No, they lived in different times.
The only relevance that Julius Caesar had in Elizabethan England was that William Shakespeare wrote the play Julius Caesar. Shakespeare was interested in the story of Caesar.
We do not know. There is very little information about what roles Shakespeare played.
He would have learnt about him when he studied History.
"They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes."They" didn't. As far as we know Julius Caesar's father died of natural causes.
The play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare contains two characters named Marcellus and Flavius that are co-conspirators against Julius Caesar. In Scene one, Act one, we see these two men complain about Caesar's rule. However, in Act one, Scene two, we discover they'd been "put to silence. " Though there were many ways to remove a dissenting voice such as theirs in the time of Julius, it is probable that in keeping with the history as we know it, Marcellus and Flavious were executed.
You mean the newly built Globe Theatre, of course. The Globe was not just moved from North London and renamed; although it used the timbers of the old Theatre, it was in most respects altogether new. Many people think that Julius Caesar may have been the first play performed there. We have a diary record of a man who went to see it shortly after the theatre was built.
Yes Julius Caesar had what is now know today as epilepsy.
Julius Caesar is a main character in the play, and even after his death appears as a ghost to Brutus. It can be and has been argued that Caesar's character overshadows the whole play, and so it is proper that it should be named after him. It is also possible that Shakespeare named the play after Caesar because he was better known than Brutus and so potential audience members were more likely to know what the play was about and buy tickets.
Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.Cleopatra's first achievement, as far as we know, was securing the throne of Egypt. She did this with Julius Caesar's backing.
We simply don't know who actually killed Julius Caesar. All the ancient writers (who were not present) say is that "the conspirators" stabbed him and when Caesar realized what was happening, he pulled his toga up to cover his face. Shakespeare would have you believe it was Brutus and that's as good a guess as any.
Aristotle died long before the historical Julius Caesar was born. Shakespeare wrote his play over 1600 years after Caesar's death. Aristotle didn't know anything about Caesar or Shakespeare's play. Some people think that Aristotle's remarks on drama (which he based on one play, Oedipus Rex) are applicable to works written thousands of years later in an idiom which did not even exist in his time. It's a debatable point.
how the heck should i know??