The baby died shortly thereafter. Caesar has no blood related descendants. There are no reliable records that exist past then. This is fact!! I mean you all got to think Julius Ceaser was all over Gual, Rome, Africa, etc fighting wars most of his life….. Leave the girl alone. Caesar was a wandering commanding general for a couple decades.
Any woman he saw, whether Roman or from the provinces, was literally his for the taking. And there was no birth control. Nice article, thank you. Statistically likely you are….. To the conquerors went the spoils. So ,it is possible he might have knocked some women in Italy orGaul where he was posted?
There were lot of women available to keep Caesar warm in the cold nights of Britain. Look up DNA mathematics, and how many families are required to make 10 generations alone. Caesar was a huge womanizer and incredibly popular. Add up his foreign exploits and he probably had hundreds of offspring all over Europe. Your email address will not be published. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Where is Julius Caesar buried?
Right in the Roman Forum. Natalie Natalie is a food and travel writer who has been living in Rome full time since Sunsets from the Train. Bum Bum Soap. July 12, at am Reply. October 20, at pm Reply. February 2, at pm Reply. January 31, at pm Reply. Natalie says: Interesting! Thanks for that info. February 2, at am Reply. Jillian dixon says: I visited Rome and the forum, St.
October 30, at am Reply. Natalie says: Hi Jillian! October 31, at am Reply. I absolutely love this website. Keep writing! May 4, at pm Reply. Tanya says: I am a direct descendent of Julius Caesar. July 18, at pm Reply. Caesar, the head of the Roman Republic, was stabbed to death by a group of rival Roman senators on March 15, 44 B. The assassination is well-covered in classical texts, but until now, researchers had no archaeological evidence of the place where it happened.
Now, archaeologists have unearthed a concrete structure nearly 10 feet wide and 6. The structure is at the base of the Curia, or Theater, of Pompey, the spot where classical writers reported the stabbing took place. Classical texts also say that years after the assassination, the Curia was closed and turned into a memorial chapel for Caesar. The researchers are studying this building along with another monument in the same complex, the Portico of the Hundred Columns, or Hecatostylon; they are looking for links between the archaeology of the assassination and what has been portrayed in art.
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