julius Caesar's son, Octavian.
Gaius Julius Caesar is one of the first greatest generals in Roman history. HE ROCKS.
Caesar Julius is on a coin because for achievements so the people made a coin for every achievement he accomplished.
There is hardly any information about Julius Caesar's youth.
No, Julius Caesar never lost any body part in battle.
Julius Caesar is at heart a political story. It could take place in any major industry or industry town - Wall Street, the garment district, Napa Valley, you name it.
yes
Julius Caesar did not write any plays. He was a Roman general and statesman who lived from 100 - 44 BCE. The play "Julius Caesar" was written by William Shakespeare and is a dramatization of Caesar's assassination and its aftermath.
His full names was Gaius Julius Caesar.
Caesar adopted Octavian, his grandnephew, because he had no male heir (not counting the son he had had with Cleopatra since the Romans would have never accepted him as ruler). Caesar needed an heir because he wanted his descendants to rule after him (he wanted to be an emperor)
yes
What novel is that? There is a play by William Shakespeare by that name, but it is not in any way a novel.
Julius Caesar did not succeed any emperor, he was not an emperor, he was going to be an emperor but before absolute power he was killed by a group of conspirators. The first emperor of the Roman empire was Julius Caesar's son, Octavian.
Gaius Julius Caesar is one of the first greatest generals in Roman history. HE ROCKS.
Caesar Julius is on a coin because for achievements so the people made a coin for every achievement he accomplished.