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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. LISWA Online Catalogue /All Locations
1982 1 Cadell Francis 1822 1879 Juvenile Literature 1975 1 Cadmium Juvenile Literature1996 1 caesar julius 100 BC 44 BC Juvenile Literature 2 caesar julius
http://henrietta.liswa.wa.gov.au:90/kids/581,786/search/dCaesar, Julius -- Juven
Caesar Julius 100 B C 44 B C Juvenile Literature
Caesar Julius Adabiyat I Javanan
Caesar Julius CultCaesar Julius Drama ... Cafarella Antonio
WORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT

22. Caesar Julius
caesar julius A Biography of Gaius Julius Caesar and all major contemporariesin the Last Days of the Album title Julius Caesar (1993) . . . .
http://www.drummerstuff.com/discount-air-line-ticket.htm

23. Julius Caesar: The Last Dictator
Comprehensive fulllength biographies of julius caesar, all major contemporaries (Pompey, Sulla, Marius, Category Society History Ancient Rome People caesar, julius......A Biography of Gaius julius caesar and all major contemporaries in the LastDays of the Roman Republic. julius caesar, I, ii, William Shakespeare.
http://heraklia.fws1.com/
JULIUS
CAESAR:
THE LAST DICTATOR J ULIUS C AESAR: T HE L AST D ICTATOR
A B IOGRAPHY O F C AESAR A ND R OME
100 - 44 B.C. When could they say, till now, that talk'd of Rome, that her wide walks encompass'd but one man? Julius Caesar, I, ii, William Shakespeare The life of Gaius Julius Caesar illuminates the history of the failing Roman Republic and changed history. Meet the last dictator of Rome and his great contemporaries. Site founded 5/15/01. Site last updated and supplemented, 3/9/03.
Featured in the BBC Online's Web Guide: Best of the Web and HistoryChannel.com Network Discussion of Caesar's life and the last years of the Roman Republic may be found at AncientWorlds at the group Aedes Divi Iulii . Further information on ancient Rome may be found at the author's site,
Feminae Romanae: The Women of Ancient Rome.

Search WWW Search heraklia.fws1.com

24. Web Der Weltgeschichte - REDIRECT
verfasst, als über jenen Gaius julius caesar, der sich im ersten vorchristlichen Jahrhundert anschickte, das Antlitz
http://www.uni-paderborn.de/Admin/corona/chris/Caesar_0.html
This page has moved. It is now hosted by layline.de. PLEASE ADJUST YOUR LINKS - YOU WILL BE REDIRECTED WITHIN 5 SECONDS

25. 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.
  • 26. The Julius Caesar Site
    Texts, sources and analogs, and student projects.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/JC/
    The Julius Caesar Site
    Bust of Julius Caesar, from the British Museum
    from The Art of the Romans by H. P. Walters (1911) Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
    Sources and Analogues

    Tufts Students' Projects

    Click here for the extensive index of what this growing site includes and what is coming soon This site is currently under construction at Tufts University
    as part of the Perseus Project , a digital library for the study of
    ancient Greece, Rome, and now the English Renaissance. webmaster@perseus.tufts.edu

    27. The Internet Classics Archive | The African Wars By Julius Caesar
    caesar's description of the African Wars, part of the Internet Classics Archive.Category Society History By Region Africa Wars......The African Wars By julius caesar Commentary A few comments havebeen posted about The African Wars. Read them or add your own.
    http://classics.mit.edu/Caesar/african.html

