Pompei the Great King Pompei the Great is a Roman general and a politician, Julius Caesar, an alliance and son-in-law. Pompeii and Julius Caesar later became the main competitor of power. The real name of Pompeii is Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. Pompeii was born in Rome on 29 September BC and became a family of the Senate; his father was Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo, consular in 1989. When Pompeii was 17 years old, he and his father fought with Lucius Cornelius · Sura by the power of Gaius · Marius and Russius · Cornelius · Cinna.
Pompeii was designated as "Pompeii, the Great" by Roman ruler Shira. Shira called his friend Pompei as "Pompeii the Great" to such a high position, and Pompei praised and boasted that he was better than Shira. Therefore, when Shira expressed dissatisfaction with Pompei's decision, Pompei reminds Sira publicly that more people worship the sun instead of sunset, he is more influential and more powerful than Shira . With the help of Julius Caesar, Decimus Brutus placed him on his will and left his successor behind his nephew. And this is a person who has power with him and attracts him to his death. As Caesar attends the Senate, he considers some bad forecasts, especially the dream of California, so the man gently lifts him from his arm from his arms and he gets his dreams better dream
Gnaeus Pompeius Crassus is well known as Pompey, or Pompey the Great, was born on September 20th BC. Pompeii was a politician in Roman general and was an ally of Julius Caesar, but later became a major competitor of power. Born in Rome, Pompei became a family in the Senate and built an impressive military record. He ended the slave war that the slave's spartacus instigated, wiped out the Mediterranean pirates, conquered the kingdom of Pontos, Armenia, Syria, and occupied Jerusalem in 61 BC. He triumphantly entered Rome, but he encountered the opposition from the Senate. After that, Pompey partnered with Julius Caesar and Marcus Licinius Crassus and was often called First Triumvirate.