Alsark
Noble
Obviously Cassius and Brutus are portrayed as being villains of sorts. For example, in Dante's Inferno they (along with Judas) are depicted in the ninth and final layer of Hell as being eaten eternally by Lucifer himself. I mean, obviously assassination isn't justifiable, but had they won the war to follow would Rome have ended up for the better, or was the very assassination of Caesar what caused the end of the Republic in the first place?
Rome, as a republic, was probably better than it was as an empire. As an empire, they did little to increase their territory (the height of territory prior to Caesar's assassination wasn't much smaller than the height of the Empire during Trajan's reign). Were Rome to remain a Republic, perhaps the East and West would have never split, and perhaps a single empire would have better dealt with attacks that eventually crumbled the entire empire. This isn't to say that Rome didn't have its fair share of good emperors, but whenever a bad emperor (such as Nero, Caligula, and Commodus) came along it really hurt.
So basically the question comes down to - if Cassius and Brutus had won the war against Marc Antony and Octavius, would Rome have been better off, or would Rome have been better off if they had simply not assassinated Caesar in the first place? Obviously we can't know the answer to this - it's just sort of a "alternate history" discussion.
Rome, as a republic, was probably better than it was as an empire. As an empire, they did little to increase their territory (the height of territory prior to Caesar's assassination wasn't much smaller than the height of the Empire during Trajan's reign). Were Rome to remain a Republic, perhaps the East and West would have never split, and perhaps a single empire would have better dealt with attacks that eventually crumbled the entire empire. This isn't to say that Rome didn't have its fair share of good emperors, but whenever a bad emperor (such as Nero, Caligula, and Commodus) came along it really hurt.
So basically the question comes down to - if Cassius and Brutus had won the war against Marc Antony and Octavius, would Rome have been better off, or would Rome have been better off if they had simply not assassinated Caesar in the first place? Obviously we can't know the answer to this - it's just sort of a "alternate history" discussion.