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    The African Wars
    By Julius Caesar Commentary: A few comments have been posted about The African Wars Read them or add your own
    Reader Recommendations: Recommend a Web site you feel is appropriate to this work, list recommended Web sites , or visit a random recommended Web site
    Download: A 106k text-only version is available for download
    The African Wars By Julius Caesar Translated by W. A. McDevitte and W. S. Bohn Chapter 1 Caesar, advancing by moderate journeys, and continuing his march without intermission, arrived at Lilybaeum, on the 14th day before the calends of January. Designing to embark immediately, though he had only one legion of new levies, and not quite six hundred horse, he ordered his tent to be pitched so near the sea-side that the waves lashed the very foot of it. This he did with a view that none should think he had time to delay, and that his men might be kept in readiness at a day or an hour's warning. Though the wind at that time was contrary, he nevertheless detained the soldiers and mariners on board, that he might lose no opportunity of

    28. Encyclopædia Britannica
    Encyclopædia Britannica. caesar, julius. Encyclopædia Britannica Article
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=114507

    29. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar: A Paraphrase
    A paraphrase of Shakespeare's play, intended as a supplement to the original work.Category Arts Literature Works Plays Tragedies julius caesar......A paraphrase of Shakespeare's play julius caesar, along with summaries of each scene.Site includes links to other online Shakespearean resources. Home Act I.
    http://members.tripod.com/~lklivingston/caesar/
    Home Act I Act II Act III Act IV ... Links Check out
    my other
    educational
    site:
    Basic

    Guide

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    This paraphrase of William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar is intended as a supplement to the original work. Read it along with the original as an aid to comprehension, not as a replacement, since no paraphrase can ever match the richness of Shakespeare's original text. Act I Act II Act III Act IV ... Links If you find this site helpful, make a small donation to help defray the hosting costs. Please email me with your questions or comments. This page was created by Kathy Livingston in April 1997. The entire paraphrase was completed in August 2000.
    Contents are intended for use by individuals only as a study aid. For any other use, the author's written permission is required.
    Credits
    In compiling Acts I, II, and III of this paraphrase, I relied heavily on two sources: the teachers' editions of the Prentice Hall Literature Platinum Edition (Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1989) and the Literature and Language Blue Level The Riverside Shakespeare (Houghton Mifflin, Boston, Massachusetts, 1974).

    30. 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
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    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.

    31. Julius Caesar -- Virgil.org
    This book is available at a discount from Amazon and, in Europe, from AmazonUK. julius caesar An Annotated Guide to Online Resources 1 September 2001
    http://virgil.org/caesar/
    search virgil
    bibliography

    eclogues

    vitae
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    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
    1 September 2001
    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:

    32. Julius Caesar -- Virgil.org
    Access primary source biographies, genealogical data, chronologies, modern essays and historical fiction about the famed Roman figure. at a discount from Amazon and, in Europe, from Amazon UK. julius caesar. An Annotated Guide to Online Resources
    http://www.virgil.org/caesar
    search virgil
    bibliography

    eclogues

    vitae
    ...
    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
    1 September 2001
    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:

    33. Caesar, Julius
    encyclopediaEncyclopedia caesar, julius. caesar, julius (Caius juliuscaesar), 100? BC–44 BC, Roman statesman and general. Sections
    http://www.infoplease.com/ce5/CE008414.html

    34. 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.

    35. Caesar, Julius
    Help Site Map. encyclopediaEncyclopedia caesar, julius. caesar, julius(Caius julius caesar), 100? BC–44 BC, Roman statesman and general.
    http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/CE008414

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    You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Encyclopedia Caesar, Julius Caesar, Julius (Caius Julius Caesar), B.C. B.C. , Roman statesman and general. Sections in this article: Caesar Caesarea Mazaca Search Infoplease Info search tips Search Biographies Bio search tips About Us Contact Us Link to Infoplease ... Privacy

