Want this question answered?
Anthony was a true friend of Caesar because he was with Caesar till the end. He made the people revolt against the conspirators. His speech was genuine and had emotions and feelings. He cleverly gains the sympathy of the people by reading them his will. Unlike Brutus he was a faithful friend of Caesar. He was willing to die in the hands of the conspirators with the same sword that killed Caesar.
The name of Miguel Hidalgo's speech is Mexican Independence. The cry of dolores!
His name was Octavian....not Octavius. After Julius Caesar was assassinated, Mark Anthony made a speech that riled the public up, created a near riot, and forced the conspirators from the city of Rome. They put together an army and were hunted down by Mark Anthony. This is one of those too many questions here which seem to be asked by people who already know the answer, so I'm not sure what your point for the question is. After the conspirators and their armies were disposed, Lepidus, Mark Anthony and Octavian formed what was known as the 2nd Roman triumvirate, and ruled together for a time. Lepidus was essentially bought out, and friction began between Anthony and Octavian. Things came to a head when Anthony shacked up and settled in with Egyptian ruler Cleopatra (especially since Anthony was already married to Octavian's sister. But the bigger concern was that he'd consider Cleopatra his wife, and try and take over the Roman Empire. Wasn't far from the truth, Cleopatra was looking to marry Anthony to become the queen not just of Egypt, but of Rome. The story of how all that worked out has been told over and over, and doesn't need to be repeated here. When Octavian was crowned the first Roman emperor (Julius Caesar was elected dictator for life, was Rom's last "elected" head of state, and was never an emperor), he took the name of Augustus.
Adjective.
Millennia is a noun.
To deliver Caesar's eulogy (funeral speech)
They were suckered into doing just what Antony intended, attacking the conspirators and driving them from Rome.
To deliver Caesar's eulogy (funeral speech)
The death of Julius Caesar , the speech of Antony and the most important part the way Antony took revenge from all the conspirators....................
I'n
1. Antony will speak only after the speech of Brutus completes. 2. He will speak from the same pulpit from where Brutus speaks. 3. He will speak good and praise Caesar but he will not blame the conspirators for the death of Caesar. and Antony agrees these conditions imposed on him.
Marc Antony reads Julius Caesar's will to the crowd during his speech. He claims that Caesar had left money and property to the citizens of Rome, appealing to their emotions and turning them against the conspirators.
Marc Antony, a Caesar loyalist, turned the crowd against the conspirators at Caesar's funeral by delivering his famous "Friends, Roman, countrymen" speech.
Antony was a skillful orator. He provoked d Romans by using rhetorical devices and appealed to their emotions and greed. All through his speech, Antony kept on calling the conspirators, particularly Brutus very honorable but it was obvious that he was using d adjective sarcastically. He laid bare the qualities of Caesar by highlighting his refusal to accept the crown at the festival of Lupercal and referred to his will by telling them that Caesar had left money to each of them and thus proved that he was not ambitious. Antony 's speech nullified all the effect of Brutus' speech and provoked the citizens against the conspirators.
The crowd is swayed by Antony's speech and turns against Caesar. They become angry and seek revenge against those responsible for Caesar's death. Antony's words have effectively turned public opinion against the conspirators.
The crowd reacts to Antony's famous "Friends, Romans, Countrymen" speech by causing a riot and making the conspirators run for their lives. This was exactly what Antony intended. This was the meaning of "Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war"
No, he wanted to gain the trust of the conspirators just to be able to give his speech in Caesar's Funeral. In his soliloquy right after the conspirators tell us so. "Oh, pardon me thou bleeding piece of earth, that I am meek and gentle with these Butchers!" He obviously meant the opposite when he said he loved the conspirators.