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World history
Course: World history > Unit 2
Lesson 6: From Roman Republic to Roman EmpireAugustus and the Roman Empire
Octavian is victorious over Marc Antony and Cleopatra and becomes Augustus, first emperor of the Roman Empire.
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- What happened to lepides, it seems like he was killed, because I dought anyone who made a wrong move back then, was able to get away unharmed.(3 votes)
- Lepides is given the power to overturn acts passed by the Congress and signed into law by the President Comment originally posted on July 18,2007pm. 5:37(0 votes)
- At the beginning of the Second Triumvirate, Octavian seems to have little power, and then he builds his power up until he eventually defeats the other two (Lepidus and Marcus Antonius).
How did he consolidate his power and build it up when the other failed? Did Julius Caesar teach him to be a good leader? It can't be pure luck.(2 votes)- At the beginning of the campaign to choose the American Republican party's 2016 presidential nominee in 2016, there were 11 or 12 candidates. How did the eventual nominee, who had little power, eventually defeat the others? Was it pure luck, or did he have someone (an Uncle Vladimir, for instance) to teach him to be such a good candidate?(3 votes)
- So did Lepidus die? Did he surrender? Didn’t he have any troops to fight with?(3 votes)
- The 'Donations of Alexandria' was held in 34 BCE and the successful invasion of Armenia happened in 33 BCE. Is this the correct timeline?(2 votes)
- Calendars and datings are flexible. The difference of a 33 and a 34 so long ago is with the acceptable range of error, don't you agree?(2 votes)
- what happen to anthony's wife(2 votes)
- So who is Octavian?(1 vote)
- Caesar Augustus (born Gaius Octavius; 23 September 63 BC – 19 August AD 14), also known as Octavian, was the first Roman emperor; he reigned from 27 BC until his death in AD 14.(2 votes)
- A little off topic but, how did CE people or our current time figure out the names of people far back then for example, Julius Caesar, Cleopatra ,Octavian , and Augustus? Its a question i always wondered.(1 vote)
- All of these persons whom you name left deep historical traces in the records of the lands where they made a mark. The Roman empire, like many previous to it, kept records of military, political, business and property dealings.(2 votes)
- Anautocratic goverment is a system in which decisons are made by?(1 vote)
- Autocratic governments are governments in which the main ruler has the majority of the power. Whatever the ruler wants, the country does. This style of government makes policy and takes action quickly, but too often doesn't act in the best interests of the country and the world. Some examples of autocratic governments could be those of Qatar, Eritrea, and North Korea.(1 vote)
- when Marc Antony and Octavian are calling each other out publicly as "false rulers" why don't they just kick the other out of the Triumvirate (or Duovirate, as Lepidus has already been kicked out) and call themselves the "True Ruler" of the Roman Empire?(1 vote)
- Once one member left the Triumvirate, the group simply disbanded all together.(1 vote)
- The story of Cleopatra sounds like a twisted version of Romeo and Juliet except Antony wanted his slave to murder him but instead the slave, Eros, stabbed his own self with the sword.(1 vote)
- Romeo and Juliet is fiction, and pretends to be nothing else. But that doesn't mean that its author, whoever she or he may have been, didn't use themes and tropes from events and situations regarded and documented as "history." Some of the best fiction has elements of history within it, and some of the most mundane history can appear to be fiction.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] We finished the last video in the year 40 B.C.E.,
where the year began with the Parthian invasion of
Syria in the eastern provinces of the Roman Republic, and
it really is an empire, the Roman Republic or the Roman Empire. But Marc Antony, who was
in control of the east of the empire, he wasn't able
to deal with it immediately because he goes to
Brundisium in order to take his wife's side on a civil
war between her and Octavian. Now, his wife dies and he
makes good with Octavian, in fact, so good with Octavian, he marries OCtavian's sister, Octavia, and they decide, alright, let's
continue to be friends here and they divide the Roman
Empire, the Roman Republic, whatever you wanna call it, between them, where Marc Antony keeps
control of the east, you now have Octavian
with control over the west and they gave Lepidus, who's always a bit of the third wheel here, they gave him some of the southern
provinces right over there. Now it seems like all is good, but as we've already talked about, the tension between Antony
and Octavian is there, it was there from the
beginning and in this video, we're going to see that it
gets a lot, a lot worse. So Marc Antony goes back to the east, where he starts planning
his invasion of Parthia, not only does he wanna
take back the territory that they took in 40 B.C.E.,
but he actually wants to avenge them for
Crassus' death in 53 B.C.E. Julius Caesar had been
planning an invasion of Persia, and you have to remember,
after Alexander the Great, all of these western rulers,
especially the Romans, they all had their sights
on Persia, they said, "Hey, maybe I can be just
like Alexander the Great "and take over the Persians." So Marc Antony is planning
his invasion of Persia but he doesn't get the troops
that he wants from Octavian and so that starts to build
the tensions even further but he goes to his lover,
Cleopatra, who is the richest woman in the world, the
pharaoh of Egypt, and says, "Hey can you give me
some Egyptian troops?" And so he plans an
invasion of Parthian Persia with a combined Roman and Egyptian troops. Now unfortunately, that
is a failed invasion. As they try to make their
way in, they get pretty far, but they weren't able to
protect their supply lines carefully and so the Parthians
are able to attack them, attack their supply
lines and while they do, the king of Armenia just kinda
doesn't really do anything about it and so Marc
Antony is forced to retreat and so you can imagine, he's
not too happy about this. The Parthians in 40
B.C.E. were able to take all of this territory, in 36 B.C.E., so now we are right
over here, in 36 B.C.E., we have a failed revenge
invasion of the Parthians, he's betrayed by the Armenian king. Now the other thing that's happening is that Lepidus is now
out of the triumvirate. He tries to do a little bit of a land grab after him and Octavian go after
another governor in Sicily, but when they're successful,
when Lepidus tries to take control of Sicily,
Octavian says, "No no no no, "not only can you not do that, "but you're now out of the triumvirate." So 36 B.C.E. is a situation where Octavian continues to try to consolidate
his power in the west, Lepidus is now out, and
Marc Antony faces another, I guess you could say embarrassment
against the Parthians. So then we get to 33 B.C.E. So let's see, this is 33 B.C.E.
