Author Topic: Julius Caesar may have been less heroic than previously imagined  (Read 458 times)

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rangerrebew

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 Julius Caesar may have been less heroic than previously imagined
7/10/2018 09:00:00 PM Email

The world-renowned general Julius Caesar may have been rather less heroic than we imagine, in terms of victories as well as physique. Caesar was largely bald and had a deformed skull, resulting from difficulties during his birth. As for military campaigns, he suffered his greatest defeat in the Low Countries, possibly near the Dutch city of Maastricht, according to new research suggesting that he fought a substantial proportion of the Gallic Wars in the northern part of Gaul.

 
These findings emerged from the research conducted by the archaeologist and author Tom Buijtendorp on Caesar’s activities in the Low Countries, in response to the mounting pile of clues for his presence here. Buijtendorp’s research was recently published in the book Caesar in de Lage Landen (Caesar in the Low Countries). His findings about Caesar’s countenance in combination with one of the oldest portraits of Caesar from the collection of the Dutch national museum of antiquities (the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden), were the basis for an alternative ’new’ face. The reconstruction of this face is currently on show in the museum.

Read more at https://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2018/07/julius-caesar-may-have-been-less-heroic.html#fLI6WcA6D4J0mh0X.99