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Julius Caesar

Gaius Julius Caesar (100–44 BC) was a Roman general who played a vital role in the transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire. He was dubbed the Republic’s “dictator in perpetuity.”

4,636 Questions

What was Brutus full name from Julius Caesar?

There were two men that had the name "Brutus." If you're talking about the one that was like Julius Caesar's son and gave the speech, you're thinking of Marcus Brutus. But if you're talking about the one against Caesar and the one who wanted to start the conspiracy, that's Cassius Brutus. The twowere brothers-in-law. I know his last name was brutus

It was not! in fact his name was Marcus Junius Brutus, and the other you were talking about, was Caius Cassius.

Decius Brutus (full name Decius Junius Brutus--Junius Brutus was the family name) was the brother-in-law who was also a conspirator against Caesar and was the man who lured Caesar out of his house to the Senate by telling him that his wife had misinterpreted her dream. Not Caius Cassius

What did Caesar mean by his final words to Brutus?

Historically, it is said that Julius Caesar made no sound while his peers murdered him except for a grunt at the first stab. He died silently, and with betrayed dignity. However, in Shakespeare's play, it is said that Julius Caesar says, "Et tu, Brute?" ("And you, Brutus?") right before he falls to the ground dead. Brutus was someone Julius Caesar considered a friend, and this quote channels the emotion that he must have felt in his last moments. However, this is merely Shakespeare's interpretation.

What kind of person does brutus seem to?

In Roman-British Celtic mythology,Brutus is said to have been the founder of the British people.The great grandson of the Trojan Aeneas, he is supposed to have landed at Totnes in Devon and to have subjugated the giants who then inhabited the country.

How does Tyranny and anarchy are never far asunder relate to the play Julius Caesar?

It means that when Tyrants are ruling, and have control over people or resources, anarchy and rebellion are sure to follow in the wake of Tyranny.

Was Brutus the one that killed Julius Caesar?

No, Marc Antony was a staunch supporter of Julius Caesar, his second in command at times, and a distant relative. He knew nothing of the plot against Caesar and was the one man that the conspirators feared.

What finally made Brutus to join the Conspirators?

Cassius tells Brutus that Caesar refused the crown of a king three times, but each time he refused it more reluctantly, which convinces Brutus that Caesar has been tempted by the thought of absolute power.

Who gave their reasons for why Caesar was killed?

Cassius was the driving force behind the whole group. He was afraid of Caesar gaining too much power and weakening his own political and economic position. Basically, he was greedy, and wanted to keep or increase his own power and wealth.

Unfortunately, Brutus was secondary and crucial to the conspiracy. Being such a close friend to Caesar, and then agreeing to the ultimate betrayal of his murder, he gave credence to the others to follow suit. His motive was to protect Rome from being destroyed by the "tyrannical ruler" Caesar was becoming, as projected by Cassius into Brutus' mind/thinking.

In the Julius Caesar play what is the relationship between Brutus and Caesar?

Brutus held great respect for Antony, despite Antony's friendship with Ceaser. Antony openly decieved Caeser in Act 3, but following this, he begins to respect Brutus and once finding Brutus's body, he calls him "The nobelest roman of all."

When Brutus delivers a soliloquy at the end of Act?

In the beginning of the play, Brutus is trusted by Caesar, and they have a filial sort of relationship. But Brutus plays a large role in Caesar's assassination. Caesar's dying words are, "Et tu, Brute?" (you too, Brutus?) because he can hardly believe that someone he loved and was close to would murder him. Brutus reasons, "Not that I loved Caesar less, but I loved Rome more." He thinks that killing Caesar was for the greater good, and if you've read the play, you would realize that Brutus's fatal flaw is his nobility. He overthinks everything, always searching for the noble, honorable, "right" thing to do. It was also mentioned that perhaps Brutus was truly Caesar's son, of an affair. At Brutus's funeral oration, Antony says Brutus was "Caesar's angel," although it is never blatantly explained why Caesar trusts and loves Brutus so much, then is betrayed. Although Brutus's honor to Caesar is strong in the beginning, it wavers enough for him to take part in Caesar's murder, but then he sees the effects because of it. By the end of the play, Brutus sees that Rome in the hands of Antony, Octavius, etc is worse than it would have been under Caesar's ruling, and Brutus commits suicide. Note that this question does not have anything to do with the question. The question entails the relationship between BRUTUS and CASSIUS, while this answer is telling the relationship between Brutus and Caeser.

Is the play Julius Caesar a comedy?

Yes, it's one of his later plays, called Romances. It has an incredibly complex plot, a number of good song lyrics and a surprise appearance by the god Jupiter.

The plot, as easily as I can tell it in a short space, goes something like this: Cymbeline, king of Britain in Roman times, has taken a second wife. By his first marriage he had two sons (which were kidnapped and have disappeared) and a daughter Imogen; by his second, he has a stepson Cloten. The Queen wants Imogen to marry Cloten; instead she marries a man called Postumus. The king is incensed and banishes Postumus to Italy, where he takes a bet from a man called Iachimo that Iachimo cannot seduce Imogen. Iachimo goes to Britain and tries seduction and when that doesn't work, spies on Imogen when she's asleep and learns some things about her body that nobody but her husband should know.

Postumus sends a servant to tell Imogen that Postumus is waiting for her in Wales. The servant is supposed to kill her on the road, but doesn't, and she flees to the protection of some Welsh hillbillies disguised as a boy (a favourite angle in Shakespeare's plots). The hillbillies kill Cloten who is searching for Imogen disguised as Postumus and throw out his head. Imogen comes across the body and thinks it's Postumus with even less brain than usual.

