It's not so much of a book as a script, which he wrote in about 1599.
William Shakespeare. I suggest you look at cover of the book that you're reading this in...
Julius Ceasar was a Famous Play by Shakespeare
From a book called Plutarch's Lives.
From a book called Plutarch's Lives.
From a book called Plutarch's Lives
Shakespeare intended his play Julius Caesar to be watched, not read. He intended that his audience should be entertained. It was not intended to teach anyone lessons.
The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.The name of Julius Caesar's book on Gaul was/ls De Bello Gallico, or The Gallic War. It is not only one book; it was originally written in eight books.
reading the book about Julius Caesar
A:The Book of Job consists of two layers, the most recent of which was written after the Babylonian Exile, but using a good deal of more ancient material. This is in a way comparable to Shakespeare writing about Julius Caesar - we would recognise Shakespeare's play as dating from the Reformation period, but that the story of Julius Caesar refers to the late Roman republic. Much of the evidence for the dating of Job is found in the authors allusions to books recently written and to concepts that did not enter Judaism until the Exile.
Julius Caesar was possibly the first play performed at the opening of the new Globe Theatre in 1599, based on a diary entry by Thomas Platter for September 21, 1599 saying he had attended a performance of the play at the Globe Theatre at about two o'clock. The year before, Francis Meres made a list of Shakespeare's plays and did not mention Caesar. It was therefore written in 1599. Few Shakespeare plays can be dated with such accuracy.
"Et tu, Brute?" And, it's NOT a book.
By "the book Julius Caesar" I assume you mean Plutarch's Life of Caesar, one of his Parallel Lives, sometimes just called "Plutarch's Lives". (This is opposed to the PLAY Julius Caesar, written by Shakespeare, using Plutarch as a source.) In Plutarch, the first blow is struck by Casca, who stabbed Caesar in the neck, but neither mortally nor deeply.