History remembers Caligula (r. 37–41 CE) through a lens of madness, depravity, and divine pretension. However, the "index" of his life—the collection of records that shape our understanding—is a complex mosaic of contemporary bias, late-antique sensationalism, and modern historical revisionism. To study Caligula is to navigate a catalog of extremes, where the transition from a beloved young "Princeps" to a murderous despot is documented by those who had every reason to see him fail. The Bibliography of a "Madman"
As a toddler, Gaius was dressed in a miniature soldier’s uniform, including the index of caligula
The version that shocked the world.
When you search for the you aren’t just looking for a list of dates or a table of contents. You are diving into a curated catalog of excess, madness, and the complex mechanics of absolute power. Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Germanicus—better known by his childhood nickname, Caligula ("Little Boots")—reigned for only four years (37–41 AD), yet he occupies a larger space in our cultural consciousness than almost any other Roman figure. History remembers Caligula (r
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