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         Caesar Julius:     more books (99)
  1. Julius Caesar Literature Guide (Secondary Solutions Teacher Guide) by Kristen Bowers, 2006-10-13
  2. Julius Caesar (2010 edition): Oxford School Shakespeare (Oxford Shakespeare Studies) by William Shakespeare, 2010-04-12
  3. Shakespeare: The Tragedy of Julius Caesar (New Kittredge Shakespeare) by William Shakespeare, 2007-05-15
  4. The Civil War: Together With the Alexandrian War, the African War, and the Spanish War by Other Hands by Julius Caesar, 1986-01
  5. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, 2010-04-20
  6. History of Julius Caesar by Jacob Abbott, 2009-10-04
  7. Ready-To-Use Activities for Teaching Julius Caesar (Shakespeare Teacher's Activity Library) by John Wilson Swope, 1993-10
  8. Julius Caesar Teacher's Manual (Picture This! Shakespeare) by Christina Lacie, 2006-03-17
  9. The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of Ancient Rome by Michael Parenti, 2004-08-30
  10. Julius Caesar (The Annotated Shakespeare) by William Shakespeare, 2006-09-27
  11. The Gallic War: Seven Commentaries on The Gallic War with an Eighth Commentary by Aulus Hirtius (Oxford World's Classics) by Julius Caesar, 2008-06-15
  12. Julius Caesar: The background, strategies, tactics and battlefield experiences of the greatest commanders of history by Nic Fields, 2010-06-22
  13. Julius Caesar: Dictator for Life (Wicked History) by Denise Rinaldo, 2010-03
  14. Caesar's Commentaries The Conquest of Gaul & The Civil War by Julius Caesar, 2007-12-25

21. Julius Caesar
Home Free Study Aids Study Guides Shakespeare julius caesar. Navigate Here -.
http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/juliuscaesar/
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- Navigate Here - Context Plot Overview Character List Analysis of Major Characters Act I, scene i Act I, scene ii Act I, scene iii Act II, scene i Act II, scenes ii–iv Act III, scene i Act III, scenes ii–iii Act IV, scenes i–ii Act V, scenes i–iii Act V, scenes iv–v Important Quotations Explained Key Facts Quiz Suggestions for Further Reading
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22. C. Julius Caesar Und Die Krise Der Republik
Ausf¼hrlich dargestellt wird in 10 Kapiteln die Geschichte der R¶mischen Republik von 133 v. Chr. (Volkstribunat des Gracchus) bis 44 v. Chr. (Iden des M¤rz), wobei schwerpunktm¤Ÿig die Rolle Caesars behandelt wird.
http://www.web-der-weltgeschichte.de/Caesar_0.html
http://web-der-weltgeschichte.de/ http://web-der-weltgeschichte.de/

23. Julius Caesar: Sources And Analogues
Several classical sources of modern knowledge about the historical caesar.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/JC/JC.source.home.html
Sources and Analogues for Julius Caesar Included here are some of the Classical sources of modern knowledge about the historical Julius Caesar. Several of these sources were also used by Shakespeare in the creation of his play Julius Caesar . Also included here is a Renaissance version of the story that is roughly contemporary with Shakespeare's. Bust of Livia, wife of Augustus, Vatican 637
Photo courtesy of Amy C. Smith Classical Sources
  • Modernized edition of Sir Thomas North's 1579 translation of Plutarch's Parallel Lives (edited by J. W. Skeat)
  • Original spelling excerpts of North's Plutarch with LINKS to relevant sections of the play ... Gallic Wars Renaissance Analogues
  • The Tragedy of Julius Caesar , Sir William Alexander, Earl of Sterline (1637) Return to Julius Caesar Homepage.
  • 24. Julius Caesar The Last Dictator
    A Biography of Gaius julius caesar and all major contemporaries in the Last Days of the Roman Republic julius. caesar THE LAST DICTATOR The life of Gaius julius caesar illuminates the history of the failing Roman Republic and changed history
    http://www.heraklia.fws1.com/

    25. Julius Caesar - The Last Dictator - Bestriding The World
    A Biography of Gaius julius caesar and all major contemporaries in the Last Days of the Roman Republic. julius caesar THE LAST DICTATOR.
    http://heraklia.fws1.com/introduction/
    JULIUS
    CAESAR:
    THE LAST DICTATOR B ESTRIDING T HE W ORLD "He was as great as a man can be without being moral." Sir Ronald Syme on Caesar. "...a man who had become strongly committed to the popular cause and highly experienced in the exercise of power, was murdered in the senate-house by Brutus and Cassius out of jealousy of his immense power and out of longing for the traditional constitution. The people in fact missed him more than they had anyone else; they went round hunting for his killers, gave him a funeral in the middle of the forum, built a temple on the site of the pyre, and still sacrifice to him as a god." Appian, I, 4. When Caesar died in 44 BC, a great comet soon troubled the skies over Rome. No more superstitious people ever lived: even those who had bitterly opposed him and murdered him outside Pompey's Theater were awed by the implications when the heavens themselves "blazed forth the death of princes." Soon thereafter, for the first time in Roman history, a living man was deified; in the process, the man himself was lost to history.

