Liberalis Circulum: Difference between revisions
imported>Slate Vesper m Slate Vesper moved page Roman Assassins to Roman Empire Assassins: Clarifying due to "Italian Assassins" and "Roman Assassins" having the potential for confusion. |
imported>Slate Vesper mNo edit summary |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
|collapsed = | |collapsed = | ||
|notable = [[Aquilus]] [[Marcus Junius Brutus]]<br>[[Leonius]]}} | |notable = [[Aquilus]] [[Marcus Junius Brutus]]<br>[[Leonius]]}} | ||
The '''Roman Assassins''' were the Brotherhood of [[Assassins]] | The '''Roman Empire Assassins''' were the Brotherhood of [[Assassins]] who operated during the [[Roman Empire]]. | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
Revision as of 22:25, 5 May 2013
The Roman Empire Assassins were the Brotherhood of Assassins who operated during the Roman Empire.
History
In 44 BCE, forty Senators, secretly Assassins, conspired against the Roman general and dictator Gaius Julius Caesar. They met in a secret cave underneath where the Santa Maria in Aracoeli would later stand and designed plans for the assassination, led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus.[1]
Deeper inside the cave, Brutus discovered an ancient vault, where he received visions of Caesar's future assassination. This motivated Brutus more, and on 15 March 44 BCE, twenty-three of the Assassins stabbed Caesar to death.[1]
Later, Brutus was eventually defeated in battle at Philippi by Marcus Antonius, and committed suicide shortly thereafter. When the Roman Assassins found his body, they tried to revive him using the Shroud of Eden, however, he was only revived for a brief moment, before ultimately dying once more.[2]
On 24 January 41 CE, the Roman Assassin Leonius killed Roman Emperor Caligula with a dagger.[3]