The Ides of March or the 15th of May. The Ides was the middle of the month in the Roman calendar and in the year 44BC, the Ides of March is when Julius Caesar was assassinated.
the ides of march is famous for being the day Julius Caesar was assassinated
The most famous and lasting reform Julius Caesar introduced was a new calendar which, with the exception of one day every century, is still used by everyone in the world today.
Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.Julius Caesar was stabbed to death on the ides of March.
I would say a bad day for Julius Caesar would be the ides of March, when he was stabbed to death by Senators.
actually Octavian would've become leader after Julius Caesar because it was in his secret will. He said that he would appoint Octavian (Augustus Caesar) on the day of his death. Any day that that would be.
Julius Caesar was famous in his own time for being a consul, for adding Gaul to the empire, for his innovations and for being created dictator for life. In our time he is mostly remembered as the one who reformed the calendar, which is the basis for our present day calendar.
Julius Caesar was assacinated by senate members led by his friend, Brutus. He died wherever the senate was meeting that day.
When he was 56 years old. He was born in 100BC and died in 44BC
We cannot unanswer this question if you do not tell us what "this day" is. If you are referring to the ides of March, this was the day Julius Caesar was assassinated.
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.
March 15th
We know the kind of things that the Romans of Caesar's day ate, but not what was Julius Caesar's particualr favourite. To jokingly talk about Big Macs, Macdonalds happy meals and Caesar Salads, none of which existed in Caesar's day, is only barely sillier than actually trying to guess the answer to this.