this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2025
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Many of Caesar's reforms were also repealed after his death, though. Just because they were repealed by people claiming to be his defenders doesn't change that.
The Second Triumvirate's power was only enabled, though, by the breakout of civil war. If Caesar had died of a heart attack in his sleep on the Ides of March, it's doubtful that the figures of the Second Triumvirate would've been nearly so well-placed to seize such extraordinary power.
See, this I have to strongly disagree with - the secrecy of the First Triumvirate was not proof of the Republic's functioning, but rather proof that the First Triumvirate was a very different beast than the Second. There's a reason I compared the Second Triumvirate to the extraordinary commands post-Sulla rather than the First Triumvirate.
The First Triumvirate was a political alliance wherein three powerful politicians sought to achieve their goals without uniting the reactionary (in both senses, but in this case, in the sense of literal reaction - opposing anything that seemed too likely to succeed) opposition against them. Not that their goals were largely anything laudable, but the First Triumvirate was not-unusual-politiking whose only unusual feature was the small number of men involved compared to past-such alliances - itself a result of the Late Republic's dysfunction.
The Second Triumvirate - as you mentioned - was an official commission wherein figures were granted extraordinary and unconstitutional powers, not simply powerful politicians agreeing to cooperate in the face of an opposition all-too-eager to unite against them. The First Triumvirate did nothing illegal by the laws and norms of the Republic (or nothing illegal by its existence - obviously arguments can be made for several of the Triumvirs' individual actions as politicians); the Second Triumvirate inherently bypassed the legal norms and processes of the Republic.
Of course, I agree entirely with that!
I would (and did) argue that Caesar predeceased the Republic, but if we're regarding the Second Triumvirate as proof of the Republic's death, then Caesar was on the crime scene when the Republic was found dead, but quite literally as a fellow corpse. It would seem more intuitive to me to treat the squabbling couple as both murdered by the same forces, regardless of the history of domestic violence.
Don't worry, I understood you meant 'shitty Lemmy comment' as the futility of any Lemmy comment tracing out the causes of the Republic's fall to an academic degree, not any comment already made in particular!