One Time pad
In the play, Caesar's closest associate is Mark Antony.
Brutus he was Caesar's right hand man
His closest associates including Brutus.
Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.Julius Caesar had many close friends and it is difficult to say which one was the closest. Marc Antony comes to mind in this circumstance, but Antony, although holding the consulship with Caesar at the time of the assassination, was more interested in being Caesar's heir than in ruling.
Brutus was a protégé of Caesar, and was considered to be one of his closest friends. That is why Caesar said "Et tu, Brute?" (What? You too, Brutus??) when Brutus stabbed him, and why Antony calls Brutus Caesar's angel.
The closest thing i can think of is a dictator,czar or maybe even a Caesar
Julius Caesar, of course! It was created for times of war, and it was a very simple cipher indeed.
No. Augustus, whose name was originally Octavius was the son of Caesar's niece whose name was Atia Balba. At the time of Caesar's death he was one of the three closest living males to Caesar. Caesar chose him to become his heir over his other great nephews.
I believe its because Cassius persuded many of his friends that Caesar was going to lead his country with tyranny along with him not being for the people. In the book Cassius persuades brutus which is one of Caesar's closest friends.
Julius Caesar never adopted Augustus. Augustus was Julius's nephew and Augustus had to fight to become the Caesar.Edit: This is false. Augustus was Julius's great nephew as well as his adopted son. Unfortunately, I don't know when he was adopted though.
Cassius also wanted to kill Marc Antony, Caesar's closest ally.
In Julius Caesar, his famous last question (which also happened to be his last words) were, "et tu, Brute?". This is translated to "you too, Brutus?", and shows Caesar's surprise over his betrayal by Brutus, one of his closest friends. It can be considered a rhetorical question, as Caesar had been stabbed several times and never lived to hear a reply.