Lucius Julius Caesar (died 46 BC) was a politician in the late Roman Republic.
A Lucius Caesar is mentioned in 54 BC as one of the men contemplated to prosecute the governor of Sardinia, Marcus Aemilius Scaurus, for extortion.
Caesar described L. Caesar as young (adulescens),[4]: 8 and the statesman Cicero had a low opinion, calling him in a letter dated 23 January non hominem, sed scotas solutas ("not a man, but a broom untied").
[4]: 10 [5][7]: 5 He next appears later in 49 as commander under Publius Attius Varus of a fleet of ten ships, charged with guarding the waters between Africa and Sicily.
[9] In 46, he is recorded as being proquaestor (a military and magisterial office) under Marcus Porcius Cato in Utica (in modern Tunisia).