One of the conspirators, a sarcastic man who is famous for the phrase, "It was Greek to me."
Casca and Cinna were two of the conspirators who murdered Caesar.
Caesar is plannng to take over rome and turn it into a dictatorship
Brutus, Marullus and Casca.
death
Casca sees Caesar refuse a crown offered to him by Mark Antony three times. He also sees him have an epileptic fit.
Casca is the first to stab Caesar.
Casca
Casca and Cinna were two of the conspirators who murdered Caesar.
Casca, the others stab him then, and Brutus stabs him last.
Yes, Casca believed that the Roman people seemed to want Caesar to be king based on their enthusiastic applause and support for Caesar during the Lupercal festival. Casca thought that Caesar's ambition to be the king was driven by the people's desire for him to take the position.
By "the book Julius Caesar" I assume you mean Plutarch's Life of Caesar, one of his Parallel Lives, sometimes just called "Plutarch's Lives". (This is opposed to the PLAY Julius Caesar, written by Shakespeare, using Plutarch as a source.) In Plutarch, the first blow is struck by Casca, who stabbed Caesar in the neck, but neither mortally nor deeply.
Casca was a Roman senator and a conspirator in the plot to assassinate Julius Caesar. He played a key role in the assassination by being one of the first to stab Caesar, which ultimately led to Caesar's downfall. Casca's actions were pivotal in the events that unfolded in Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar."
Casca
Casca says, "Speak hands for me!" By this, he means he intends to use his hands (in the murder) to express how he feels about Caesar.
His full name was Publius Servilius Casca, but we do not know when he was born.
Casca was a conspirator and he was the first to stab Caesar.
Caesar is plannng to take over rome and turn it into a dictatorship