answersLogoWhite

0

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.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is Julius Caesars empires?

The answer is the Roman Empire


What is the Roman calendar?

the roman calendar was made by Julius Caesar.


Where was Julius Caesars's mother from?

Julius Caesar's mother was from Rome. She was an aristocratic Roman matron.


What was Julius Caesar favourite movies?

There were no movies when any of the Roman Caesars lived.


What is a word for pre-Gregorian calendar?

The word is Julian calendar. It was a Roman calendar introduced by Julius Caesar.


Whom did Julius Caesar instruct to fix the calendar in 46 BC?

Sosigenus fixed the Roman Calendar


Who is the roman general to discover the calendar?

Julius Caesar introduced what is known as the Julian calendar in 45 BC.


Why would Roman senate be likely to lead the opposition to Caesars growing power?

Read Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar"


When did the roman calendar become solar and who was responsible for this?

Julius Caesar replaced the lunar Roman calendar with the solar Julian calendar in 46 BCE. It took effect beginning in 45 BCE.


Did quintilis change to lulius on the roman calendar?

Yes, Quintilis was later renamed Julius in honor of Julius Caesar after his assassination in 44 BCE. The name change was part of the efforts to honor significant figures in Roman history. Quintilis was the fifth month in the Roman calendar, and the renaming reflected Caesar's contributions to Roman society, including the introduction of the Julian calendar.


What is the old roman calendar?

The calendar used in Rome from 45 BC through AD 1581 is the Julian Calendar, which was introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BC.


What was the roman calendar made of?

Our current calendar comes for the Julian calendar, the calendar introduced by Julius Caesar. In the 15th century pope Gregory XIII shortened the day of that calendar by about 11 minutes. Apart from that, our calendar is the same as the one introduced by Julius Caesar. Because of this, the name of our current calendar is Gregorian calendar. The Roman calendar was divided into months and the name of the months we use today are derived from the names the Romans used. For a short while at the beginning of their history, the Romans had calendar with 10 months. Soon after that, it was reformed and lengthened to 12 months. The Julian Calendar was a further reform of the Roman calendar. Two months were renamed after Julius Caesar and Augustus. This is the origin of the names of the months of July and August. The names of the other months came from the older Roman calendar.