Want this question answered?
He is trying to warn Caesar of the assassination plot.
Cassius says the real cause is the fact that caesar is not a good man and hides things from everyone. He was trying to convince Brutus that Caesar is bad. His descision will backfire
They are two characters from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. They are executed, when trying to decrease the support for Caesar.
They were afraid that Caesar was trying to become a king, thus ending the Roman Republic, which they cherished.
Because Julius caesar had taken mostly over rome and trying to be the emporer rome! and also caesar killed one of the senates.... (P.S: i am a history teacher in california)
Artemidorus is important because he is trying to warn Caesar of the conspirators and that Brutus is planning against him. He writes a letter to tell him and Caesar does not accept it before going into the Senate.
He is trying to warn Caesar of the assassination plot.
The major theme of Artemidorus' letter was "Beware the Ides of March". He was trying to warn Julius Caesar of the assassination plans of Brutus.
it is a list of conspirators that conspired to kill caesar.
Cassius says the real cause is the fact that caesar is not a good man and hides things from everyone. He was trying to convince Brutus that Caesar is bad. His descision will backfire
"The Ides of March are come.""Aye, Caesar, but not gone."The audience knows that the plot the soothsayer is warning Caesar about is real, even if he doesn't see it. He is like Bud Abbott, being calm while Frankenstein's monster lumbers up from behind him. And Lou Costello, who sees the monster and tries to warn Abbott, is the soothsayer, who gets pooh-poohed for trying to warn him. (If you don't know who Abbott and Costello were, look them up. It's worth it, believe me.)Caesar is all smug because he thinks the soothsayer was wrong. The soothsayer, and the audience with him. know that he is not out of the woods yet.
Shakespeare was not trying to warn Caesar who died 16 centuries before he was born. Are you asking what the dramatic effect is of the warning Caesar receives from the soothsayer and from Calpurnia? Dramatically, Caesar's reaction to the warnings may show him to be conceited and arrogant (or confident and level-headed, if you like him).
Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile trying to escape Caesar's forces. Cleopatra had nothing to do with his death.
Well, I have been trying to find the answer of this as well. Caesar is sorta like an Emperor.......Constantine was A Caesar
lot's of things, but if you're trying to answer the clue "Julius Caesar's love" try "amor"
They are two characters from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. They are executed, when trying to decrease the support for Caesar.
im trying to figure it out also