right over here on this map and finally, he's able to
muster up enough of a force to take not revenge on the Parthians, but to take some of the
territory, but in particular, to take revenge on the Armenian king. And so Marc Antony, it's
his first win after awhile, tries to make a lot of
this, and so when he goes, he goes back to Alexandria,
where of course his lover Cleopatra reigns, and there,
he has this big celebration to say, "Hey look, I went and was able "to take out the king of Armenia." Now this celebration, it rubs
the Romans in a wrong way on a whole bunch of dimensions. One, they never really like Cleopatra, they view her as a foreign
queen, they didn't like her when she was Julius Caesar's
lover, they definitely don't like her when she's
Marc Antony's lover, and they're kind of peeved that
he decides to go Alexandria and do this ceremonial victory party that typically only happened in Rome, it looks like this guy doesn't really even view himself as Roman anymore. He likes to go back to Alexandria. And the real salt that he rubbed, especially in Octavian's wounds, was a speech he gave
which will later be known as the Donations of Alexandria. So what he starts doing
is putting his children, especially the children
that he has with Cleopatra, as the rulers of a lot
of the eastern provinces. But the worst thing that
he does, is in that speech, in the Donations of Alexandria,
this is in 33 B.C.E., right over here, he declares
that Cleopatra's son that was apparently the
son of Julius Caesar, Caesarion, that he is the
rightful heir to Julius Caesar. Now, Octavian does not like this, he says, "Hey, I'm the adopted son,
I'm the rightful heir, "I don't like this Caesarion guy." And so for the next few
years, in 33 and 32 B.C.E., so we're in this period on that timeline, we're in this period on this timeline, tensions start to get
a lot, lot, lot worse between Octavian and Marc Antony, they are publicly accusing
each other of not even being legitimate people with
legitimate authority, they are really starting
to question each other, they're really starting
to go at each other. And it all culminates in 31 B.C.E., it all culminates in 31
B.C.E., so this is where we are right over here, with the
naval battle at Actium. And for the most part, and
Marc Antony and Cleopatra are both there, and
they're on their heels, they're surrounded by
the forces of Octavian, and the best that they can
hope for is just an escape and Antony and Cleopatra
are able to escape and it's very clear from that battle that they really only cared
about saving their own hides and their own wealth, and they
left the most of their navy, they returned with only
60 boats to Alexandria but they leave most of
their navy to kind of have to deal with the forces of Octavian. So they were already on their heels, they have this escape in 31 B.C.E., many historians will call
the Battle of Actium, and this is a depiction of
the naval battle at Actium right over here, as the end, after this, there was no chance, really,
for Cleopatra and Marc Antony in any way, to rival Octavian,
that Octavian was now the real sole power in what is evolving from a Roman Republic to a Roman Empire. But Antony and Cleopatra,
maybe they didn't realize it as much, they go back to
Alexandria and continue to plot, seeing how they can get back at Octavian. So Octavian doesn't want much of this, so he decides to go attack
them in Alexandria in 30 B.C.E. And Antony tries to make a
last stand against Octavian but his soldiers really
aren't in the mood to fight so he goes back to the palace,
he looks for Cleopatra, Cleopatra gets one of her
servants to tell Marc Antony, 'cause she has no mood to
see him, because who knows, he's raving mad, he might
wanna kill her or kill him, who knows what he might wanna do, Cleopatra had her servant tell Marc Antony that Cleopatra was dead
and so Marc Antony, he's already down, his
soldiers have deserted him, there's no way for him to take
on Octavian, he's essentially lost, and now Cleopatra, his
lover, is apparently dead. He stabs himself
repeatedly in the stomach. Now, Cleopatra finds out about
this and then she has Marc Antony brought to him, he
doesn't die immediately, stabbing yourself in the stomach is a way of having a very slow and painful death. And he dies essentially in her arms. And then Cleopatra is
taken, then, by the forces of Octavian, but then she too decides that she wants to commit
suicide or at least that's what most accounts say
and the most common account is that she gets a snake
smuggled into her rooms, a poisonous snake that she
taunts and gets to bite her, which allows her to die, so
both Cleopatra and Marc Antony die in 30 B.C.E., and Octavian now, really the main power, he kills Caesarion, who was Cleopatra's
son with Julius Caesar, as the only possible rival, and
so here we are on 30 B.C.E., Octavian is victorious and
then he goes back to Rome and continues to consolidate his power. Until we get to 27 B.C.E.,
which is often marked as the beginning of the Roman Empire, when Octavian was given the name Augustus, which means illustrious
one, and from then on, he will continue to reign
with more and more and more power that he continues to consolidate for many, many, many, many more decades.