Cassius did
In their long conversation which forms the bulk of Act I Scene 2 Cassius attempts to convince Brutus that Caesar is a threat to the traditional values of the Roman Republic.
Cassius' main argument is simply that Caesar is an ordinary man:
I had as lief not be as live to be
In awe of such a thing as I myself.
Cassius tells Brutus that Caesar sweats when he is ill, and that he does not swim as strongly as a younger man:- but the common people of Rome love him (and this is somehow dangerous):
And this man
Is now become a God, and Cassius is
A wretched creature.
None of the conspirators in the play have any substantial objection to Caesar, and Cassius is simply eaten up with envy. Caesar knows this, he says:
Yond' Cassius has a lean and hungry look;
He thinks too much, such men are dangerous.
But Caesar is too proud to act on his suspicions. This is his weakness.
The conspirators, such as Brutus and Cassius. Especially Cassius.
Brutus is because he doesn't show any emotion when he found out that his wife, Portia, died. Someone who is stoic is unaffected by grief or pain, and that is why I believe that Brutus is a stoic character in the tragedy of Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar has 3 children
Jealousy, Rivalry and Revenge play importance in the world of Julius Caesar and co. Jealousy was the main reason for Caesar's death.
Cassius was not Caesar. Cassius wanted to kill Caesar for jealousy and some other issues.
Gaius Julius Caesar wrote this in his book, 'Commentarii de Bello Gallico'.
Caesar was terribly ambitious.
power hungry and ambitious
Julius Caesar formed a political alliance with Marcus Crassus and Pompey in order to dominate Roman politics. Caesar also attained great military power and eventually began a dictatorship in Rome.
Arrogance would certainly be a character flaw in Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar was feared because he was very ambitious and powerful and he always wanted more power than he already has.
The main reason is that Brutus believed he was ambitious. Antony does through in some good points how he wasn't ambitious. Caesar was apparently [from Brutus's point of view] power hungry and would make Rome corrupt.
Brutus is the character with the most lines in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. Hope this helps!
In the present day we say, "Peace, Love, and Happiness" but in the tragedy of Julius Caesar we say, "Love, Death, and Power" Julius Caesar was ambitious because he was POWER-HUNGRY, ARROGANT, and IMPERTINANT.
BetrayedStabbed in the backPowerfulRulerTragicLegendary
Alas, Julius Caesar is only a main character in one play, Julius Caesar. Mark Antony, on the other hand, is a main character in two plays, Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra.
There is not a character called Papilius in the play Julius Caesar. There was not an historical figure called Papilius either.
he was too arrogant