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This play details
Orgetorix as he begins planning and persuading others to join in his conspiracy. The drama was designed for there to not be any costumes worn except for swords, shields, and spears for the soldiers. This is largely due to the fact that this play was written in as a project for the
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The cause of
Casticus’ death is not detailed in the accounts given by Caesar. However, according to Rene Van Royen, it can be inferred that Casticus was either put to death swiftly upon the discovery of the conspiracy by the Helvetii or that he faced a fate similar to the one that Orgetorix faced
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author's Latin class to perform. Casticus does not appear until Act III of the play. In this act
Orgetorix persuades Dumnorix and Casticus to join the conspiracy in the hopes of gaining control of Gaul. The final act of the play is the trial of Orgetorix after the conspiracy has been revealed.
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Despite not much being known about the
Conspiracy of Orgetorix, there have been two dramas written that detail the account of what is believed to have happened. In each of these accounts Casticus makes an appearance and plays a very brief part in the drama.
127:. Each individual gave a pledge and swore an oath to one another in the hope that when they seized the sovereignty that they would be the three most powerful and valiant nations. This plan however fell apart when the conspiracy was made known to the
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Since the account of his death is missing, it is not known exactly what fate awaited
Casticus. All that is known thus far is inferred from what is known of the people and the times.
141:. William Henry Altman expands on Yves Gerhard's views of this by presenting six parallels between what he calls "The Gallic Triumvirate" and the First Triumvirate.
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Altman, William Henry
Furness (2015). "Self-Revelation and Concealment in Caesar's DE BELLO GALLICO: CICERO, Orgetorix, and the Belgae".
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99:, Casticus was a Sequanian whose father Catamantaloedes had been king for many years. It is believed that he was chosen by
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This play also details the accounts of what takes place during the formation of the conspiracy. Similar to
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to join his conspiracy because he was one of the "two most prominent chieftains within his reach."
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Some historians have found links between the
Conspiracy of Orgetorix the Helvetian,
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Horner, Brita L. (1917). "The
Conspiracy of Orgetorix, A Dramatization".
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293:. Besancon: Presses Universitaires de Franche-Comte. pp. 39–54.
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Parallels between "The Gallic
Triumvirate" and the First Triumvirate
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Dunn, Frederic
Stanley (April 17, 1909). "The Helvetian Quartet".
175:(burning) when he was brought forward for trial by the Helvetii.
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Radin, Max (1918). "Dumnorix, A Play Fabula Braccata".
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289:Van Royen, Rene (November 2004). Rethymon (ed.).
137:the Aeduan, and Casticus as an allusion to the
111:In 60 B.C. he entered into a conspiracy with
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209:The Conspiracy of Orgetorix, A Dramatization
191:The Conspiracy of Orgetorix, A Dramatization
162:Common appeal to people against aristocracy
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153:Chronological simultaneity of two triads
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16:Nobleman of the Sequani of eastern Gaul
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372:1st-century BC Gaulish tribal chiefs
159:Use of marriage for political goal
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202:Dumnorix, A Play Fabula Braccata
211:, it is also written in Latin.
156:Common goal of two conspiracies
250:Commentaries on the Gallic War
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165:Eventual defeat of coalitions
150:Secret character of alliance
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71:was a nobleman of the
335:The Classical Journal
316:The Classical Journal
291:Slavery and Conquest
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107:Conspiracy
113:Orgetorix
101:Orgetorix
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129:Helvetii
121:Dumnorix
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