1 00:00:06,749 --> 00:00:11,784 What would you do if you thought your country was on the path to tyranny? 2 00:00:11,784 --> 00:00:16,091 If you saw one man gaining too much power, would you try to stop him? 3 00:00:16,091 --> 00:00:20,429 Even if that man was one of your closest friends and allies? 4 00:00:20,429 --> 00:00:27,331 These were the questions haunting Roman Senator Marcus Junius Brutus in 44 BCE, 5 00:00:27,331 --> 00:00:31,524 the year Julius Caesar would be assassinated. 6 00:00:31,524 --> 00:00:35,779 Opposing unchecked power wasn't just a political matter for Brutus; 7 00:00:35,779 --> 00:00:37,470 it was a personal one. 8 00:00:37,470 --> 00:00:40,385 He claimed descent from Lucius Junius Brutus, 9 00:00:40,385 --> 00:00:45,675 who had helped overthrow the tyrannical king known as Tarquin the Proud. 10 00:00:45,675 --> 00:00:47,485 Instead of seizing power himself, 11 00:00:47,485 --> 00:00:51,135 the elder Brutus led the people in a rousing oath 12 00:00:51,135 --> 00:00:54,777 to never again allow a king to rule. 13 00:00:54,777 --> 00:00:56,003 Rome became a republic 14 00:00:56,003 --> 00:01:00,239 based on the principle that no one man should hold too much power. 15 00:01:00,239 --> 00:01:04,763 Now, four and a half centuries later, this principle was threatened. 16 00:01:04,763 --> 00:01:08,384 Julius Ceasar's rise to the powerful position of consul 17 00:01:08,384 --> 00:01:10,080 had been dramatic. 18 00:01:10,080 --> 00:01:14,374 Years of military triumphs had made him the wealthiest man in Rome. 19 00:01:14,374 --> 00:01:18,777 And after defeating his rival Pompey the Great in a bitter civil war, 20 00:01:18,777 --> 00:01:21,540 his power was at its peak. 21 00:01:21,540 --> 00:01:25,301 His victories and initiatives, such as distributing lands to the poor, 22 00:01:25,301 --> 00:01:27,138 had made him popular with the public, 23 00:01:27,138 --> 00:01:32,243 and many senators vied for his favor by showering him with honors. 24 00:01:32,243 --> 00:01:34,832 Statues were built, temples were dedicated, 25 00:01:34,832 --> 00:01:40,197 and a whole month was renamed, still called July today. 26 00:01:40,197 --> 00:01:42,654 More importantly, the title of dictator, 27 00:01:42,654 --> 00:01:45,957 meant to grant temporary emergency powers in wartime, 28 00:01:45,957 --> 00:01:50,443 had been bestowed upon Caesar several times in succession. 29 00:01:50,443 --> 00:01:54,438 And in 44 BCE, he was made dictator perpetuo, 30 00:01:54,438 --> 00:01:56,882 dictator for a potentially unlimited term. 31 00:01:59,326 --> 00:02:01,772 All of this was too much for the senators 32 00:02:01,772 --> 00:02:06,628 who feared a return to the monarchy their ancestors had fought to abolish, 33 00:02:06,628 --> 00:02:09,144 as well as those whose own power and ambition 34 00:02:09,144 --> 00:02:12,036 were impeded by Caesar's rule. 35 00:02:12,036 --> 00:02:15,786 A group of conspirators calling themselves the liberators 36 00:02:15,786 --> 00:02:20,018 began to secretly discuss plans for assassination. 37 00:02:20,018 --> 00:02:23,451 Leading them were the senator Gaius Cassius Longinus 38 00:02:23,451 --> 00:02:26,928 and his friend and brother-in-law, Brutus. 39 00:02:26,928 --> 00:02:30,616 Joining the conspiracy was not an easy choice for Brutus. 40 00:02:30,616 --> 00:02:34,432 Even though Brutus had sided with Pompey in the ill-fated civil war, 41 00:02:34,432 --> 00:02:38,682 Caesar had personally intervened to save his life, 42 00:02:38,682 --> 00:02:42,890 not only pardoning him but even accepting him as a close advisor 43 00:02:42,890 --> 00:02:45,708 and elevating him to important posts. 44 00:02:45,708 --> 00:02:50,399 Brutus was hesitant to conspire against the man who had treated him like a son, 45 00:02:50,399 --> 00:02:51,454 but in the end, 46 00:02:51,454 --> 00:02:58,185 Cassius's insistence and Brutus's own fear of Caesar's ambitions won out. 47 00:02:58,185 --> 00:03:01,707 The moment they had been waiting for came on March 15. 