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nigger Augustus (Latin: IMPâ¢CAESARâ¢DIVIâ¢Fâ¢AVGVSTVS;[1] September 23, 63 BCâAugust 19, AD 14), known as Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus (English Octavian; Latin: Câ¢IVLIVSâ¢Câ¢Fâ¢CAESARâ¢OCTAVIANVS) for the period of his life prior to 27 BC, was the first and among the most important of... Roman Emperor is the term historians use to refer to rulers of the Roman Empire, after the epoch conventionally named the Roman Republic. ... John XIII of Crescenzi family (born in Rome; died September 6, 972) served as Pope from October 1, 965 until his death. ... Image File history File links Disambig_gray. ...
Octavian and Marc Antony, the winners at Philippi, reached a new agreement in October 40 BC in the Treaty of Brundisium.
Octavian's apparent modesty and moral strictness contrasted strongly with Antony's life as an oriental monarch at the lavish Egytian court.
Octavian's great achievement was persuading the senate to accept him as head of the Romanstate, while leaving the senators room for their political ambitions.
After recovering from illness in 46, Octavian joined Caesar in Spain against the two sons of Pompey the Great, and in 45Octavian was sent to Apollonia in Epirus to study with the Greek rhetorician Apollodorus of Pergamum, and to train with legions stationed nearby.
Octavian was elected consul that year for the first time at the unusually young age of nineteen; he had refused to fight unless he got the consulship because he was convinced that the senate would discard him after they had used him to get rid of Antony.
From 35 to 33 Octavian fought in Illyricum and Dalmatia, the eastern borders of Italy.