Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Liberators' civil war: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Gener4l Cl4ank4
mNo edit summary
imported>Gener4l Cl4ank4
mNo edit summary
Line 16: Line 16:
|commanders2=[[Marcus Junius Brutus]] †<br>[[Gaius Cassius Longinus]] †<br>[[Amunet|Aya]]
|commanders2=[[Marcus Junius Brutus]] †<br>[[Gaius Cassius Longinus]] †<br>[[Amunet|Aya]]
}}
}}
The '''Liberators' civil war''' (43 – 42 BCE)<ref>{{WP|Liberators' civil war}}</ref> was a conflict in the [[Roman Republic]] that was sparked by the [[Roman Hidden Ones]] and a faction of {{Wiki|Roman Senate|Roman Senators}} calling themselves the "''Liberatores''" working together to [[Assassination of Julius Caesar|assassinate]] the ''{{wiki|dictator perpetuo}}'' [[Gaius Julius Caesar]]. Caesar's heir [[Augustus|Octavian]] formed the {{wiki|Second Triumvirate}} with [[Marcus Antonius]] and {{wiki|Marcus Aemilius Lepidus}} to avenge his death and wrest control of the republic from the ''Liberatores''{{'}} leaders [[Marcus Junius Brutus]] and [[Gaius Cassius Longinus]]. Both Brutus and Cassius, alongside many of their supporters, were secret members of the [[Assassins|Hidden Ones]], and their defeat at the climactic [[Battle of Philippi]] was a substantial blow to the fledgling organization.
The '''Liberators' civil war''' (43 – 42 BCE)<ref>{{WP|Liberators' civil war}}</ref> was a conflict in the [[Roman Republic]] that was sparked by the [[Roman Hidden Ones]] and a faction of {{Wiki|Roman Senate|Roman Senators}} calling themselves the "''Liberatores''" working together to [[Assassination of Julius Caesar|assassinate]] the ''{{wiki|dictator perpetuo}}'' [[Gaius Julius Caesar]].
 
Caesar's heir [[Augustus|Octavian]] formed the {{wiki|Second Triumvirate}} with [[Marcus Antonius]] and {{wiki|Marcus Aemilius Lepidus}} to avenge his death and wrest control of the republic from the ''Liberatores''{{'}} leaders [[Marcus Junius Brutus]] and [[Gaius Cassius Longinus]]. Both Brutus and Cassius, alongside many of their supporters, were secret members of the [[Assassins|Hidden Ones]], and their defeat at the climactic [[Battle of Philippi]] was a substantial blow to the fledgling organization.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 17:10, 4 October 2025

The Liberators' civil war (43 – 42 BCE)[1] was a conflict in the Roman Republic that was sparked by the Roman Hidden Ones and a faction of Roman Senators calling themselves the "Liberatores" working together to assassinate the dictator perpetuo Gaius Julius Caesar.

Caesar's heir Octavian formed the Second Triumvirate with Marcus Antonius and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus to avenge his death and wrest control of the republic from the Liberatores' leaders Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus. Both Brutus and Cassius, alongside many of their supporters, were secret members of the Hidden Ones, and their defeat at the climactic Battle of Philippi was a substantial blow to the fledgling organization.

History

On 14 March 44 BCE, the Hidden Ones Aya, Brutus, and Cassius arrived at the Theatre of Pompey to assassinate Julius Caesar, whose rise to power as dictator perpetuo was aided by the Order of the Ancients. While Amunet engaged Lucius Septimius in a fatal duel, Brutus and Cassius confronted Caesar in the curia with 40 of their allies from the Roman Senate. Following Caesar's murder,[2] his friend Antonius rallied Caesar's supporters and called for revenge against the assassins.[3]

The Hidden Ones were later forced out of the city, with Brutus going to Krete on the advice of Aya, newly-rechristened as Amunet. However, they were unable to flee far, as a civil war arose between the assassins and the newly-formed alliance of Antonius and Caesar's adopted son, Octavian.[4] Neither of the assassins returned to Rome, with both Cassius[5] and Brutus[6] opting to commit suicide[7] rather than be captured following their decisive defeat at the Battle of Philippi,[4] though it did not stop Antonius or his allies from spreading the rumor that his forces had killed them.

Aftermath

With the elimination of his political enemies, Octavian took over the power vacuum left in Rome. In 32 BCE, he convinced the Roman Senate to declare war on the Egyptian queen Cleopatra, who had become Antonius' lover after he divorced Octavian's sister Octavia. This triggered the War of Actium, which would be the last conflict the Roman Republic participated in, for upon the couple's own suicides in the war, Octavian was free to fully monopolize power and transform the republic into the Roman Empire.[4]

Appearances

References