48 00:03:01,707 --> 00:03:02,840 At a senate meeting 49 00:03:02,840 --> 00:03:07,166 held shortly before Caesar was to depart on his next military campaign, 50 00:03:07,166 --> 00:03:10,377 as many as 60 conspirators surrounded him, 51 00:03:10,377 --> 00:03:15,546 unsheathing daggers from their togas and stabbing at him from all sides. 52 00:03:15,546 --> 00:03:17,058 As the story goes, 53 00:03:17,058 --> 00:03:21,627 Caesar struggled fiercely until he saw Brutus. 54 00:03:21,627 --> 00:03:25,183 Despite the famous line, "Et tu, Brute?" written by Shakespeare, 55 00:03:25,183 --> 00:03:28,509 we don't know Caesar's actual dying words. 56 00:03:28,509 --> 00:03:31,077 Some ancient sources claim he said nothing, 57 00:03:31,077 --> 00:03:33,852 while others record the phrase, "And you, child?", 58 00:03:33,852 --> 00:03:39,522 fueling speculation that Brutus may have actually been Caesar's illegitimate son. 59 00:03:39,522 --> 00:03:43,072 But all agree that when Caesar saw Brutus among his attackers, 60 00:03:43,072 --> 00:03:46,739 he covered his face and gave up the fight, 61 00:03:46,739 --> 00:03:51,681 falling to the ground after being stabbed 23 times. 62 00:03:51,681 --> 00:03:52,984 Unfortunately for Brutus, 63 00:03:52,984 --> 00:03:57,208 he and the other conspirators had underestimated Caesar's popularity 64 00:03:57,208 --> 00:03:58,856 among the Roman public, 65 00:03:58,856 --> 00:04:01,284 many of whom saw him as an effective leader, 66 00:04:01,284 --> 00:04:04,621 and the senate as a corrupt aristocracy. 67 00:04:04,621 --> 00:04:08,764 Within moments of Caesar's assassination, Rome was in a state of panic. 68 00:04:08,764 --> 00:04:11,264 Most of the other senators had fled, 69 00:04:11,264 --> 00:04:14,853 while the assassins barricaded themselves on the Capitoline Hill. 70 00:04:14,853 --> 00:04:17,895 Mark Antony, Caesar's friend and co-consul, 71 00:04:17,895 --> 00:04:20,498 was swift to seize the upper hand, 72 00:04:20,498 --> 00:04:24,250 delivering a passionate speech at Caesar's funeral days later 73 00:04:24,250 --> 00:04:28,229 that whipped the crowd into a frenzy of grief and anger. 74 00:04:28,229 --> 00:04:31,564 As a result, the liberators were forced out of Rome. 75 00:04:31,564 --> 00:04:35,287 The ensuing power vacuum led to a series of civil wars, 76 00:04:35,287 --> 00:04:40,629 during which Brutus, facing certain defeat, took his own life. 77 00:04:40,629 --> 00:04:42,639 Ironically, the ultimate result 78 00:04:42,639 --> 00:04:46,104 would be the opposite of what the conspirators had hoped to accomplish: 79 00:04:46,104 --> 00:04:47,480 the end of the Republic 80 00:04:47,480 --> 00:04:51,648 and the concentration of power under the office of Emperor. 81 00:04:51,648 --> 00:04:55,735 Opinions over the assassination of Caesar were divided from the start 82 00:04:55,735 --> 00:04:57,388 and have remained so. 83 00:04:57,388 --> 00:04:58,715 As for Brutus himself, 84 00:04:58,715 --> 00:05:02,701 few historical figures have inspired such a conflicting legacy. 85 00:05:02,701 --> 00:05:06,990 In Dante's "Inferno," he was placed in the very center of Hell 86 00:05:06,990 --> 00:05:12,198 and eternally chewed by Satan himself for his crime of betrayal. 87 00:05:12,198 --> 00:05:14,148 But Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" 88 00:05:14,148 --> 00:05:18,522 described him as one of the most virtuous and benevolent people to have lived. 89 00:05:18,522 --> 00:05:22,994 The interpretation of Brutus as either a selfless fighter against dictatorship 90 00:05:22,994 --> 00:05:25,291 or an opportunistic traitor 91 00:05:25,291 --> 00:05:28,378 has shifted with the tides of history and politics. 92 00:05:28,378 --> 00:05:31,330 But even today, over 2000 years later, 93 00:05:31,330 --> 00:05:33,338 questions about the price of liberty, 94 00:05:33,338 --> 00:05:37,646 the conflict between personal loyalties and universal ideals, 95 00:05:37,646 --> 00:05:42,173 and unintended consequences remain more relevant than ever.