Lucius Caesetius Flavus,
tribune of the plebs in 44 BC, was deprived of his office after earning the enmity of
Caesar through is actions. Flavus, along with Lucius Epidius Marullus, had ordered the removal of crowns from Caesar's statues, and imprisoned a man who had saluted the dictator as rex. Caesar expelled them from the
senate, but Flavus became quite popular as a result of his steadfastness. The tribune "Flavius" in
Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar is based on him.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]
Caesetius Rufus, the owner of a house coveted by
Fulvia, the wife of
Mark Antony, by whom he was proscribed in 43 BC. Supposedly his death was the result of little more than Fulvia's greed.[12][13]
Lucius Caesetius Flavus,
tribune of the plebs in 44 BC, was deprived of his office after earning the enmity of
Caesar through is actions. Flavus, along with Lucius Epidius Marullus, had ordered the removal of crowns from Caesar's statues, and imprisoned a man who had saluted the dictator as rex. Caesar expelled them from the
senate, but Flavus became quite popular as a result of his steadfastness. The tribune "Flavius" in
Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar is based on him.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]
Caesetius Rufus, the owner of a house coveted by
Fulvia, the wife of
Mark Antony, by whom he was proscribed in 43 BC. Supposedly his death was the result of little more than Fulvia's greed.[12][13]