It depends on how you define 'good'.
He was a soldier for the majority of his life and led armed forces into battle, so he must certainly have done a fair ammount of killing. Did he commit war-time attrocities, like kill women and children, or execute enemy soldiers after they had surrendered? The answers to those questions are lost forever, but chances are that he probably did both at some time or another. There were rules regarding conduct then, just as there are now, but war is ugly business.
In his later years, he was a cunning and ambitous politician. It is well known that when he made himself emperor, he did so in blatant defiance of long standing laws designed to prevent any one individual from wielding absolute power. Did he break laws and abuse public trust? Did he threaten the members of Rome's social and political elite with war and/or assasination if they tried to oppose him? Again, probably. They didn't assasinate him for no reason. Politics is ugly business.
Julius Caesar ushered in a long period of relative peace and prosperity for Rome, but in those days, as in these days, peace is only held through the threat or application of force...peace and prosperity for one nation often means hardship and oppression for others. Also, Rome during the period of peace was no shining example of goodwill towards men...there just wasn't anyone with the power and the will to attack Rome then: they had become a formidable force, not to be attacked or challenged lightly.
All in all, Julius Caesar was most likely not an EVIL man, nor a GOOD man...but rather somewhere in between, just like about 99% of humanity.
it depends on your own personal point of view. some see him as a visionary leader who was supposed to lead his people out of a rut and others saw him as a power hungry tyrant. this is a question that is subjective to opinion. Julius Caesar was a good man and was a role model to children he loved the Romans and respected them.
Please be more specific as to exactly which Brutus you mean.
.By repeating the phrase, "he is an honourable man"
Octavious
That Brutus "is a honourable man".
Mark Antony
Please be more specific as to exactly which Brutus you mean.
Brutus is what we today consider a last name. The man's complete name was Marcus Junius Brutus.
Antony, in his funeral oration for Caesar, repeated the phrase, "Brutus said he (meaning Caesar) was ambitious and Brutus is an honorable man," in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
brutus was called the noblest man in rome
That Brutus "is a honourable man".
.By repeating the phrase, "he is an honourable man"
Octavious
brutus
That Brutus "is a honourable man".
Bluto/Brutus .
Marcus Brutus is a man who is between the sizes of large and extra large. The most recent weighing of Marcus Brutus has him weighing about 260 pounds.
During Caesar's funeral, Antony refers to Brutus as an honorable man. This is said sarcastically as Brutus was a traitor to Caesar.