Caligula declares himself a god, appoints his horse, Incitatus (Swift), consul, senator and priest
Caligula, Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (b 31 August 12 AD, d 24 January 41 AD), was Roman emperor 37–41 AD.
Caligula has been described as insane, angry and self-absorbed. He killed on a whim for amusement, and indulged in too much sex and extravagance. He is accused of incest with his three sisters, Agrippina the Younger, Drusilla, and Livilla, and prostituting them to others. He also cuckolded other men by sleeping with their wives and bragging about it.
He deliberately wasted money on building his two-mile-long floating bridge, which caused mass starvation.
In 40 AD, Caligula addressed the senate revealing his plan to leave Rome permanently and moving to Alexandria, Egypt, where he hoped to be worshiped as a living god.
Caligula’s cruelty, sadism, sexual perversity and extravagance finally led to his assassination when he was 28 years old.
[Prepared by an affiliated team of researchers.]
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