Julius Caesar

 

The life and times of Julius Caesar

 

1.     Julii Family

a.      The Julii Family did not just go “poof” from no hwere.

b.     The julli family are an ancient Jewish bloodline born in Egypt, some evacuated out of the way of way of the invading armies. Some were captured and put to work in the jeish slave shield wall.

c.      Those who evacuated in time traveled to “The City of Samhain(pronounced 7) hills” which could be to honor “the 7 pyramiads/hills of Israel”

d.      

2.     The Punic War

3.     Hannibal Barka

4.     Birth

5.     First years

6.     Training to become High Priest of Jupiter

7.     The Temple of Jupiter

8.     Diplomatic trip to turkey

9.     Converting to Judaism

10.  Return to Rome

11.  Joining the army

12.  The hunt for Spartacus

a.      His name was not Spartacus, that was his slave name given/forced on him previous to being sold to the House of Batiatus a Gladiator Academy or Ludis

b.     His name has been lost to common hisotyr

c.      But his connection to Hannibal Barka is much easier to establish

d.     He is likely a direct blood descendant of Hanniba Barka.

e.      Since the THraicaians knew flat out that the Romans were coming to capture thrace, kill many, and enslave the rest for profit and pleasure.

f.      The plan was simple. Trojan Horse the Thracian Army into slavery. Make the Romans transport them to Rome. Where they would survive and learn as much as they could about the inner workings of Roman life. Then at a given signal; rise up and begin a revolt which would eventually destroy the Plantation System of the Roman Republic to replace it with an Imperical System. But that Imperical System was itself supposed to be something different than what happened. The city and the entire empire was supposed to be handed back to the Jews and the new king of the Jews. But that only semi-happneed. The Roman Senate figured out what the plan was and prevented it from happening after the Crucifixion

g.     the Thracian commanding general ordered his soldiers to surrender to the romans “believably”

h.     so they would be taken back to rome under roman expensive.

i.       Same people who would have died fighting against the invasion from the thracians, enjoyed taking their enemy from thrace to rome. Arrogantly and egotistically bragging about how meek and timid the Thracian warriors were “giving up so easily”.

j.       Spartacus and his army trained in Rome for 2 years. Learning close to eerythign theyr was to kow about Roman life. As slaves.

k.     The females were put to work as prostetutes, the males were etiehr put to work in the fields, or in the ludis. To die in the areana’s.

l.       But the problem was. The entire Thracian culture trained for their entire life’s for this situation. They were so prepared for a façade life as a slave, they took to it with eager abandon. The more of them pleased roman culture as slaves, the more would survive till the order came.

m.    

13.  The Spartan Revolt

a.      The Spartan Revolt was an incredible event in the history of the Empire. It is 70% truth and 30% pure fiction.

b.     The fiction being anything and everything which made the Romans look bad.

c.      The Trojan Horse being one of the major aspects which made the Romans look bad.

d.     Being defeated by an extremely well organized Jewish army was also very low on the list of acceptable concepts. The romans were flat out enraged by the prospect.

e.       

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15.  The deals made between the Julii family and Spartacus

a.      The Julii family for the first year kept out of the fray of the revolt.

b.     But they spent time sending their most bitter enemies, and generals of the roman army who were so arrogant, egotistica, and narcissistic to “defeat the army” they did not get into the fight till Spartacus had killed more than 100,000 soldiers and about 15 of Romes Top Generals.

c.      The 20 or so top generals still alive were on the front and unable to pull out of the fights they were in, or were not interested at all I participating in battles with soldiers profoundly better then they were. They would loose and loose so badly, they themselves might not survive.

d.     Another solution was required.

e.      A high ranking merchant, who came from a family present in rome from say one. Which means his family were likely secret Jews. Was asked by the senate to engage his own army, pay for it himself, be given the rank of general, under the supervision of 3 of the best generals Roman had left alive. Including  Lucius Cornelius Sulla, the Lucius family were partners with the JUlii family and in some cases senate forced enemies. The families were often forced against each other in combat in order to keep the families in line and to prevent them from being a threat to the republic. But would never risk their own troops in said war; they knew their own troops would be killed and the rest of their own lives was close to a guarantee. The thracians figured out thanks to Hannibal how to defeat Roman Tacktics. The Lucia family only did close and complex deals with other Jewish families. Which means that Marcus Licinius Crassus was also a Jew. The second richest man in all of Rome was a Jew, but his façade religioun prevented him from being more than a middle ranked military commander under the Lucia family. Till the Spartan Revolt that is. he was placed in charge of the Army under the supervision of the Lucia family in partnership with the Julii family, and its representative Julius Caesar to go and defeat Spartacus.

