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  2. Constitutional reforms of Augustus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutional_reforms_of...

    In 28 BC Augustus invalidated the emergency powers of the civil war era and in the following year announced that he was returning all his powers and provinces to the Senate and the Roman people. After senatorial uproar at this prospect, Augustus, feigning reluctance, accepted a ten-year responsibility for the "disordered provinces".

  3. Augustus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus

    Both his adoptive surname, Caesar, and his title augustus became the permanent titles of the rulers of the Roman Empire for fourteen centuries after his death, in use both at Old Rome and at New Rome. In many languages, Caesar became the word for emperor, as in the German Kaiser and in the Bulgarian and subsequently Russian Tsar (sometimes Csar ...

  4. Constitution of the Roman Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitution_of_the_Roman...

    The first emperor, Augustus, inherited a senate whose membership had been increased to 900 senators by his predecessor, the Roman Dictator Julius Caesar. Augustus reduced the size of the senate to 600 members, and after this point, the size of the senate was never again drastically altered.

  5. Crisis of the Roman Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crisis_of_the_Roman_Republic

    The end of the Crisis can likewise either be dated from the assassination of Julius Caesar on 15 March 44 BC, after he and Sulla had done so much "to dismantle the government of the Republic", [23] or alternately when Octavian was granted the title of Augustus by the Senate in 27 BC, marking the beginning of the Roman Empire. [24]

  6. The Twelve Caesars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Twelve_Caesars

    Caesar is described as routinely wearing loose clothes. Suetonius quotes the Roman dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla as saying, "Beware the boy with the loose clothes, for one day he will mean the ruin of the Republic." This quote referred to Caesar, as he had been a young man during Sulla's Social War and subsequent dictatorship. Suetonius ...

  7. Pompey, in effect, was vested with Dictatorial powers, but his army was composed largely of untested conscripts. Caesar then crossed the Rubicon river with his veteran army, and marched towards Rome. Caesar's rapid advance forced Pompey, the Consuls and the senate to abandon Rome for Greece, and Caesar entered the city unopposed.

  8. Roman dictator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_dictator

    A Roman dictator was an extraordinary magistrate in the Roman Republic endowed with full authority to resolve some specific problem to which he had been assigned. He received the full powers of the state, subordinating the other magistrates, consuls included, for the specific purpose of resolving that issue, and that issue only, and then dispensing with those powers immediately.

  9. Talk:Augustus/Archive 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Augustus/Archive_2

    Caesar (and later Augustus) were the new Romulus (parens patriae, the title Augustus etc.), his rightful successors, they were the new gods, Father and Son, and later both were ruling from heaven as a divine entity side by side (after Augustus' apotheosis = ascension), fathers and godfathers of the new Rome, the new Iuppiter (diuus having been ...