Hece gives them peace
Brutus and Cassius, defeated in battle, kill themselves, and Octavius Caesar continues where Julius Caesar left off--turning Rome from a Republic into an empire.
The second triumvirate consisted of Mark Antony, Octavius and Publius
Julius Caesar died in Curia of Pompey, Rome. Brutus died in or after the Battle of Philippi, which took place in Greece.
You must be thinking of the end of Act III Scene 1 where Antony advises Octavius, who is Caesar's nephew and adopted son, to stay out of Rome for the present. Antony sends Lepidus as a messenger in Act IV Scene 1 to Caesar's house to get a copy of the will. Antony is not around in the other three Scene Ones in the play.
It's set in Rome. It is based on historical events which happened in Rome.
Octavius came to Rome to claim his inheritance. He was Julius Caesar's principle heir and adopted son.
Octavius
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Octavius
They helped make Rome an empire........I think
when Caesar is assassinated there is political distubance in Rome ......after the battle at Phillipi the triumvarate is again formed with Antony ,octavius and lepidus leading the triumvarate
He asks them to come be a part of the new Rome with Octavius and Antony in control. He wants the men to join in the new efforts to reunify and strengthen Rome.
He asks them to come be a part of the new Rome with Octavius and Antony in control. He wants the men to join in the new efforts to reunify and strengthen Rome.
He asks them to come be a part of the new Rome with Octavius and Antony in control. He wants the men to join in the new efforts to reunify and strengthen Rome.
Seven
Octavius is the person that lies within seven leagues of Rome. Octavius was an ancestor to the Roman Emperors of the Julio - Claudian dynasty and passed away in 59 BC.
At the end of Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," Octavius Caesar emerges as the new ruler of Rome. Following the defeat of Brutus and Cassius in the battle of Philippi, he, along with Mark Antony, takes control of the Roman Republic. Octavius's rise marks the transition from the Republican system to the eventual establishment of the Roman Empire.