f.      The Romans had not updated their tactics from the Punic Wars 150 previous to then. They were easy to defeat by Hannibal, easier to defeat now.

g.     But that was embarrassing for Rome, so those details were not include in official Roman hsitoyr books. Which were the only history books allowed. Must be nice to force govenrmnt propaganda on the population and force them to “believe it”.

h.     1000 years later, there is no question as to if roman propaganda is the true facts of hsitoyr. Aademics also created by the Roman EMire asserts those documents are true, so there is no reason whatsoever to question if the propaganda is true.

i.       Other than all aspects of the entire situation.

j.       That Rich Merchant agreed to become a Roman Genearl, upon his successful completion of Killing the façade of Spartacus he was given a seat in the Roman Senate. A seat his and the julii family would work very hard to swing politics into the direction needed to create “Imperical Rome” with. But remember they are Jews, not polytheistic. Being Jews, means the entire situation they are working from being Monotheistic is different than the direction and goals of a polytheistic culture.

k.     The rich merchants name Marcus Licinius Crassus, being a Jew he was not allowed into normal Roman Culture. His ancestors in the centuries previosu had openly practiced Judaism. He was prevented from being a full roman citizen because of it. He was a citizen, but not a fully and completely respected one. Much less rich romans had brought their way into the senate. Crassus owned several properties in Rome Propper, but was still not allowed to rise above station. Till he defeated Spartacus. Or that is what he told the senate.

l.       He killed Spartacus by taking every last slave in his army and crucifying them all.

m.   Which pleased the raomns to absolutely no end. They could take day trips on the appien way and enjoy the rotting corpses of the Spartacus slaves.

16.  Spartcaus Negotiation

a.      But there is something the Romans like more than they do sadistic premeditated torturous murder. They like money amove all else.

b.     The Julii and Lucia family negotiated with the Senate to give tons and tons of gold to each senator if Spartacus and his key several 1000 soldiers were allowed to purchase their freedom, kill key enemies of the senate, and open up lands for the senators to expand their power in and outside the city walls.

c.      The owners would need to be killed, but htat is hwat the spartan army was not in the same league as the roman army at performing. The roman army had no chance against the Thracian amry.

d.     Spartan tactics, added to Thracian tactics, added to gladioter training. The spartans were undefeatable.

e.      The senate after 6 months of 100s of estates were erased from existence. The neighborning senators were able to at zero cost absorb huge 1000s acre estates into their own already in existence 10,000 acre estates. Expxanding their power and influence exponentially. The senators who formerly owned those estates were either invited to leave or were killed flat out.

f.      Huge amounts of money, huge expansion of lands, and of course huge expansions of each senators power. They wree all in.

g.     Spartacus was given his real name, titles, and several estates which he had already caprured and set up his own Thracian defenses at. The senate officially transferred the title deeds to him and his top commanders.

h.     This is the interesting part.

i.       Just before the end battles

17.  North and south 3 times

a.      The Spartacus army left capua to head to Vesuvius

b.     Spent months at Vesuvius

c.      Then traveled north, got to the alps

d.     Traveled all the way down to the boot tip

e.      Traveled back north to the alps.

f.      Travels back to just a short distance away from rome itself.

g.     Hwere the army was finally defeated.

h.     On Spartacus’ way south for the second time. A huge revolt began in his ranks, and several groups of his solderis split off.

i.       One of the most annoying of the Spartacu army groups were the Ga’als. Who refused to cooperate almost the entire time with the Thracians.

j.       The roamns claimed that group, several hundred miles away from Spartacu’s group were so nasty they decided that they would make a better way for htsemvels. They were surrounded and entirely destoyred by the Roman Army. Their commander was supposedly Crixus although the real Crixus had left the group when they reached the alps the second time. He had a mission to travel around his homeland to spy, and let his family kknow the Romans were on their way and would defeat them.

