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13. Shakespeare: Julius Caesar
- ccsun7.sogang.ac.kr
- Julius Caesar .
- Scene 1: Popular festival, until Flavius and Marullus (Tribunes) send the common people home, telling them not to celebrate Caesar's victories. ...
- Scene 2: Soothsayer warns Caesar of the Ides of March. ... Caesar returns, angry. ...
- Brutus meets the conspirators, they plan to kill Caesar. ...
- Scene 2: Caesar reports Calphurnia's words in her sleep. ... He accepts, but when Decius offers another interpretation of her dream, Caesar decides to go. ...
- Scene 3: Artemidorus writes a letter to warn Caesar. ...
- Scene 1: Proud Caesar does not read Artemidorus's warning. ... Antony sends message asking to hear why Caesar had to die. ... He shakes their hands, then praises Caesar. ... Antony's soliloquy on "Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge. ...
- Reads the will of Caesar "If you have tears. ...
- Brutus works late, sees the ghost of Caesar. ...
- Cassius commits suicide: "Caesar thou art reveng'd," too early, for Brutus has won his side of the battle. ...
- Scene 5: Brutus sees he has lost the battle; runs on his sword: "Caesar now be still. ...
14. ROMA - History and Civilization of the Eternal City
- www.mclink.it
- Julius Caesar.
- That young man was Julius Caesar, who was to become one of the greatest generals of all ages, more famous than Alexander the Great and Hannibal.
- Caesar ruled the Republic together with two other generals: Gneo Pompeo and Licinio Grasso, forming the Triumvirate, rule by three people.
- Pompeo jealous of Caesar's fame for conquering Gaul, persuaded the Senate to declare him an enemy of his homeland and to remove him from the army leadership. ...
- The civil wars ended with the victory of Caesar and the death of Pompeo. Caesar became then a dictator for life, he ruled wisely and did not take revenge as Silla. ...
- Rome at the death of Julius Caesar. ...
15. Julius Caesar -- virgil.org
- www.virgil.org
- caesar.
- The emphasis here is on Cleopatra, but George's most indelibly rendered character is arguably Caesar. ...
- Caesar. ... A history of the art of war among the Romans, with a detailed account of Caesar's military campaigns. ... Those more interested in Caesar's political career should try the biography by Christian Meier. ...
- --> Julius Caesar.
- The ancient biographies of Suetonius and Plutarch, along with Caesar's own account of his military campaigns. ...
- Potted summaries of and essays on various aspects of Caesar's life and career, including his war with Pompey, his invasion of Britain, and his assassination. ...
- Caesar Augustus.
- A companion to the Julius Caesar pages: primary sources, background and images, modern essays and historical fiction. ...
16. Image of Julius Caesar
- www.bible-history.com
17. Julius Caesar: Table of Contents
- web.uvic.ca
- Julius Caesar.
- The Internet Shakespeare Editions offer old spelling, draft texts of the Folio of Julius Caesar. ...
- Julius Caesar was first printed in the Folio of 1623, in a text that is the basis of all modern editions. ...
18. Shakespeare: Julius Caesar. resources, criticism, sources, theatre, music, film, popular culture, teaching material
- www.unibas.ch
- Titus Andronicus - Romeo and Juliet - Julius Caesar - Antony and Cleopatra - Coriolanus - Hamlet - Othello - King Lear - Macbeth - Timon of Athens.
- Julius Caesar.
- Julius Caesar - Julius Cäsar.
- Audio recordings: Julius Caesar (Richardson, Quayle) (last visit: 22/02/00).
- Julius Caesar (Audio excerpt from Mankiewicz film 1952) Caesar: Louis Calhern, Cassius: John Gielgud, Cinna: William Cottrell, Brutus: James Mason, Casca: Edmond O'Brien (to listen, click at scene picture from Knight's Imperial Edition) at: [http://home. ...
- Julius Caesar in modern English, transl. ... com/~lklivingston/caesar/].
- de/shakespr/caesar/caesar. ...
- Caesar Dutch translation. ...
- Giulio Cesare / Julius Caesar Italian version (PDF,. ...
- Caesar, De bello gallico / Gallic Wars. ...
