Julius was loved and hated by many people....mostly because the people that hated him thought they had taken Cleopatra and they were not happy.
Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.Cleopatra had a son with Julius Caesar (or so she claimed) and she had two sons with Marc Antony.
Julius Caesar was a Roman so his culture would be Roman.
Julius Caesar is a name, which means it is a noun. So you use it as a noun in a sentence. For example, "Julius Caesar was a great general" or, "The man who reformed the calender was Julius Caesar".
No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.No, Julius Caesar did not figure in the Spartacus events.
Julius Caesar had a massive ego.
There are quite a number of important decisions that Julius Caesar made. Some of them include the decision to cross the Rubicon in 49 BC, starting the civil war which he won among and so many others.
Lol, yes, more so actually. The story is really about Julius Caesar, more Brutus.
Metellus distracts Caesar.
Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.Nothing. Julius Caesar was never a king so he could not have lost anything by being something he never was.
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.
Julius Caesar was stabbed. Apparently he had arranged his death so he wouldn't be humiliated by dieing slowly and painfully (he suffered chronic diarrhea ).
yes because he was