k.     His men scouted all of the area to make it easy for Julius Caesar to come up in a few years and defeat the bad cultures, and have his family cutlulres to merge into Roman culture and accept Civis Romanus with ease. The bad cultures and dark war lords their defenses were so well known by the time Caesar arrived he knew exactly how to defeat every single culture present. He already knew how many “bad cultures were around”, he had already negotiated thanks to Crixus and his family to have 100s of cities lay down their defenses and welcome rome with open arms.

l.       The Germans in Spartacus’ command did exactly the same time. But instead of heading to Gaal they headed east of the rhine to do the same thing. spy and identify. They be able to hand all that intel to Caesar.

m.   The thing to kow abot the Spartan revolt is, the thracians already knew hard and strong who they could trust and who were going to be roman spy's.

n.     The spy's were also very useful.

o.     The spy's were allowed to enter and interact freely. But were never tursted.

p.     Some of the thracians, Gaals, and Germans had been in on “The Plan” to trojan horse into the Republic for a decade before Spartacus was captured. The slaves who wanted to not be slaves were identified, the slaves who were just that, and the slaves who were pretend spy's had been well and thoroughly identified.

q.     The good slaves were released on the first and second trip to the alps. The majority of the spy's and bad slaves who would turn back into romans at the slightest hint of a shift in pwer were kept in the main group.

r.      The main group were who were captured and executed on the apian way.

s.      When Spartacus and his 10,000s of men left. They did not leave because they wanted to. They left because the spy's and bad slaves began their own revolt and wanted to seize control over the army to have the same riches and success as Spartacus.

t.      Spartacus simply allowed this revolt to happen, and allowed others to take on the name “spartcaus” to leave the slave revolt. They lasted a few weeks before being killed.

u.     Spartacus under his original name tralved to his estate and spent time preparing for the second part of the plan.

v.     That second part of the plan involved Caesar negotiation with the Ogle family in the Kingdom of Ogle in Britain for the hand of Cleopatra.

w.    Since Cloeptra’s ancestors were safetly in their own kingdom. With defenses more than capable of defeating anything the Hyksos descendent armies could throw at them.

18.  After the revolt

a.      Spartacus and his men prose no threat to the rebluic and they are happy.

b.     Both sides complete negotiations and are happy.

c.      The senate gives Crassus a seat in the senate. Although it pisses some of the other senators off, they do not want to be killed so they cooperate.

d.     But anticipating the issues, which would come. The second part of the plan kicks into motion.

e.      The julii family became so rich during the spartan revolt they alsmot did not have any idea how to spend all the money.

f.      They expanded their army to a point of being capable of taking over all the other leagions of Rome itself. They could attack Rome and win.

g.     So the senate forced Julius Caesar to take his huge and extmreely wlel trained army north to run down any of the Spartacus slaves who might have escaped into first Gaal and then germany and either kill them or place them back into slavery.

h.     Knowing full well this was what was going to happen.

i.       Caesar left immediately to conquer gaal.

j.       He arrived and with the coopartion of Crixus achieved the perfect and extremely well planned out conquest of Gaal.

k.     He started to send back huge amounts of money, slaves, huge body counts, and 1000s of cities ready for Romans to move into.

l.       But the speed at his accomplishemts did alarm the Senate.

m.   He then far enough north of the alps to only be foothills, truned east towards germany.

n.     In germany he defeated a few enemies. But mostly he expanded and marched for days unopposed.

o.     Returning to Rome. To gain permission to invade Britain.

p.      

19.  Rome

a.      Back in Rome.

b.     Caesar was the second riches, largest, and most pwerful roman citizen in all of rome. He commanded close to a million troops. Was so rich he needed dozens of vaults to hold it all. He had estates in Rome proper which equaled a sizable portion of the city itself. Several were more than 100 acres each.

c.      Several were on the tiber, several on the Hills. A huge 1000 acre estate around the Vatican hill, plane, and of course the swamp between.

d.     He was rich, but also the largest threat Rome had ever seen since Hannibal.

e.       

