Politics
Miscellaneous
Gaul
Civil War
Assassination
100

The series of political offices expected of a nobleman

Cursus Honorum

100

The mythological ancestor of the gens Iulia

Venus (Aeneas, Ascanius/Iulus)

100

Gaul's modern-day counterpart

France
100

Caesar's declaration of war against the Senate

Crossing the Rubicon

100

The reason Caesar was killed

He was becoming a king in all but name

200

Two orders of Roman upper class or nobility

Patricians and Equites

200

Caesar's lover, whose side he took in the Egyptian civil war

Cleopatra VII

200

Enemies separated from Roman Gaul by the Rhine river

Germani

200

Caesar's Second-in-command, whom he left in control of Rome

Marcus Antonius (Mark Antony)

200

The ringleaders of the assassins

Cassius and Brutus

300

The arrangement by which Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus worked together

First Triumvirate

300

Range of number of conspirators

Number of times Caesar was stabbed

60-70

23

300

Region Caesar invaded twice but ultimately failed to take

Britannia

300

The two factions that Pompey and Caesar led

Populares and Optimates

300

Caesar's adopted son, who inherited much of his power and influence

Octavian (Augustus)

400

System of reciprocal obligation that Rome was built on

Clientela (Patronage, Patron-Client)

400

Roman politico-religious rite celebrating a victorious general

Triumph

400

Caesar's greatest advantage against the Gauls

Their disunity

400

What Ptolemy gave Caesar when he arrived in Egypt

The head of Pompey

400

Where Caesar was killed

The Senate (Theater of Pompey)

500

The arrangement by which Octavian, Antony, and Lepidus ruled

Second Triumvirate

500

Caesar's mercy for the pirates

Slitting their throats before crucifying them

500

Battle in which Caesar defeated Vercingetorix (bonus for the engineering tactic he used)

Battle of Alesia

500

Battle in Greece where Caesar defeated the Senate

Battle of Pharsalus

500

Given to Caesar posthumously by the Senate

Godhood (apotheosis, deification)