The Course of History: Julius Caesar
What if Julius Caesar’s most famous weapon wasn’t a sword or a legion, but his own pen—and what if that weapon was almost turned against him? This episode uncovers the story of Gaius Julius Tiro, not the famous Cicero’s secretary, but Caesar’s own chief scribe and archivist, who attempted one of history’s most consequential acts of literary sabotage. We delve into the chaotic aftermath of the Battle of Pharsalus, tracing Tiro’s secret plot to alter, delay, and misplace the scrolls of Caesar’s *Commentaries on the Gallic War*. Motivated by a hidden loyalty to the senatorial ideal and a personal grievance over his family’s treatment, Tiro’s bureaucratic rebellion aimed to cripple Caesar’s narrative control at a critical political moment. The episode pieces together how this quiet war in the scriptorium threatened to undermine Caesar’s legitimacy and how the plot was ultimately discovered. Listeners will gain a new appreciation for the immense power of information management in the ancient world, seeing the *Commentaries* not just as military history, but as vital, time-sensitive political propaganda. We explore the fragile chain of slaves, freedmen, and copyists upon which Caesar’s reputation depended, revealing a vulnerability no enemy on the battlefield could ever exploit. The survival of Caesar’s story hinged on stopping the man who was supposed to preserve it. #AncientPropaganda #InformationWarfare #CaesarsCommentaries #ScribeSabotage #RomanArchives #LiteraryHistory #GallicWar Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
20 episodios
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