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It is Julius Caesar not two names. He won battles against the German tribes and built a bridge across the Daube to invade the Germanic tribes. He was made Caesar, married Cleopatra, had two children with her, was murdered in the forum, and made an impact so powerful that even today flowers are put on the spot where he died.
"In 60 BC Caesar returned from Spain, enriched by the spoils of successful military campaigns against rebellious tribes. He found Pompey showing little interest in any alliance with Cicero and the senatorial party. Instead an alliance was forged between the popular politician, the victorious general and the richest man in Rome - the so-called first triumvirate - between Caesar, Pompey and Crassus." From the site ... http://www.roman-empire.net/republic/laterep-index.html Hope this helped!!.....Robert Ellis, South Hackensack.NJ
Gaul was not a people but a territory (modern France, Belgium, the south Netherlands, western parts of Germany and northern Italy). It was inhabited by the Celts in the Iron Age. About 900BC, tribes of Celts advanced even westward. Britain also was inhabited by the Celts before the Roman rule. The area north of the Alps was occupied by the Romans (Julius Caesar - 58-51 BC - was called Transalpine Gaul, and remained under Roman rule until the 5th century AD. The territory of modern France was garadually invaded by the Goths, Franks and Burgundians after 330.ce today.
There are many, many Indian plains tribes. There are nations and tribes and clans within those nations. It would be impossible to list all of them. Some well known tribes are the Cheyenne, Northern and Southern, the Arapaho, DeSota, Cree, Osage, Sioux and their many clans, Crow and Mandan. Lesser known tribes would include Assiniboine, Arikara, and Oto.
The Aztecs fought with many tribes, including the Texlacans, the Huaxtec, the Purempecha, Mayans,and the spanish conquistadors
Vercingtorix was the last leader of the Gauls. He was able to gather many tribes in an attempt to rid Gaul of the Romans. Julius Caesar defeated him at the battle of Alesia, thus ending large scale Gallic resistance.
Vercingetorix
If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.If you mean in the Gallic wars, there were no countries at the time. There were only tribes who lived in certain territories. The first of these tribes that Caesar encountered were the Helvetii.
Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.Yes, Julius Caesar tried to invade again in 54 (he had landed there previously in 55) but had to turn back. It's unclear if Caesar intended to establish a permanent presence in Britain, or just invaded to punish the British tribes that sided with the Gauls in his Gallic campaigns.
One of Julius Caesar's major accomplishments was to prevent the invasion of Rome by the tribes of Gaul (sort of modern day France and Germany) during the Gallic Wars. This made him very rich, but it also made Rome richer too. It catapulted Caesar's military career.
The phrase "All Gaul is divided into three parts" is from Julius Caesar's "Commentarii de Bello Gallico" (Commentaries on the Gallic War), where he describes the division of Gaul (ancient France) into three parts based on different tribes or alliances. It is meant to emphasize the political and geographical divisions in Gaul during Caesar's time.
No, but he established relations with some tribes.
A couple of the tribes Caesar conquered in Gaul were the Arvemi and the Camutes. He also drove the Helvetii back to their original homeland.
Julius Caesar is important to Britain because he is an important part of British history. He was the first Roma to establish a presence in Britain with etither a treaty or an agreement with one of the southern tribes.
The English word Germany comes from the Greek term Germania. The name "Germania" came into use after Julius Caesar adopted it from a Gallic term for the peoples east of the Rhine that could possibly have meant "neighbour", or "men of forests", or even "men with spears".
It is Julius Caesar not two names. He won battles against the German tribes and built a bridge across the Daube to invade the Germanic tribes. He was made Caesar, married Cleopatra, had two children with her, was murdered in the forum, and made an impact so powerful that even today flowers are put on the spot where he died.
The alliance was the First Triumvirate, the three-men informal political alliance between Julius Caesar, Pompey the Great and Marcus Licinius Crassus. Caesar was given the governorships of Cisalpine Gaul (in northern Italy), Illyria and Transalpine Gaul (in southern France). He was given these governorships for five years and then they were extended for another five years. During this period Caesar conquered the rest of Gaul. Julius Caesar did not subjugate Illyria. He hardly got involved in Illyria because he was too busy with his Gallic Wars. He conducted only one campaign there because of some wrong doing by one of the tribes there and then returned to Gaul. Illyria was subjugated by Augustus after the death of Caesar (44 BC), in the campaigns he conducted there in 35- 33 BC. The area became a proper Roman province intended as an administrative unit of the empire (during the time of Julius Caesar Illyria was a province in the sense of a military jurisdiction; It was not part of the Roman Empire yet) in 27 BC. It became the province of Illyricum (the Latin name for the area)