    26. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Julius Caesar Scaliger
    Article by Paul Lejay on this scholar's life and writings.
    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13506a.htm
    Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... S > Julius Caesar Scaliger A B C D ... Z
    Julius Caesar Scaliger
    (It., DELLA SCALA). Aristotle whom he calls "imperator noster; omnium bonarum artium dictator perpetuus". Like Aristotle he makes imitation the basis of all poetry. He spoiled his work by exaggerations; not only does he place Virgil above Homer but he places the Homeric epics below the "Hero and Leander" of Musaeus, a poet of the Byzantine period; it is true that Scaliger identifies him with the legendary Musaeus, a disciple of Orpheus (Poet., V, 2). He declared that Seneca was not surpassed in grandeur by any of the Greek tragedians. This last opinion was not without its consequences; it explains the excessive liking of Shakespeare , Corneille, and many of their contemporaries for the tragedies of Seneca. Scaliger is also the author of the following works: "De comicis dimensionibus" (Lyons, 1539); "Exotericarum exercitationum de subtilitate ad H. Cardanum" (Paris, 1537; Basle, 1560); "Poemata" (Geneva, 1574; Heidelberg, 1600); "Epistolae et Orationes " (Leyden, 1600). He translated into Latin Aristotle's "Natural History" (Toulouse 1619), the "Insomniae" of Hippocrates, and wrote commentaries on the treatises on plants of Theophrastes and

    27. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
    William Shakespeare s julius caesar. Using play. Multiple Editions of julius caesar (includes glosses, commentary and textual variants).
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/JC/JC.shak.home.html
    William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar Using this Edition:
    Choose from the several different editions of Shakespeare's play listed below. This site also provides critical material on Julius Caesar . You may read the commentary alongside either modernized or original editions by first clicking into those editions and using the link menu on the right side of the screen. You may also select from the list of additional criticism below. This list includes the scholarly commentary gathered by an editor H. H. Furness, editor of the 1913 Variorum edition that is not included in the page-by-page commentary you will find alongside the text. In the print edition, most of this can be found in the appendix. This critical material has been selected from approximately three hundred years of scholarly discussions among various editors and critics of the play. Multiple Editions of Julius Caesar
    (includes glosses, commentary and textual variants)
  • 1623 First Folio dramatic text with commentary by Variorum editor H. H. Furness, Jr. (1913)
  • 1623 First Folio facsimile edition Additional Scholarly Criticism on Julius Caesar
    • Character Analyses: What have scholars said about the play's characters since it was first published?
  • 28. Julius Caesar -- Virgil.org
    This book is available at a discount from Amazon and, in Europe, from Amazon UK. julius caesar An Annotated Guide to Online Resources 3 August 2003
    http://virgil.org/caesar/
    biography
    search virgil

    bibliography

    eclogues
    ...
    courses

    The Memoirs of Cleopatra: A Novel.
    By Margaret George. Griffin, 1997. Historical fiction from the author of Mary Queen of Scotland and the Isles and The Autobiography of Henry VIII . The emphasis here is on Cleopatra, but George's most indelibly rendered character is arguably Caesar. The whole thing weighs in at 976 pages: think of it as immersion. This book is available at a discount from Amazon and, in Europe, from Amazon UK Julius Caesar
    An Annotated Guide to Online Resources
    3 August 2003
    Primary Sources

    The ancient biographies of Suetonius and Plutarch, along with Caesar's own account of his military campaigns.
    Chronology, genealogy, background on the history and institutions of the Roman Republic, images from statuary and coin. Modern Essays 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. See also... Caesar Augustus A companion to the Julius Caesar pages: primary sources, background and images, modern essays and historical fiction. Search Amazon.com for books on:

    29. Caesar, Julius
    caesar, julius. caesar, julius ( Caius julius caesar), 100? B.C. julius caesar. julius caesar.(Play) ( Junior Scholastic)julius caesar
    http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0809782.html
    in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
    Infoplease Tools

