Caesar and Pompey Went From Besties to Civil War Enemies. No Way.

May 11, 2026
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Random History

Picture this: Pompey runs to Egypt for help, and the king he expects to save him has him murdered before he can even step onto shore. 😱 Caesar and Pompey went from political besties to full civil war enemies. No way.

👑 The Original Power Group Chat

Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus basically formed Rome’s most dangerous group chat: the alliance we call the First Triumvirate. It was not an official office. It was more like three mega-influencers quietly deciding Rome would move when they said move. 👀

Pompey brought military fame. Crassus brought absurd money. Caesar brought ambition, charm, and the terrifying ability to make chaos look like strategy. Iconic? Yes. Healthy for the republic? Absolutely not. 🔥

💅 The Marriage That Held Rome Together

Here is the wild part: Caesar sealed the friendship by marrying his daughter Julia to Pompey. Bestie became son-in-law. Politics got awkward fast. 🫠

Ancient writers say Julia genuinely helped keep the peace between them. Then she died in childbirth, and soon after Crassus died fighting Parthia. The two human shock absorbers between Caesar and Pompey were gone. 💔

⚔️ The Rubicon Was the Point of No Return

The Senate backed Pompey and told Caesar to give up his army. Caesar said, basically, “no thanks,” and crossed the Rubicon in 49 BCE. That was not just a river crossing. It was the ancient version of posting a breakup note and tagging the whole republic.

Now Rome has two celebrity generals, two armies, and zero chill. Pompey retreats east. Caesar chases. The air smells like dust, sweat, and panic. 🗡️

🏛️ Pharsalus: The Battle That Broke Rome

At Pharsalus in 48 BCE, Pompey has the bigger army. Caesar has the veterans. And veterans, unfortunately for Pompey, do not scare easily. 💀

Caesar reportedly had around 22,000 men against Pompey’s roughly 45,000. Caesar still wins because he secretly holds back a fourth line to smash Pompey’s cavalry. Wait, WHAT?! 🤯

Pompey flees. Caesar walks a battlefield full of dead Romans and supposedly says, “They would have it thus.” Not exactly a victory lap. More like a horror movie ending. 😭

💀 The Twist Nobody Forgets

Pompey escapes to Egypt, expecting shelter from King Ptolemy XIII, a former client. Instead, Ptolemy’s court decides Caesar is the better person to impress. So they murder Pompey as he lands. 😱

When Caesar arrives, they present him with Pompey’s severed head. Caesar does not celebrate. Ancient accounts say he mourns and turns away. Because even in civil war, some betrayals are too ugly. 🏛️

🔥 The Takeaway

Caesar and Pompey did not just break up. They broke the Roman Republic with them. Wild, right? ⚔️

📚 Sources & More Reading

Pompey the Great Assassinated - HISTORY

Pharsalus (48 BCE) - Livius

Historical Sources on the First Triumvirate - History Skills

First Triumvirate - Wikipedia

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