20.  Invasion of Britain

a.      Almost immediately after Caesar was given permission by the senate to invade Britain, he left.

b.     They gave him pmiersio mostly because he was too powerful to say no to.

c.      Each time he went on a military campaign he not only succeeded but he came back more pwerufl, richer, and of course with a larger army.

d.     Britain would not be an exeption

e.      Caesar arrived in Britain

f.      Attacking and conquering city at after city.

g.     Sending part of his forces east to what is currently understadoot to be the boarder of wales. The bulk of his forces north to York. Continnueing north to newCastle.

h.     Where his forces simply stopped and proceeded with no military success north of hwer the wall would be constructed in 180 years.

i.       He sat and simply negotiated for moniths if not years at NewCAstle.

j.       Then abruptly left leaving only a token of soldiers north nad allwing  a resort town to be built “Bath” about 50 miles away from the capital of wales. The commanders he palced in charge of Newcastle were hand picked by the senate and almost to a man entirely incompenant. Most were killed quckly.

k.     Most of the soldiers of the roman army were killed in that 70 mile strentch from Glasgow to Newcastle from that day till the last day of the roman empire. The defenses were simply too strong. And solciers on the north side were absolutely better than the romans in all ways.

l.        

21.  Caesar returns to Rome

a.      Along with lots of help, Caesar turns the republilc into an emire with himself as Emperor.

b.     He is too pwerufl, rich, wth too huge an army to say no to.

c.      Caesar was a huge and impressive threat to the republic 10 years previosu, he was not only a threat but he was one of the most poweful pepel on the planet at the time. Which was needed in order to ahcive the next goals in the third part of the plan.

d.     Caesar was too pwerful not to be invited to be a senator of Rome. Despte the fact he was a Jew.

e.      He was simply just flat out too pwerufl. He owned too much of Rome to not allow him to be a senator. He oculd purchase lock stock and all of the senators of rome who considered thsemvesl rich. He could purchase their “everything” and not notice the pinch to his vaults.

f.      If he wanted to purchase your estate, minus Crassus and a few dozen others, they could not say no.

g.     Several of Caesars former friends and extended family generals disagreed to the ultimate degree regarding the switch from republic to empire.

h.     They revolted against him

i.       Which was part of the plan.

j.       They had no where to run to but some portions of Greece, and of course Egypt.

k.     He needed them to go to Egypt.

l.       Which gave him the ultimate escuse to take his most of the entire Roman Army he contorled down to Egytp. The third part of the plan kicked in.

m.    

22.  Invasion of Egypt

a.      Although Cleopatra and portions of her family were well aware of the plan, and had agreed to portiosn of it. Other portions of her family did not agree to an extreme amount

b.     But cleoptra was several things. Firstt she was extmreely smart, she did not look like an egytian she was more greek Amazon (6’ tall, pale skin, bright blue eyes, flame red hair) and anything else. She was taller than most of the soldiers in her army. Her body guards were all over 6’2” in order to make her appear smaller. Most were in the 6’6” range. When they arrived in Rome, it is difficult to determine who scared the Senatros at 5’4” more. Cleopatra or her body guards.

c.      Once Caesar defeated his main roman Eniemimes. And killed teh members of the ptolomaic family who refused to cooperate with the greater plan. Including cleopatras 12 year old husband/brother. Cleopatra was entirely free to marry the emperor of Rome. Which they did. but the ROMans refused flat out to even attampet t acknowledge let along accept in any way, shape or form.

23.  Enter Cleopatra

a.      There is no possible way Caesar could have gained permission from her family and extended family without having a significatnt to a maximum degree both military title and political title. He already possessed an ancient from Jacob blood line. But he needed the other two. He had trained in his youth to be an ordained priest of the temple of Jupiter.

b.     The pre King David name of rhte city of Jerusalem levant lands is

24.  Caesar and Cleopatra

a.      In Julius Caesars life from the point he married in Egypt Cloeopatra

25.  Anthony

a.      Cleoptra would never had let Anthony touch her, forget having sex with her. There is less than zero chance that the Pharaoh of Egypt would let a low level, non royal, non titled, non head of the army, non important, non senator of rome, etc. he was nothing other than a fantasic exectuvie officer for Caesar.

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35.  Execution