![Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator](https://image.pbs.org/contentchannels/6Fs4plu-white-logo-41-6WFy6Ey.png?format=webp&resize=200x)
Caesar Sorting Rome’s Problems
Clip: Episode 3 | 2m 24sVideo has Closed Captions
Caesar implements a program of reforms, even amending the Roman calendar.
When Caesar returns to Rome after three years fighting a civil war against Pompey, the city is in dire straits. Caesar is made dictator for 10 years, and sets about implementing a program of reforms. He fixes Rome’s grain supply; he repairs Rome’s crumbling infrastructure, and has the Senate rebuilt. He also amends the Roman calendar – giving us the same calendar we use today.
![Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator](https://image.pbs.org/contentchannels/6Fs4plu-white-logo-41-6WFy6Ey.png?format=webp&resize=200x)
Caesar Sorting Rome’s Problems
Clip: Episode 3 | 2m 24sVideo has Closed Captions
When Caesar returns to Rome after three years fighting a civil war against Pompey, the city is in dire straits. Caesar is made dictator for 10 years, and sets about implementing a program of reforms. He fixes Rome’s grain supply; he repairs Rome’s crumbling infrastructure, and has the Senate rebuilt. He also amends the Roman calendar – giving us the same calendar we use today.
How to Watch Julius Caesar: The Making of a Dictator
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipCaesar is bringing in policies that are designed to heal Rome.
♪ Narrator: Caesar uses his power to put other radical policies into action.
Wallace-Hadrill: Caesar has got a hell of a lot to do to deal with all the problems that have been bubbling away and try to get Rome back on-- on an even kilter.
It's astonishing how much he could do so quickly.
Malik: A lot of things aren't working, and a lot of things need repair-- roads, infrastructure, aqueducts.
There are food shortages.
Holland: But he's in a position now to ensure that the mouths of the Roman people will be fed.
He feels that he alone has the ability and the vision to solve problems that his contemporaries had manifestly been unable to solve.
He sponsors the rebuilding and beautification of the Senate House.
He draws up plans to build the largest temple of the world on the Campus Martius.
He even has an astonishing scheme to divert the very course of the Tiber, as though he is a man so divine that with his finger, he can, you know, reorder the course of rivers.
Nothing is beyond the reach of Caesar to correct, to regulate, to improve, even the dimension of time.
The Roman calendar by Caesar's lifetime is in a state of chaos.
It doesn't synchronize at all with the rhythms of the seasons, the patterns of the years.
And so, amid all the many other things that--that Caesar is doing, he orders a recalibration of the calendar.
Wallace-Hadrill: He gives us the calendar, which we have continued to use for the next two millennia.
♪ Malik: It probably seems like life is going to get better under Caesar.
He offers the people a little bit of stability
Video has Closed Captions
As Caesar tightens his grip on Rome, he is declared "Dictator for Life." (2m 47s)
Video has Closed Captions
Caesar’s ambition turns to tyranny, and a handful of senators plot his downfall. (30s)
Video has Closed Captions
When Caesar fails to stand for a delegation of Senators, it is seen as a symbolic moment. (2m 17s)
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