He wasn’t born by cesarean section
On July 13, 100 B.C., Gaius Julius Caesar entered the world, but he probably wasn't born by cesarean section, which is one of the most interesting facts about Julius Caesar. According to Philip Freeman, a professor of classics at Pepperdine University and the author of the biography "Julius Caesar", it is highly unlikely that Caesar was born by surgery thousands of years before anesthesia or antibiotics. Although the operation was available at the time, it was typically fatal to the mother and was only used to try to save a child when a pregnant woman was already dead or close to death. Aurelia, Caesar's mother, actually lived for 50 years after her son was born.
The Latin form of Caesar's name, which closely resembles the verb "to cut", is possibly where the story about Caesar being born by cesarean section originates. There have been other theories about the name's origins, such as the idea that the original member of Caesar's family line may have possessed "caesars," or long, flowing hair.