July was renamed for Julius Caesar, who was born that month. Before that, it was called Quintilis in Latin, meaning the fifth month in the ancient Roman calendar. However, Marc Anthony changed the name to July after Caesar’s assassination.
This was before January became the first month of the calendar year, about 450 BC. We currently use the more contemporary Gregorian calendar — recent, as in since AD 1582. It uses Anno Domini, meaning “in the year of our Lord,” counting from the birth of Jesus. As I’ve previously discussed, in this calendar curiously, Jesus was born 4 to 6 years BC or “Before Christ.”
Calendar and Julius
The Gregorian calendar was a reform of the Julian Calendar, which itself was a reform of the previous Roman calendar.
Julius Caesar himself introduced the Julian Calendar in 46 BC, adding 67 additional days by putting two intercalary months between November and December. According to Cicero, he probably did this after returning from an African military campaign in late Quntilis (July). This solved some leap-year problems.
Julius and the name Caesar
Though Julius Caesar is often called the first “Emperor of Rome,” that honor actually goes to his successor, Octavian or Augustus Caesar, to whom Julius was a great uncle. Part of the confusion about who the first Emperor was is that his cognomen of Caesar later became a synonym for “Emperor.” The title “Caesar” was subsequently used throughout the Roman Empire, giving us the more modern cognates of Kaiser and Tsar.
His “family name,” or gens, was Julia. They held they descended from Julus, son of the legendary Trojan prince Aeneasfrom Greco-Roman mythology, who was himself reputedly the son of the goddess Venus. The Greek version of this story is in Homer‘s Illiad. The Roman version, Virgil‘s Aeneid, tells how Aeneas was the ancestor of Romulus and Remus, the heroic founders of Rome.
Julius Caesar played a significant role in Rome’s transformation from a Republic to an Empire. He rose to the position of “perpetual dictator,” and his conquest of Gaul and his invasion of Britain extended the Roman world to the North Sea. He was a general, statesman, member of the First Triumvirate (with Crassus and Pompey), and “dictator for life,” dictator perpetuo.
His family, Julia, was the beginning, at the very height of Roman government, of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, which lasted until Nero’s demise in AD 68.
Historical Trivia to Impress Your Friends:
The “Julio-Claudian dynasty” comprised the first five Roman emperors: Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero. This name comes from the two families who composed this Imperial dynasty: the Julii Caesares and Claudii Nerones. The “Flavian dynasty,” from AD 69 and 96, succeeded them, involving the reigns of Vespasian and his two sons Titus and Domitian.
Caesarian-Section for Caesar?
The story that Julius Caesar was born by Caesarian section is colorful but inaccurate. The story dates back at least to the 10th century, but Julius wasn’t the first to take the cognomen Caesar, and it was unlikely that he was born by this method. During his day, the procedure was only performed on mothers who died during childbirth. We know that Aurelia, Caesar’s mother, lived long after his birth. The etymology of caesarian may well have come from cadere, “to cut.”
I was born by Caesarean section, but you really can’t tell…
except that when I leave my house, I always go out the window. — Steven Wright
Bill Petro, your friendly neighborhood historian
billpetro.com
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