Julius Caesar: see Caesar, Julius.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Related content from HighBeam Research on: Julius Caesar
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Erasmus's De Copia, and sentential ambiguity. (Comparative Drama)
Julius Caesar.(Play) (Junior Scholastic)
Julius Caesar.(Theater Review) (Shakespeare Bulletin)
Shakespeare's JULIUS CAESAR.(Review) (The Explicator)
The Julius Caesar Syndrome. (CioInsight)
The rise of Caesarism: the weakened Roman Republic was crushed by Julius Caesar, a charismatic military leader who exploited his popularity with a Roman people who desired security above all else.(History--Rome) (The New American)
From republic to empire: the assassins of Julius Caesar hoped to restore the Roman Republic, but they instead set in motion events that encouraged the rise and triumph of despots worse than Caesar.(History--Rome) (The New American)
Shakespeare's JULIUS CAESAR.(William Shakespeare)(succession of political power)(Critical Essay) (The Explicator)
Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar.' (The Explicator)
Julius Caesar. (Public Theater, New York) (The Nation)
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