The term "ides" was a day in the Roman month. Every month had one and it could be either on the 15th or the 13th of the month. It was a way of dividing the various days of the month along with the Kalends and Nones.
By a soothsayer crying out "Beware the Ides of March!". However that was in the play Julius Caesar. In reality he was given a letter with the entire plot written out, but he ignored it, setting it aside to read later.
Caesar:Who is it in the press that calls on me?I hear a tongue shriller than all the musicCry "Caesar!" Speak, Caesar is turn'd to hear.Soothsayer:Beware the ides of March.Caesar:What man is that?Brutus:A soothsayer bids you beware the ides of March.(Figure something bad is going to happen on March 15th...knives will be involved.)
The play is titled "Julius Caesar" because it is about the final days of the Roman king, Julius Caesar.
The play is titled "Julius Caesar" because it is about the final days of the Roman king, Julius Caesar.
His wife Calpurnia.
Julius Caesar was told to beware the ides of March by a soothsayer in the play Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar was told to beware the ides of March by a soothsayer in the play Julius Caesar.
The Soothsayer from the play, "Julius Caesar" said "Beware the ides of March."
The play was Julius Caesar. "Soothsayer Beware the ides of March."
The date of Julius Caesar's death is remembered as the ides of March due to the line "Beware the ides of March" from the play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare. The ides of a month is the 13th, except in March, May, July and October, when it's the 15th.
Ides of March is a line from a play by Shakespeare called "Julius Caesar". A soothsayer says to Julius Caesar "Beware the ides of March!". He was warning Julius Caesar that he would be murdered then. The word ides means the the 15th day, in this case the 15th of March. Also note that the Ides of March (or March 15th) was the Feast day for the god Mars - the Roman god of war.
March 15th is known as "The Ides of March", or the day that Julius Caesar was killed in 44 B.C. In Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar", Caesar is warned by a soothsayer to "beware the Ides of March". Caesar ignores the warning, and is later stabbed by conspirators (most famously, Brutus) at the Capitol.
The middle of a Roman month is considered the ides, hence the reference to the Ides of March in William Shakespeare's play, The Tragedy of Julius Caesar.
march 15th... ides is a old way of saying the middle of the month
If you mean Julius Caesar, the person, Gaius Julius Caesar and Aurelia Cotta made him, they were his parents. If you mean the play, it was William Shakespeare.
The Soothsayer in Julius Caesar is pretty much a gypsy or a fortune teller. This is the person who warns Caesar of the Ides of March (March 15h). He ignored the Soothsayer's warning and is killed by the conspirators on that date later on in the play.
There were multiple assasins in the assasination of juilius caesar and he was left with more than 30 wounds but he names of the assassins were Brutus, Cassius, Ligarious, Metallus, Casca, Trebonius, and Cinna. That is all. Oh by the way, if you play minecraft email me at kirimlee1@gmail.com we could play minecraft together. When you send the email make sure to title the subject "Minecraft" THX