"Julius caesar rise to political prominence and power" Essays and Research Papers

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    Julius Caesar’s rise to prominence up until 60BC transpired due to a number of factors. The first of these being his family background and Marian connections‚ which at varying stages of his life were both a help and a hindrance. We can also note that most of his marriages were used to gain political and financial resources accentuating his connections to powerful families and individuals. This rise to prominence can also be attributed to Caesar’s opportunistic nature and vast ambitions coupled with

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    Julius Caesar’s death included twenty-three brutal senators‚ an apparent close friend that turned out to be an enemy‚ a community that loved their leader‚ and a whole lot of power. Julius Caesar was the most powerful figure in the history of the Roman Republic‚ and at the time was gaining unlimited power. Caesar gained so much power‚ that he was being considered as the “King of Rome”. Power became the key to life in Rome‚ and the Senate was frightened by Caesar’s tremendous amounts of power. Due

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    general and politician‚ Julius Caesar (c.100 BC – 44 BC / Reigned 46 – 44 BC) changed the course of Roman history. Although he did not rule for long‚ he gave Rome fresh hope and a whole dynasty of emperors. Born into an aristocratic family in around 100 BC‚ Julius Caesar grew up in dangerous times. Rome could not yet handle its own size and power. The nobility were widely discredited and order had given way to chaos. The only clear alternative was military dictatorship. Caesar allied himself against

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    Analytical Essay Julius Caesar Power is a theme that has dominated mankind since history was recorded. The assassination of Julius Caesar‚ ruler of the greatest empire the world has ever known‚ was a result of such a struggle for power. The foundations of Shakespeare’s ’Julius Caesar’ are power relationships which dominate the liaisons between characters of opposing sex‚ classes‚ and ambitions. Even in the historical context‚ Rome in 44 BC‚ the height of the Roman Republic‚ predisposes the play

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    circumstances or experiences. Power can go either way. In Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare‚ power is addictive‚ it destroys relationships‚ and induces guilt in the characters. There are two examples in Julius Caesar where power changes the characters into greedy men. The first example is Julius Caesar. At the beginning of the play‚ he has already attained most of the power he could possibly have. He needs only to be crowned the king of Rome to have absolute power. When he says‚ “Let me have men

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    play “Julius Caesar” by Shakespeare‚ the power of words is displayed throughout the entire work. Speech plays a large role in the plot of “Julius Caesar”. Generally‚ when people try to get what they want or to persuade others; they use words. The fickle plebeians are swayed through Brutus’ and Antony’s speeches. The power of words is seen most clearly in Act III when Antony and Brutus speak at Caesar’s funeral. Brutus speaks first‚ explaining why he and the conspirators assassinated Caesar.

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    800-600 Rise of Greek city- states; Athens and Sparta become dominant. c.700 Homerian epics Iliad Odyssey; flowering of Greek architecture. 550 Cyrus the Great forms Persian Empire. 509 Beginnings of Roman republic. 470-430 Athens at its height: Pericles‚ Phidias‚ Sophocles‚ Socrates. 450 Twelve Tables of Law 431-404 Peloponnesian Wars. 359-336 Phillip II of Macedonia 338-323 Macedonian Empire‚ Alexander the Great. 300-100 Hellenistic period. 264-146 Rome’s Punic Wars. 49 Julius Caesar becomes

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    Title of Assessed Work: Why did Thebes come to political prominence in the fourth century? ‘’The victory of the Thebans was the most famous of all those won by Greeks over Greeks’’1 This essay will look at the rise of Thebes to political prominence in Greece in the fourth century BC in a an analytical rather than chronological fashion‚ by considering both the decline of the major city states around Thebes as well as Theban advantages. It will draw on the format used by John Buckler2

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    Does power corrupt people or do people corrupt power? Power is something that is coveted by many. It is fickle like luck and can change between people in an instant. It can be solid like steel and wielded with absolute authority. In Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar‚ the Roman senators are always struggling for power‚ especially the prominent ones like Caesar and Pompey. Not only does Shakespeare use animal imagery to describe the the nature of his characters in The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

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    What were the reasons for the rise and fall of Julius Caesar? Changes within the structure of the Roman army set the early stage of the rise of Julius Caesar to power within the Roman Empire. The republican army of the early days was founded on the “Servian” constitution. The army was the army of the state; citizens served in it according to their wealth and were called to arms when needed. In the third century this began to change as campaigns increased in duration and moved farther and farther

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