I dont think anyone can comment on the quality of parenting that he had but Gaius Julius grew up very wealthy.
Rome
Rome was Julius Caesar's home town. He was born and died there.
Julius Caesar's home "country" was Rome. He was a Roman. You could very loosely say he was an Italian, but you must remember that in Caesar's day, Italy was not a country but a territory made up of various different peoples.
because chuck Norris was in side
Calpurnia requests that Caesar stay home on the Ides of March and not go to the Senate because she had a nightmare in which Caesar's statue was spouting blood in which many Romans bathed their hands.
Julius Caesar lived from 100 BC to 44 BC. Although he traveled far and wide in his military campaigns, his home was in Rome.
Yes, Cleopatra was alive when Julius Caesar died. In fact, she was in Rome at the time. After Caesar's death she hustled back to Egypt to make certain that her rule would not be overthrown in case of any dissent at home.
Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.Julius Caesar was a lifelong resident of Rome. Even though his military affairs caused him to travel, his home was Rome.
Julius Caesar lived from 100 BC to 44 BC and when he was not away with his army he lived in Rome.
Calupurnia in To Kill a Mockingbird is almost like the nanny for the kids. She is a black lady, older then Atticus, and she cooks and takes care of the kids and so on. Calpurnia in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar and in Plutarch's Lives is the wife of Julius Caesar at the time of his death.
If the Julius Caesar you are talking about is Shakespeare's play, it doesn't come with an introduction. It starts with dialogue, specifically the line "Hence! Home, you idle creatures, get you home!". Your edition of the play may well have an introduction written by the editor, but since mine has a different editor, it doesn't.
In Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," Decius re-interprets Calpurnia's dream by convincing Caesar that it actually symbolizes Rome being revitalized by his blood. Decius uses flattery and manipulation to persuade Caesar to ignore Calpurnia's warnings about staying home on the day of his assassination.