    30. The Roman Empire
    Features a short biography of caesar and information about the Gallic Wars.
    http://homepages.iol.ie/~coolmine/typ/romans/romans6.html
    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. This comes from Iulus, the name of Venus' son. At the time of his birth, Rome was still a republic and the empire was only really beginning. The senators ruled, motivated by the greed of power in the hope of becoming either a consul or a praetor, the two senior posts which carried imperium, the legal right to command an army. From these posts it was possible to, with the help of the army at your command, conquer new territories and so gain a triumph and the pleasure of knowing that your name would be remembered forever in statues and inscribed monuments, paid for by the spoils of the war. Caesar made his way to praetorship by 62 BC and many of the senate felt him a dangerous, ambitious man. Because of this, they deprived him of a triumph after his praetorian command in Spain (61-60 BC) and they also did their best to keep him out of consulship. He finally became consul in 59 BC. Much of the thanks for this achievement should be given to Gnaeus Pompeius (Pompey the Great) who had just come back from a campaign which had doubled the income of the Roman treasury and gained three new provinces to the empire. Because of this he had popular support and his voice carried great weight with the public at large. Because of Pompey, however, to become a leading person in Roman politics you had to have more then just an ordinary triumph.

    31. The Galileo Project
    Biographical information presented as part of the Galileo Project.
    http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/scaliger.html

    The Galileo Project
    Catalog of the Scientific Community Catalog of the Scientific Community
    in the 16th and 17th Centuries This catalog is a collection of 631 detailed biographies on members of the scientific community during the 16th and 17th centuries with vital facts about each individual and their contributions to science. The information here was compiled by the late Richard S. Westfall , Professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at Indiana University. While the scope of Dr. Westfall's research is immense, the information is concise and very well organized. All individuals in the catalog are systematically described by ten categories using twenty searchable fields. Short Form Search 9 of the 20 fields in the database. Long Form Search all 20 fields in the database. ©1995 Al Van Helden
    Last updated Home Galileo Biography Chronology ... Search
    See the for more information.

    32. Caesar, Julius
    caesar, julius. caesar, julius (Caius julius caesar), 100? BC–44 BC, Roman statesman and general. Related content from HighBeam Research on julius caesar.
    http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0809782.html
    in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
    Infoplease Tools

    33. Julius Caesar
    Includes a critical summary, essays, and a complete, searchable text.
    http://www.analyzing-caesar.com/
    Analyzing-Caesar:
    A ClickGuides.com Site
  • NEW - Featured Julius Caesar Essay: Women in Julius Caesar
  • Julius Caesar home.
  • New Essays on Shakespeare's work at Analyzing-Caesar. Click on any links below: As You Like It
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    Featured Article: Omens in Julius Caesar
    Courtesty All Shakespeare Featured Links Read more at All Shakespeare's Julius Caesar guide, featuring Julius Caesar essays Julius Caesar summary and more. Beware the leaders who bang the drums of war check out what this quote really means at this urban legends page. Julius Caesar insults at insults.net. A good essay on Julius Caesar at this site.
  • 34. Cicero: Select Letters, U. Of Sask.
    Selection of letters from Cicero on the Civil War, including assassination of julius caesar and the early career of Octavian, later Augustus. In English U. Saskatchewan.
    http://www.usask.ca/antharch/cnea/DeptTransls/CicLetters.html
    To Home Page
    To Translations Menu
    Selections from Cicero's Letters
    Lewis Stiles, translator
    Notice: NOTE: This translation is intentionally literal; violence is occasionally done to English syntax in the interests of preserving some of the original order of thoughts. [] - enclose words added for sense
    For background material, see the course notes on Octavian and Antony: The Rise of Augustus on this WWW site. I. CROSSING VARIOUS RUBICONS
    II. AFTER THE IDES OF MARCH

    III. MISUNDERSTANDING OCTAVIAN
    I. CROSSING VARIOUS RUBICONS
    Caelius to Cicero (Ad Fam. 8.14) August, 50 B.C.
    If one or the other of them does not go off on a Parthian war, I see great discords hanging over us, which steel and force will settle. Each in spirit and in resource is prepared. If without danger to you it could happen, it is a great and pleasing spectacle with Fortuna has prepared for you!
    Cicero to Atticus (Ad Att. 7.1) Oct. 16, 50 B.C. (Athens)
    "SPEAK, MARCUS TULLIUS!" What am I to say? "Wait, please, until I meet Atticus?" There is no room for back-turning. Against Caesar? For, that these things be permitted to him, I helped him when he asked me to himself....