- Plutarch: Caesar (Dryden) [http://classics. ... edu/Plutarch/caesar. ...
- Annotated Resources, sources, background, essays on Caesar etc. ... org/caesar/].
- Julius Caesar page [http://www. ...
19. The Controversy Over Caesar: Who really started the Roman Empire?
- www.geocities.com
- THE CONTROVERSY OVER CAESAR: WHO REALLY STARTED THE ROMAN EMPIRE?.
- Superstitions about Caesar .
- / Julius Caesar / Sign Guestbook / View Guestbook .
- They claimed he would implant an evil in their democracy, but when the Roman senators stabbed Julius Caesar to death they doomed Rome to tyranny. ... Gaius Matius, a friend of Caesar, illustrated this when he remarked, "If Caesar with all his genius could not find a solution, who is to find one now?" (qtd. ... All these incidences lead to the conclusion that, though intending to stop a tyrant, the assassins of Caesar, through their negligence and lack of forethought, stripped themselves of power and, in effect, created a tyrannical government. ...
- ---The senators showed a surprising lack of forethought when planning the death of Caesar. Michael Akinde, a doctorate student at Aalborg University, acknowleges that they planned their excuses well, associating Caesar with the word king, a word the Romans equated with tyrant and assigning him excessive titles, making him "odious" to the common Roman ("Assassination" 1). But they failed to anticipate the consequences of their actions, such as the rumors that arose after Caesar's death. ... According to Plutarch, Cinna, a friend of Caesar, foretold his own death when he supposedly dreamed that Caesar requested they dine together and upon Cinna's refusal, Casear tried to force him. ... Another superstition arose when Brutus reported that Caesar's ghost came to him during the battle of Phillipe foretelling of Brutus's death and defeat. Besides these incidents, a comet appeared in the sky for seven nights after Caesar's death, and the sun dimmed for the remainder of that year, resulting in damp air and a bad harvest (Plutarchus 529). These superstitions contributed to the supernatural aspects concerning Caesar and helped condemn his murderers to failure. By removing Caesar, the assassins turned him into a myth, his life into folklore. Since ancient Romans were very superstitious, this made the populace support Caesar's associates.
- Knox, a professor of Western Civilization at Boise State University, states that after Caesar's murder, chaos erupted. Proponents and opponents of Caesar each feared a massacre from the other and therefore hid. ... Akinde claims this is because the assassins were all men of no importance and without Caesar they did not know how to reform the government. ... Reid in "The Power and Glory of the Roman Empire", the senators thought that with Caesar removed, democracy would restore itself (24). ...
20. Welcome to CampusNut.com -- Message Boards
- www.campusnut.com
- Home > Book Summary Index > Julius Caesar .
- Book Summary -- Julius Caesar .
- Written in 1599, Julius Caesar tells the story of an extremely powerful general who substantially increased the size of Rome’s territorial possessions yet was assassinated because he wanted to rule Rome by himself. ... It is believed that Julius Caesar was the first play performed in the Globe, which is somehow appropriate because the ambition to rule the world is central to this play.
- Shakespeare takes certain liberties with his historical sources – the lives of Caesar and Brutus in Plutarch’s Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans – in order to condense the events of several years into seemingly just a few weeks. Historically, Caesar’s triumphal ceremony over Pompey occurs months before his assassination in March, and Brutus and Cassius wait in Rome for a year after Caesar’s funeral before amassing their armies to fight Antony and Octavius on the plains of Philippi. In Shakespeare’s play, however, Caesar marches into Rome in triumph on the Lupercalia, which is in February, and he is assassinated in the middle of March. Also, Brutus and Cassius are driven out of Rome immediately after Antony’s stirring speech at Caesar’s funeral. In addition to increasing the dramatic intensity of the action, Shakespeare suggests that the decisions the characters make – Caesar ignoring the warning of the soothsayer or Brutus allowing Antony to speak at Caesar’s funeral – have huge and immediate consequences.
21. Julius Caesar Project
- www.svms.santacruz.k12.ca.us
- Julius Caesar Project .
- Character Study: To better understand the life and times of the people of ancient Rome, we will be researching the everyday lives of characters from William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. ...
