Where can someone find a listing for the Caesar Poconos?
Cove Haven is a good resource for information on visiting the Pocono Palace. They can be reached via their website which provides further contact information.
No. Caesar salad was so named because of a Mexican Italian chef named "Caesar Cardini" in the early 20th century.
Who is known for the fsmous quote vene vidi vici?
Julius Caesar had a plaquard in his triumph with the quote. It was in reference to his quick victory in the battle of Zela.
What did Julius Caesar do as consul?
Julius Caesar help the poor to save money and not to give too much money to him and the 600 senators.
"He was the noblest Roman of them all."
Why did juluis Caesar get stabbed 23 times?
because the people feared he was going to be king for life so Brutus made a plan and stabed him in the back and there were other assassins that stabed too. Julius Caesar was Brutsus's freind and Ceasar's last words were "why Brutus"
Where is Julius Caesar current city?
Julius Caesar is currently dead, and has been for over 2000 years.
Who offered Julius Caesar the crown?
Mark Antony offered him three times but he refused it each an every time .He would have kept it if he'd dared but he wanted to please the mob
Who leads the conspiracy against Caesar?
Cassius and Brutus were the two co-leaders of the conspiracy against Caesar.
Who sponsored Julius Caesar's explorations?
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Julius Caesar was not an explorer. It is said that he was interested in finding the source of the Nile, but he never tried to travel up the river and never sent out an expedition to explore.
Who died first Julius Caesar Alexander the Great Marie Antoinette or Genghis Khan?
Alexander the Great - 323BC Julius Caesar- 44BC Genghis Khan - 1227 Marie Antoinette - 1793
Alexander the great
What was the cause of Julius Caesar death?
Julius Caesar thought that he was so powerful that he didn't need any guards to protect him and this caused a pandemonium with the Roman population that they decided to assassinate Caesar to end his ruling of the Roman Empire.
One of the accomplishments of Julius Caesar was the establishment of a?
Julius Caesar had established the calender that is still in use today
What event does Antony use to show that Caesar was not ambitious?
Well, Antony clearly states, "Caesar is a cleft bag heifer in the reebag mouth."
How were the goals of Julius Caesar and pompey and crassus different from ciceros?
Caesar, Pompey and Crassus were the members of the first triumvirate, which was, to be honest, an ego trip for the three men. Crassus wanted the glory of the military triumph that was given to Pompey instead of to himself for the defeat of Sparticus. Caesar needed an ally in the senate while he was away in Gaul, and Pompey vacillated between support for Caesar and support for the senate. The triumvirate, under the guidance of Caesar, tried to attain their objectives through reforms that, at least on paper, benefited the lower classes.
Cicero, on the other hand, was a strict republican. He wanted to see things the way they traditionally had been, with the upper class keeping their lands and status. He was eventually able to win Pompey over to the senatorial side.
In other words, the triumvirate could loosely be said to want to change the republic and Cicero wanted to keep it the way it was.
Did roman women choose who to marry?
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.
The answer to your question is another of those "yes and no" answers. The parents of a girl would pick out a potential groom, or even a list of potential grooms. The girl would have to give her consent. However, in the Roman culture, children were brought up to respect the wishes of their parents, so the girl would nearly always consent to the man her parents suggested for her husband. However there were times when a woman/girl would pick out her own husband and her parents would go along with it. Remember, Roman marriages were not just the uniting of a man and wife, but the uniting of entire families, especially in the upper classes, so this factor had a bearing upon the choices a woman had for a husband.