Julian Star

E889956

Julian Star is another name for Caesar’s Comet, the bright comet that appeared in 44 BCE and was interpreted by Romans as a sign of Julius Caesar’s deification.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Julian Star canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (30)

Predicate Object
instanceOf astronomical object
comet
alsoKnownAs Caesar’s Comet NERFINISHED
Comet of Julius Caesar NERFINISHED
Sidus Iulium NERFINISHED
appearedAfter assassination of Julius Caesar
appearedInYear 44 BCE
associatedWith Julius Caesar NERFINISHED
associatedWithEvent deification of Julius Caesar
category historically recorded comet
chronologicalRelation appeared during games in honor of Julius Caesar
culturalSignificance omen in Roman religion
era 1st century BCE
hasHistoricalDebate exact nature and orbit uncertain
interpretedAs sign of Julius Caesar’s deification
linkedTo rise of Octavian (Augustus)
locationInSky northern sky (as reported by Roman sources)
mentionedIn Roman historical sources
observedBy Roman citizens
Roman priests NERFINISHED
observedFrom Rome NERFINISHED
relatedTo Roman imperial cult NERFINISHED
representedOn Roman coins
monuments honoring Julius Caesar
symbolOf divine status of Julius Caesar
imperial legitimacy
timePeriod late Roman Republic
usedFor political propaganda in support of Julius Caesar’s cult
visibility daytime visible
visibleDuration several days

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Caesar’s comet alsoKnownAs Julian Star
subject surface form: Caesar’s Comet