Egotistical, arrogant, impatient, forgiving, lucky, charismatic, charming, inquisitive. Caesar was a blend of all the above characteristics.
Yes. Julius Caesar was a great reformer and ruler, some what at least.
There is hardly any information about Julius Caesar's youth.
Cowards die many times before their actual deaths. - Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar only killed Gaius Pompey, one of Pompey's sons. This was after the Battle of Munda in 45 BC which finally brought the civil war to an end. Pompey himself was murdered in Egypt. His remaining son, Sextus Pompey, was murdered in the mideast, by Marc Antony's commander, some say on orders from Antony, although Antony denied responsibility.
Actually No, Julius Caesar turned down the title of emperor. The first Roman emperor was Octavian, who was Julius Caesar's adopted son, who became the first Roman emperor in 27BC, some time after Caesar's death in 44BC (and was awarded the name Augustus Caesar).
Well, obviously, everyone did not love Julius Caesar, remember the Ides of March? But Julius Caesar was a personable man. The ancient writers describe him as charming and being able to sway people's opinion to his way of thinking. He was considered a populist, and he advocated some debt reform, which endeared him to not only the poor people, but to the middle class and some wealthy as well.
Caesar's wife telling him of his assination
Lots of mountains.
I
Antony.
Cassius was not Caesar. Cassius wanted to kill Caesar for jealousy and some other issues.
Julius Caesar did not write any plays. He was a Roman general and statesman who lived from 100 - 44 BCE. The play "Julius Caesar" was written by William Shakespeare and is a dramatization of Caesar's assassination and its aftermath.