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Caligula

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Caligula (AD 12–41)

Roman emperor (AD 37–41), son of Germanicus and Agrippina the Elder, and successor to Tiberius. Caligula was a cruel tyrant and was assassinated by an officer of his guard. He appears to have been mentally unstable.

As a child he spent much time among the legions which his father commanded on the Rhine and was given the nickname, Caligula (‘bootikins’ or ‘little boots’), after the small soldiers' boots caligae he wore. As emperor, Caligula was popular at first, thanks to his liberality and the illustrious reputation of his father. However, following a serious illness AD 37 which seemed to affect his sanity, he declared himself a god and his extravagance was a severe drain on the treasury. He built a temple to himself as Jupiter Latiaris and threatened to erect his own statue in the Holy of Holies at Jerusalem. In AD 39 he went to Gaul and planned an invasion of Britain, but this was abandoned and he was assassinated, together with his wife and daughter, four months after his return to Italy.



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I had read Goldsmith's History of Rome, and had formed my opinion of Nero, Caligula, &c.
Thus a Trajan and an Antoninus, a Nero and a Caligula, have all met with the belief of posterity; and no one doubts but that men so very good, and so very bad, were once the masters of mankind.
There were Cain and Nimrod, and Nero, and Caligula, and Dionysius, and Pisistratus, and - and a thousand others, who never knew what it was to have a soul during the latter part of their lives; yet, sir, these men adorned society.
 
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