Career
According to Tacitus, before Chaerea"s service in the Praetorians, he distinguished himself with his bravery and skill in helping to subdue the mutiny on the Germanic frontier immediately after the death of Augustus in 14 Civil Engineering. Chaerea was disturbed by the increasingly unbalanced emperor, and angered at Caligula"s mocking of his voice and of his supposed or real effeminacy. Suetonius reported that whenever Caligula had Chaerea kiss his ring, Caligula would "hold out his hand to kiss, forming and moving it in an obscene fashion". Chaerea was also made to use degrading watch-words at night, including "Venus" (slang for a male eunuch) and "Priapus" (erection).
Unable to bear this any longer, Chaerea planned to assassinate Caligula during the Palatine games held in January, 41.
Chaerea"s plot was one of several that formed around the same time and eventually coalesced into one broad conspiracy involving a number of Praetorians, Senators, and Equestrians. On January 24 Chaerea struck, and Caligula died.
Chaerea was sympathetic to his fellow conspirators in the Senate, and wanted the destruction of the Principate. But Chaerea did not control the loyalty of the majority of the Praetorians, who proclaimed Caligula"s uncle, Claudius, as emperor.
Shortly afterwards, Chaerea was sentenced to death, one of the few assassins to be actually condemned.
Chaerea requested to be executed with his personal sword, and this boon was granted. Cassius Chaerea is portrayed very sympathetically in Robert Graves" I, Claudius novels. Here Chaerea is portrayed as having had a long and distinguished career in service of Rome, including being the only surviving officer of the massacre at Teutoburg Forest.
He later serves under Caligula, whom he protected in his youth.
Chaerea insists that he killed Caligula for the Republic"s sake, and Claudius sympathizes with him. Chaerea is foretold in the Sibyl"s prophecy to be "the horse" that will kill Caligula, as Caligula rode on Chaerea"s shoulders as a child.
In the 1976 British Broadcasting Corporation television series I Claudius, Cassius Chaerea was portrayed by Sam Dastor. In the 1979 theatrical film Caligula he was portrayed by Paolo Bonacelli.