    36. Julius Caesar
    Includes a critical summary, essays, and a complete, searchable text.
    http://www.analyzing-caesar.com/
    Analyzing-Caesar:
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    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.
  • 37. - Great Books -
    Gaius julius caesar (c. 100 BC44 BC), Gaius julius caesar, born Rome, (probably)100 BC, died March 15, 44 BC, was a Roman military leader and dictator.
    http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_275.asp
    Gaius Julius Caesar (c. 100 BC-44 BC)
    Gaius Julius Caesar, born Rome, (probably) 100 BC, died March 15, 44 BC, was a Roman military leader and dictator. His military conquest of Gaul extended the Roman Empire to the Atlantic, an achievement whose consequences are visible to this day. His establishment of a government under the Triumvirate (see below) brought the Roman Republic to an end. He later became Dictator for Life and began many reforms in Roman society and government, work that was cut short by his assassination. Many of these reforms were later implemented by Augustus Caesar. Caesar's military achievements are known to us in detail from his own written accounts.
    Having held the positions of quaestor in Spain (69 BC), Caesar was elected curule aedile in 65 BC, pontifex maximus in 63 BC, and praetor in 62 BC. If it is true that he was implicated in the Catiline conspiracy, it did him no lasting damage. Caesar had already been in the service of the general, Pompey, with whom he would later share power. Following the death of his wife Cornelia (68 BC), he married Pompeia, a relative of Pompey, only to divorce her in 62 BC after a scandal. In 61 BC, Caesar served as governor of the province of Hispania Ulterior, and in 60 BC he was elected consul.
    Caesar's cursus honorum . In 59 B.C., the year of his consulate, Caesar entered into a strategic alliance with two other leading politicians, Marcus Licinius Crassus and Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. Crassus was the richest man in Rome; Pompey was the most successful general. Caesar brought to the alliance his political popularity and drive. Pompey married Caesar's daughter Julia. This unofficial alliance is called by historians the First Triumvirate, or "Three-man Arrangement". The Triumvirate meant the end of the Roman Republic. Other events in succession included the following: Consul, governor of Gaul and Spain 59 BC; Proconsul in Gaul, 58 BC-49 BC; Defeats Helvetii 58 BC; Defeats Belgic confederacy and Nervii, 57 BC; Defeats Veneti, 56 BC; Invasion of Britain 55 BC; Defeats union of Gauls 52 BC.

    38. 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....

    39. The Julius Caesar Site
    The julius caesar Site Bust of julius caesar, from the British Museum from The Art of the Romans by H. P. Walters (1911) This site is currently under construction at Tufts University
    http://www.perseus.org/JC
    The Julius Caesar Site
    Bust of Julius Caesar, from the British Museum
    from The Art of the Romans by H. P. Walters (1911) Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
    Sources and Analogues

    Tufts Students' Projects

    Click here for the extensive index of what this growing site includes and what is coming soon This site is currently under construction at Tufts University
    as part of the Perseus Project , a digital library for the study of
    ancient Greece, Rome, and now the English Renaissance. webmaster@perseus.tufts.edu

    40. Roman Calendars From Romulus To Julius Caesar
    Story of the Roman calendar from the time of Romulus to julius caesar.
    http://www.greenheart.com/billh/earlyrom.html
    document.write(''); document.write('') document.write('') document.write('3') document.write('') document.write('') document.write('6') document.write('') document.write('') document.write('9') document.write('') document.write('') document.write('12') document.write('Chronos')
    Early Roman Calendars
    This site is about
    M uch of the knowledge we now have about early Roman calendars came from Ovid, a Roman born in 43 B.C. , and from Plutarch, a Greek biographer who wrote between A.D. 105 and 115. Both of them had access to historical documents that are no longer extant. Ovid claimed that his information was "dug up in archaic calendars," so it was already ancient over two thousand years ago.
    We can assume that Rome's original citizens brought from their birthplace the notion of calendars having ten major divisions because early-on theirs contained only ten months. It has been suggested that those month lengths reflected growth cycles of crops and cattle. When compared with the solar year, it had an uncounted winter period of approximately sixty days.
    Plutarch pointed out that months at the time of Rome's founding were of varying lengths, some as short as twenty days and others with thirty-five or more in what early Romans believed was a year of three hundred and sixty days.

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