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Shakespeare was using common people in Elizabethan England as his model. He knew nothing about the common people of Ancient Rome. Mind you, we don't know much about either ourselves--for all we know, his portrayal may be accurate for either.
Julius Caesar in Shakespear`s Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar. "Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look; he thinks too much; such men are dangerous."
Shakespeare got much of his information from the writings of Plutarch. But remember, Shakespeare was not a historian, he was a playwright. He used artistic licence to change the characters and their motivations in order to write a good play.
Shakespeare was much too smart to let out what he believed about anything. Had he expressed the view that any form of government other than the one England had was to be preferred, he stood a good chance of being tortured, hanged and having his head on a pike above London Bridge. Thus his play Julius Caesar does not tell us anything about what Shakespeare believed. No play by Shakespeare or any of his contemporaries would suggest either that a mob of people knows better than a monarch how to govern or that it is legitimate to murder a ruler.
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar traces the plot to assassinate the Roman dictator Julius Caesar, and its execution, and the subsequent attempt of the assassins to take over the Roman government, and its failure. Much attention is paid to the contrasting personalities of the leaders of the plot, the idealistic Brutus and the bitter and cynical Cassius.
It's not so much of a book as a script, which he wrote in about 1599.
In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, Caesar is murdered in the Senate at the begining of Act III. Caesar's ghost later returns to warn Brutus that he will die at Philippi - a warning that Brutus seems neither surprised, nor much troubled by.
Julius Caesar was the person who conquered much of western Europe.
Julius Caesar is usually counted among Shakespeare's tragedies. The tragedy is not so much around Caesar but around Brutus, who is seduced into becoming a political assassin, and ends up dead.
Shakespeare was using common people in Elizabethan England as his model. He knew nothing about the common people of Ancient Rome. Mind you, we don't know much about either ourselves--for all we know, his portrayal may be accurate for either.
Julius Caesar in Shakespear`s Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar. "Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look; he thinks too much; such men are dangerous."
Shakespeare got much of his information from the writings of Plutarch. But remember, Shakespeare was not a historian, he was a playwright. He used artistic licence to change the characters and their motivations in order to write a good play.
Caesar died at the senate floor, killed by other senators by stabbing because they thought he was gaining too much power. Julius Caesar was stabbed to death.
Julius Caesar help the poor to save money and not to give too much money to him and the 600 senators.
The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.The reasons for Julius Caesar's death were that he had attained too much power and that he was undermining the principles of the republic.