Casius because Caesar feared Casius's ambition.
Cassius and Caesar, according to Shakespeare's play, were childhood friends (Cassius told a story of how he even saved Caesar from drowning in the Tiber River). Obviously, they were once good friends. However, Caesar gained more power and disregarded Cassius (Cassius also became more jealous and was not so friendly in return). Caesar had new friends, like Antony and Brutus, who were loyal to him. Caesar did not need Cassius to be his friend; he felt threatened by Cassius at one point. He said to Antony that he did not trust him (he was a thinker, probably plotting something devious). Caesar had hubris and did not feel threatened, really, by anyone. Obviously, Caesar undermined Cassius and did not care for him as a friend.
He died on the 15th of March, 44 B.C. (B.C.E.). The date is referred to as 'the Ides of March' and is most commonly used in the sentence, 'Beware the Ides of March' because a Soothsayer (seer) reportedly told Julius Caesar that before his death.
they did whatever the leaders told them to do
By the 'Great Beast' he is talking about the public, society.
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
The soothsayer Spurinna warned him to 'beware the Ides of March'.
Caesarian section was named after Julius Caesar, who was born by this method.
Caesar's will was told to the people by Mark Antony.
The soothsayer came up to Casaer from a group of crowded people and said, "Beware the Ides of March." 'Ides' is the 'middle'. SO the soothsayer told Casaer to beware the middle of March, or March 15.
It is actually "Beware the Ides of March," not the "ideas" of March. It refers to March 15. Someone told that to the emperor Julius Cesar, and he was assassinated on March 15 by his closest friend and adviser, among others. I believe it's from a play by Shakespeare about Julius Cesar.
He told them that Caesar was dead.
the soothsayer
Decius
Told on you for what?