The assassination of Julius Caesar was reenacted in Rome at the exact same place where it had taken place 2,000 years ago.
BCE, ancient Rome witnessed one of the most infamous betrayals in history, the assassination of Julius Caesar. Known as the ...
Roman proconsul Julius Caesar conducts a series of military campaigns ... The tribunes Mark Antony and Quintus Cassius (a relative of the famous Cassius who later conspired to assassinate Caesar ...
March 15 is associated with misfortune and doom. On this day, Roman dictator Julius Caesar was murdered at the hands of ...
Cassius:I have heard where many of the best respect in Rome, except immortal Caesar, speaking of Brutus and groaning underneath this age's yoke, have wished that noble Brutus had his eyes.
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Commentary: After all, the play’s the thing — Alexandra Paskhaver
When your old professor asks you to perform a bit from “Julius Caesar” in front of his fourth-graders, you start to wonder if you were a favorite student or a hated one. I am to dramatic acting what ...
On March 15, 44 B.C., on the “ides of March,” Roman dictator Julius Caesar was assassinated by Roman senators, including ...
Julius Caesar's popularity soars when he returns ... assassination in the name of preserving the Republic of Rome. Led by Cassius, a group of conspirators convince Brutus, Caesar's best friend ...
A rare coin minted by Marcus Junius Brutus after he helped assassinate Julius ... Brutus and Cassius went into exile, attempting to take over the eastern provinces, while Caesar's allies stayed ...
Caesar is gaining power — so much so that the people of the Republic of Rome want to crown him king, which would destroy the republic. The senators, including Cassius and Brutus are determined not to ...
Desiring thee that Publius Cimber may have an immediate freedom of repeal. Julius caesar:What, Brutus? Caius Cassius:Pardon, Caesar, Caesar, pardon. As low as to thy foot doth Cassius fall to beg ...
Rome in the first century was carefully chronicled by Roman historians, particularly Tacitus, Suetonius and Dio Cassius – that ... of Rome from the time of Julius Caesar to the Emperor Domitian.