Cymbeline, meanwhile, has been persuaded by the Queen and Cloten to antagonize the Romans who invade, with Iachimo and Postumus serving in the invading army. Imogen (still disguised) attaches herself to the Roman commander as a page. Postumus deserts and switches sides and he and the hillbillies win the battle for Britain. After the battle, in a long scene, everyone reveals their secrets and they all live happily ever after except the Queen who has died upon hearing that Cloten was beheaded.

That's the gist. I said it was complex.

What are the connotations of Antony's image of Caesar as a hart or a deer?

Although many modern cultures recall a "deer" as a imagetic of "gay man", a deer (more often written, as "stag") was, and still is a simbol of power, its horns simbolizing a crown, it moves gracefully. The way it solves many matters (fighting by clashes of head, usually breaking a horn or two) simbolizes the so called "manly way" of doing things work.

All said, a deer is usually simbol of vilrile and noble man.

P.S.: Sorry about my lame English, still studying. ^^

Metaphors in act 4 of Julius Caesar?

Act 2 Scene 1 lines 311-313You are my true and honorable wife, as dear to me as are the ruddy drops that visit my sad heart- Portia is like Brutus' heart because she is so honest and such a great person. He truly loves and cares for her.

What did the Athens and Sparta have in common?

Athens and Sparta both had very efficient fighting forces and and were the two powerhouse cities in Greece.

What year did Julius Caesar was born?

he was alive on July 13, 100 b.c and died on march 15, 44 b.c because of all the senators that stabbed him 23 times. he tried to take full power and become king, and the senators disagreed and Julius was stabbed 23 times, and some of those senators were once his friends.

What are facts about Sir Isaac Newton?

  • Born in 1642
  • Born same year Galileo died
  • Born on christmas day
  • Died 1727
  • When he was born premature and wasn't expected to live
  • He almost became a farmer but he turned out to be a bad one
  • Newton was very religious
  • He became apart of the Royal Society but before that he had sended his notes and experiments about gravity and such things and Robert Hooke disagreed and they had a bunch of arguments

He invented Calculus (yeah, I find that fun).
his tallents are gravity and his education was intrupted by the deadly disease plauge

isaac newton was not married ether nor he had children

How does Cassius die in Julius Caesar?

WARNING: There are a lot of spoilers!

Cinna died in Catching Fire. Katniss had to wear to her wedding dress to interview with Caeser Flickerman during the Quell. Cinna had secretly altered it so that when she twirled for Caesar, it would transform into a mockingjay-like dress. When Katniss was in her tube to go to the Games with the other tributes, he was beaten by Peacekeepers and killed.

Puns in Julius Caesar from act 1 scene 1?

act 1

scene 1, line 13.

"A trade sir, that, I hope, may use with a safe conscience, which is indeed, sir, a mender of bad soles."

The pun is "bad soles." It has a double meaning of 'bad souls.'

"Truly, sir, all that I live by is with awl"

The pun is with the 'awl,' meaning 'all.'

How did Caesar die?

Julius Caesar was killed in the year 44 BC He was stabbed to death and left with 37 wounds.Brutus, Cassius, Ligarious, Metallus, Casca, Trebonius and Cinna killed him.

In Julius Caesar which character establishes the notion that Caesar is ambitious and that Caesar is too high and is a danger to free men?

Cassius did

In their long conversation which forms the bulk of Act I Scene 2 Cassius attempts to convince Brutus that Caesar is a threat to the traditional values of the Roman Republic.

Cassius' main argument is simply that Caesar is an ordinary man:

I had as lief not be as live to be

In awe of such a thing as I myself.

Cassius tells Brutus that Caesar sweats when he is ill, and that he does not swim as strongly as a younger man:- but the common people of Rome love him (and this is somehow dangerous):

And this man

Is now become a God, and Cassius is

A wretched creature.

None of the conspirators in the play have any substantial objection to Caesar, and Cassius is simply eaten up with envy. Caesar knows this, he says:

Yond' Cassius has a lean and hungry look;

He thinks too much, such men are dangerous.

But Caesar is too proud to act on his suspicions. This is his weakness.

Who is Portia in the tragedy of Julius Caesar?

In the tragedy of Julius Caesar, Portia is the wife of Brutus, the idealist conspirator and main character of the story.

What was the point of act 3 scene 3 in Julius Caesar?

Unless the term is used in a technical sense (whereby the "Climax" of a Shakespearean play is always whatever happens in Act 3), the climax of a story is generally the point where everyone's plans reach their fruition and either succeed or fail. In Hamlet, it is when Hamlet actually takes his revenge in Act 5. In Julius Caesar and Macbeth there is an early climax when the murderers complete their murders in Act 3 in Caesar and Act 2 in Macbeth. In Macbeth, his struggle to hold on to his kingdom leads to a further climax when he meets MacDuff in Act 5. In Caesar there is no similar further climax; the conspirators' hope of a joyous revival of the Republic is quickly dashed by Antony and the mob and their revolution fizzles out.

What does artemidorus offer Caesar in the street?

it is a list of conspirators that conspired to kill caesar.

What is a slogan for Julius Caesar?

Eagles falling at the end-eagles symbolize power and the eagles falling to the ground from above is symbolic of a leader falling from power Blood-blood is symbolic all throughout the play especially in Calpurnias dream

Who dies in act 5 of Julius Caesar and how do they die?

A whole pile of people (most notably Brutus and Cassius) commit suicide.