- Julius Caesar Project Bookmarks .
- Text of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar .
- JULIUS CAESAR .
- "Caesar, beware of Brutus, take heed of Cassius, come not near Casca, trust not Trebonius, Decius Brutus loves thee not, the mighty Gods defend thee. ...
- He tried to warn Caesar by giving him a scroll with warnings on it, but he was interrupted by Decius who wouldn't let the King know what was going to happen to him. ...
22. ShakespeareHelp.com -- Julius Caesar
- www.shakespearehelp.com
- Julius Caesar .
- Julius Caesar.
- Julius Caesar Message Board.
- Julius Caesar at the Internet Movie Database.
- Orson Welles and Julius Caesar.
- - Caesar: I, ii.
- Caesar - Plutarch.
- Caesar's Reviving Blood: Shakespeare and the Religion of Revolution - Peter Leithart.
- The Cleveland Press Shakespeare Photographs - Julius Caesar.
- Encyclopedia information about Caesar .
- Gradesaver Julius Caesar - analysis, essays, etc.
- Et tu Brute: Performing Julius Caesar.
- Honorable Men, Militancy and Masculinity in Julius Caesar - Eugene Giddens.
- Julius Caesar, An Abbreviated Textual History.
- Julius Caesar - FreeDictionary Summary (multiple links to characters, concepts, etc. ...
- Julius Caesar - Links to translations, sources, criticism, etc. ...
23. The Roman Empire
- www.iol.ie
- Gaius Julius Caesar ( warning this page contains an image over 110 kB in size )was born in the year 100 BC into a patrian family who claimed decendancy from the kings of Alba Langa and through them, Aeneas of Troy whose mother was the goddess Venus. Caesar's name Julius comes from Iulius, the family name. ...
- Caesar made his way to praetorship by 62 BC and many of the senate felt him a dangerous, ambitious man. ...
- It was because of this that Caesar, during his consulship, pushed through a special law giving him a five-year command in Cispine Gaul and Illyricum, both provinces in the empire covering North Italy and the Adriatic coast of Yugoslavia. Caesar saw this as a great opportunity to extend the empire either into Gaul or in the Balkins. ...
- Caesar had all the acclaim he could hope for and the triumph to back it up, however, to get the position he felt his achievements deserved, he had to take his troops across the River Rubicon and in doing so declare civil war on the state and Pompey. Pompey, the person who had got Caesar to where he was, was sent to stop him but failed. General Pompey fled to Egypt while Caesar entered Rome in triumph as Dictator. ...
- By the time Caesar came to Gaul, the Romans were in control of Cispine Gaul and also Narbonese Gaul in the southern most point of Gaul which was simply called the Province because it was the main province in the Roman empire after Rome itself.
- When Caesar first came to Gaul, the country had two main tribes and all the other tribes supported one or the other. ...
- When Caesar heard of these developments, he returned from Rome. ... The Sequani lost their supremacy and the Remi tribe, who were also favoured by Caesar, took over their place. Because of this incident, the Aedui tribe were allies of Caesar and when the Aedui felt threatened by the Arverni, they began to trade grain for Romans soldiers to build up their armies.
- There had always been a lot of unrest among the Gauls as Caesar's army began to have more control over the country and as the Roman philosophies infiltrated the tribes. ...
- Now that he had control over the lands of the Bituriges, Vercingetorix started to lead his army to the Boii oppidum of Gorgobina whom Caesar had settled under the protection of the Aedui after he had defeated them in battle. ...
- Caesar sent word that he was going to come and help them. ... Once this was finalized, Caesar set off again for Gorgobina via Cenabum. ...
24. Poynter. Ides
- www.emory.edu
- This large, sombre painting illustrates Act II, Scene ii, of Julius Caesar when Caesar's wife Calphurnia emplores him to take the comet they see as a portent and to stay away from the Senate on the Ides of March, the fifteenth day of the month. ... " But the fatalistic Caesar replies, Cowards die many times before their deaths;.
- Poynter was a student of classical architecture and the interior of the palace with its structural detail commands our attention more than the two figures of Caesar and Calphurnia. ...
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