Julius Caesar was a great military general who, after having been removed from his governorship of Gaul by the Roman senate, staged a coup and took control of Rome by force, the person with whom he was once aligned to take control of the empire. Although he is often portrayed as a tyrannical dictator, Julius Caesar was somewhat of a champion of the people. He eliminated the heavy taxes levied on farmers and granted any Roman citizen with three or more sons land. He also made the dealings of the Roman senate public by posting an account of them for the public to read and realigned the Roman calendar to coincide with the seasons. He also declared himself ruler for life.
Since his lineage could be traced to the founding of Rome, the role of the Caesars came to be associated with the role of the gods, who had more power than senators in the eyes of Romans. All of these actions infuriated the senate, which felt that he had compromised its power. This ultimately led to the senate attack on Julius Caesar that killed him.
Using latin as a primary language
Aqueducts transport water, they are like the things that supply water to faucets and the sewers
hmm
a. enhanced understanding of human ailments and injuries
not reallyh, that just give water,not wisdom or anything, and injuries are
like stabs, so water doesn't help with understanding stabs
b. improved public sanitation and access to fresh water
duh, this is true
c. sped up transportation across the empire
unless people were small enough to travel in these aqueducts, they couldn't travel using these, also it wouldn't be clean to polute the water with people, the answer for this option would be roads
d. made it easier for Roman officials to rule the provinces
what, they shut the water off or something? send letters down the channel?
the right answer is b
The Khmer Rouge were the one's that <span>took power in Cambodia immediately after Vietnam War</span>