The assassination of Julius Caesar was reenacted in Rome at the exact same place where it had taken place 2,000 years ago.
March 15 once again marks the Ides of March, a date linked annually to doom and misfortune due to the assassination of Julius ...
Delve into the intriguing history and significance of the Ides of March, a day that has fascinated historians and conspiracy theorists alike for centuries.
On March 15, 44 B.C., on the “ides of March,” Roman dictator Julius Caesar was assassinated by Roman senators, including ...
In the 1599 William Shakespeare’s play, In Act I, Scene II of Julius Caesar, Shakespeare introduces a soothsayer to offer a ...
Marcus Junius Brutus was a Roman politician, leader, orator—and one of history’s most infamous assassins. Why did he launch a ...
Today the Ides of March survives as a powerful historical metaphor. What was once simply a day for settling debts and ...
When I was in Class Four, I read The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. Among the many plays, two left a lasting impression on me: Julius Caesar and The Merchant of Venice. Of the two, ...
The Roman Republic fell roughly 2,000 years ago — the culmination of a series of events including Julius Caesar’s assassination 2,069 years ago today. Yet the republic’s ruin still influences how we ...
Julius Caesar would seem a no-brainer choice at the moment. The timing looks bang on. Autocrats the order of the day, assassination attempts, actual assassinations, the threat of civil war, rabid ...