    35. Caesar, Julius
    caesar, julius. caesar, julius ( Caius julius caesar), 100? B.C.
    http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0809782.html

    Encyclopedia

    Caesar, Julius Caesar, Julius (Caius Julius Caesar), B.C. B.C. , Roman statesman and general. Sections in this article: The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia,
    Caesarion
    Caesar, Lucius Julius
    Print this page Cite this page AD AD AD ADS
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    36. Caesar, Julius. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
    caesar, julius. (Caius julius caesar), 100? BC–44 BC, Roman statesman and general. 1. A literary classic on caesar is Shakespeare’s tragedy, julius caesar.
    http://www.bartleby.com/65/ca/Caesar-J.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Caesar, Julius

    37. History Of The Hellenistic And Roman World
    Includes biographies of julius caesar and Scipio Africanus, a Timeline from 300BC 1CE, and introductory histories of both Rome and Greece.
    http://www.fenrir.dk/history/
    Imperium History Forum About ... Fenrir.dk History Timeline Bios History Gallery
    History of the Hellenistic and Roman World
    On the following pages, you will find a number of articles describing various events and personalities of the Hellenistic and Roman world in the time period 300 BCE to 1 CE. I have been very pleased by the great popularity of the (former) Geocities website which now - for the second time - has caused me to move the website to a new domain. With any luck, this will be the last time I will need to do so. I hope this website will be able to continue to serve, inspire and help people looking for information about the Hellenistic and Roman worlds for many years to come. Michael A.
    January 1, 2002
    General History
    Historical Timeline (300 BCE - 1 CE)
    Short timeline of the major events of the Hellenistic and Roman World from 300 BCE to the year 1 CE.
    Great Leaders of the Ancient World
    Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus
    (236 - 184 BCE)
    - A Biography The greatest Roman General, and perhaps the greatest general of the ancient world. During the Second Punic Wars, he led the Roman armies to success, first in Spain and later against the great punic general Hannibal. The most famous person of his age of whom it was said that "one man alone was the prop of the Roman Empire", he was instrumental in shaping the policies that made Rome the unchallenged mistress of the Mediterranean.
    Gaius Julius Caesar
    (100 - 44 BCE)
    - A Biography The most famous Roman general and statesman, conqueror of Gaul (58 - 50 BCE) who brought about the effective end of the Republic. After building up an army in Gaul, Caesar marched against the Senate in 49 BCE, and defeated his rival Gnaeus Pompeus Magnus at the battle of Pharsalus. As dictator of Rome, he launched a series of political and social reforms before he was assasinated by a group of nobles in the Senate House on the Ides of March.

    38. Gaius Julius Caesar
    This webpage covers caesar's early life and the Gallic wars.
    http://www.main-vision.com/richard/Caesar.html
    Gaius Julius Caesar
    Back
    Next
    Early days
    His Parents
    Gaius Caesar's father was an upper class person of good origin although the material wealth was quite small. He was a minor state official. He was a member of the Julia Clan whom are descendants of Iulus, son of Lenas, mythical creator of Rome His mother rose from a less important towards one of greater power.
    Caesar and Sulla
    Cornelus Sulla who lived from 138-78BC was elected consul in 88BC. He launched a counter strike in Asia after 80,000 Roman soldiers were massacred and in 83 BC came back victorious. With his army he became more powerful so as to become dictator. During this time he created public lists of his enemies to be killed and at least a thousand perished due to this. Caesar was no longer welcome in Rome due to is connectiongs Marius and Cinna. He lost the inheritance from his father and lost the dowry of his marriage to Conclia. He was no longer a priest and was given freedom from harrasment but went to Asia to be an aide to Marcus Thermus. He won the citizen's crown after having stormed Mytilene on the Island Of Lesbos. Following from this his reputation had increased and it would become time for him to rise to power.

    39. 9997. Caesar [Gaius Julius Caesar], Julius. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 19
    caesar Gaius julius caesar, julius. The Columbia World of Quotations. ATTRIBUTION julius caesar Gaius julius caesar (100–44 BC), Roman general, emperor.
    http://www.bartleby.com/66/97/9997.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Quotations The Columbia World of Quotations PREVIOUS ... AUTHOR INDEX The Columbia World of Quotations. NUMBER: QUOTATION: The die is cast.

    40. Ides Of March
    The soothsayer's warning to julius caesar, Beware the Ides of March, has forever imbued that date with a sense of foreboding.
    http://www.infoplease.com/spot/ides1.html
    in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
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      The Ides of March Just one of a dozen Ides
      by Borgna Brunner
      As far as Caesar knew, the Ides were just another day. The soothsayer's warning to Julius Caesar Shakespeare's time, sixteen centuries later, audiences attending his play Julius Caesar wouldn't have blinked twice upon hearing the date called the Ides.
      The term Ides comes from the earliest Roman calendar , which is said to have been devised by Romulus , the mythical founder of Rome . Whether it was Romulus or not, the inventor of this calendar had a penchant for complexity. The Roman calendar organized its months around three days, each of which served as a reference point for counting the other days:
      • Kalends (1st day of the month)
      • Nones (the 7th day in March, May, July, and October; the 5th in the other months)
      • Ides (the 15th day in March, May, July, and October; the 13th in the other months)

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