Augustus Caesar Accomplishments

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Augustus Caesar was solely responsible for the stability of the Roman Empire because of his various prodigious accomplishments that greatly influenced the world, the building up of the Roman army to make it the most dominant army of the time, and his ingenious strategies on the reformation of the entire Roman Republic.
Augustus Caesar was was the first emperor of Rome because of his various accomplishments that contributed to the rapid growth and success of the Roman Empire. One of his first, and maybe one of his greatest while in power was the time of the “Pax Era” (time of peace). This was a long era of peacefulness and the minimal expansion of the Roman Republic starting 21 B.C. and going to about 165 B.C. This was a term that seemed far …show more content…

He would conquer smaller enemies and tax them and make alliances with larger ones, creating a flow of money into Rome while sustaining trade. He stretched trade all the way to the outskirts of China, importing many luxury items and grains. He then created a form of currency to create an organized and smooth way to trade throughout the Empire. The expansion of trade very positively affected the economy, boosting it dramatically in the right direction. This is exactly what the Roman people needed after the disastrous Roman Civil …show more content…

This battle took place only a few years after Augustus took control, so this was going to test his leadership skills. Antony was a predominant general in the Roman army, but broke away at the start of the civil war. He was seduced by Cleopatra, but then eventually came back to Rome and ended up marrying Augustus's sister. He left her daughter and went back and united once again with Cleopatra In 34 BC. After several more years of tension, Augustus Declared war on Cleopatra and Marc Antony in 31 BC. Many of Caesar’s enemies rallied against him, but that didn't stop him because with his brilliant war strategies, he essentially set the tone of the war and killed many enemy troops. On September 2, 31 BC, there fleets crashed in Actium, Greece. The largest naval battle in the history Rome's Republic was to follow. After a long and merciless fight, the Roman fleet prevailed. Thus, Cleopatra fled back to Egypt, shortly followed by Marc Antony. The helps delete that remained surrendered and it wasn’t until a year later that Augustus defeated the rest of Antony’s army and forced the two to commit

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