He said that it was not in his interest to ever become Emperor, but what he said and what he wants to do are two different things. I would say that he would eventually become the Emperor.
No. Julius Caesar was eventually persuaded to become Dictator. His adopted son Octavius Caesar became the first Emperor under the name of Augustus Caesar.
As he was never crowned no one will ever know.
YEP!
Antony never killed anyone to become emperor. Antony was never an emperor. The highest office he ever rose to was that of triumvir.
I assume he replaced the title of "general" with "Emperor," but Julius Caesar was in charge of his mass army until the day he died.
No, Julius Caesar was never an emperor. He was a dictator, with all the powers of an emperor, but he ruled during the republican form of government, and received his office under the republican system. The men who historians refer to as emperors ruled under the principate form of government which was different from the republic.
No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.No, Julius Caesar was ever an emperor. He was a dictator. A dictator is a legally appointed official who has power for a set period of time. An emperor is a person who gains his power either by inheritance or appointment, but he holds his power for life. In the case of Julius Caesar, he was appointed dictator for life (a set period of time) but he was killed shortly afterwards.
A Caesarean was around ever since the time of Julius Caesar, but that would mean death for the mother. Since Caesar was the first person ever to be born by a c-section, that's how it therefore got his name.
No, Andrew Jackson did not give up the right to become an emperor. He served as the seventh President of the United States from 1829 to 1837 and there is no evidence to suggest that he ever aspired to become an emperor. In fact, he was a strong advocate for democracy and the rights of the common people.
No Roman ruler was ever called emperor. The word emperor is a word that we use, the Romans never used it. They referred to their "emperors" as Caesar. Caesar was originally a family name, but it grew into a title after the Julio-Claudian dynasty. The closest title to the term emperor was the military title of "imperator" which was given to a general by his troops after a victory. For clarity and based on common usage, it's true that "emperor" was not what is being asked. The first Roman emperor aka Imperator was Augustus Caesar. He won the Roman civil war against Mark Antony and Cleopatra. He was as Octavian the nephew of Julius Caesar.
No, Cicero was one of Rome's greatest orators. He was basically a lawyer. He rose to the rank of counsul, and was a staunch supporter of the republic. He lived at the time of Julius Caesar, years before the idea of "emperor" was ever imagined.
Undoubtedly. Caesar was already Dictator for life which is as close to king as you can come without having the title and regalia. He had already made the pattern for the future Imperator, his nephew Augustus, who would destroy the Republic (but not its forms) for ever.