Pompey is important in the plot because Julius Caesar ironically dies next to his statue after Caesar kills him.
Pompey was important to the plot of Julius Caesar for many reasons. The first is because Pompey was part of that original trio of people that were going to rule together. Then Julius Caesar freaks out and wants to rule by himself so he goes off and decides to kill Pompey. This makes Julius Caesar very big headed. He begins to like himself a bit too much, and does things just to get attention and pretend that he is modest (like refusing the crown three times before finally accepting it.)
This leaves Pompey's people in a bit of a predicament. They have to choose between death, and following Julius Caesar's rule. Many of them decide to follow Caesar, and many decide to just die.
Cassius and Brutus have a similar relationship. Cassius needs Brutus to be able to go through with his plan. Without Brutus, he wouldn't get away with it because he wouldn't have an insider in on the assassination plans. Even if Cassius went through with the plans to kill Caesar with the help of Brutus, and he was successful; people would look down on this. Brutus has the power to make anything he does wrong look like the politically correct thing to do. If the group gets away with killing Caesar, then they will need someone to make everyone else see their side. That is Brutus.
So in the end, Brutus is being used intentionally, and Pompey being murdered was a good thing to Caesar.
Julius Caesar's soul never dies throughout the entire play. He is always there and there would never be a plot without him.
That it's called the tragedy of Julius Caesar, but when one more closely examines the plot structure and dramatic form it's really the tragedy of Marcus Brutus.
Portia was the wife of Brutus in the time of Julius Caesar. Brutus was the one who killed Caesar, and Portia suspected a plot to assasinate Caesar. She killed herself by swallowing hot coals. She is famous because she was involved in the murder of Caesar, and in in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, as well she is in the movie adaptions.
A plot led by Brutus was carried out so that Brutus and the other murderers (Roman Senators) would each stab Julius Caesar at a dinner. According to accounts he was stabbed 37 times.
Pompey is not a place, he was a political rival of Caesar who died in Egypt long before Caesar's assasination. It's possible you were thinking of Pompeii, but Caesar was not killed there, either. He was killed in the Senate building on March 15, 44 B.C. The conspirators who killed him were a group of Senators. Brutus, once a close ally of Caesars', was the most famous assasin. Cassius Longingus was another famous assasin, and a senator who was involved in the plot.
Pompey was important to the plot of Julius Caesar for many reasons. The first is because Pompey was part of that original trio of people that were going to rule together. Then Julius Caesar freaks out and wants to rule by himself so he goes off and decides to kill Pompey. This makes Julius Caesar very big headed. He begins to like himself a bit too much, and does things just to get attention and pretend that he is modest (like refusing the crown three times before finally accepting it.) This leaves Pompey's people in a bit of a predicament. They have to choose between death, and following Julius Caesar's rule. Many of them decide to follow Caesar, and many decide to just die. Cassius and Brutus have a similar relationship. Cassius needs Brutus to be able to go through with his plan. Without Brutus, he wouldn't get away with it because he wouldn't have an insider in on the assassination plans. Even if Cassius went through with the plans to kill Caesar with the help of Brutus, and he was successful; people would look down on this. Brutus has the power to make anything he does wrong look like the politically correct thing to do. If the group gets away with killing Caesar, then they will need someone to make everyone else see their side. That is Brutus. So in the end, Brutus is being used intentionally, and Pompey being murdered was a good thing to Caesar.
Julius Caesar's soul never dies throughout the entire play. He is always there and there would never be a plot without him.
Pompey was important to the plot of Julius Caesar for many reasons. The first is because Pompey was part of that original trio of people that were going to rule together. Then Julius Caesar freaks out and wants to rule by himself so he goes off and decides to kill Pompey. This makes Julius Caesar very big headed. He begins to like himself a bit too much, and does things just to get attention and pretend that he is modest (like refusing the crown three times before finally accepting it.) This leaves Pompey's people in a bit of a predicament. They have to choose between death, and following Julius Caesar's rule. Many of them decide to follow Caesar, and many decide to just die. Cassius and Brutus have a similar relationship. Cassius needs Brutus to be able to go through with his plan. Without Brutus, he wouldn't get away with it because he wouldn't have an insider in on the assassination plans. Even if Cassius went through with the plans to kill Caesar with the help of Brutus, and he was successful; people would look down on this. Brutus has the power to make anything he does wrong look like the politically correct thing to do. If the group gets away with killing Caesar, then they will need someone to make everyone else see their side. That is Brutus. So in the end, Brutus is being used intentionally, and Pompey being murdered was a good thing to Caesar.
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar traces the plot to assassinate the Roman dictator Julius Caesar, and its execution, and the subsequent attempt of the assassins to take over the Roman government, and its failure. Much attention is paid to the contrasting personalities of the leaders of the plot, the idealistic Brutus and the bitter and cynical Cassius.
Julius Caesar knew a guy called Brutus because he had an affair with Brutus' mother and Brutus would sometimes go to Julius' house. A rumour then began that Brutus wanted to kill a politician called Pompey, Julius helped Brutus out saying it was all a lie. Then in 44BC(the year Julius was killed), Brutus was part of a plot to murder Julius. Brutus played a major role, distracting Julius so someone could stab him in the neck.
The senators quarreled with one another. Eliminating Caesar was the only thing they had in common.
William Shakespeare based his play Julius Caesar on Sir Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Life of Brutus and Life of Caesar. Plutarch's biographies of important Romans were popular in Shakespeare's days.
While Julius Caesar was alive, he was more important than Marc Antony because his status was higher. However, in the play by William Shakespeare, Marc Antony is more important to the overall theme because he lives longer, and his role is more significant to the plot in general.
kill himself
Brutus joins the plot to assassinate Julius Caesar with Caesar's dying words being 'Et tu Brute'
Casca was a Roman senator and a conspirator in the plot to assassinate Julius Caesar. He played a key role in the assassination by being one of the first to stab Caesar, which ultimately led to Caesar's downfall. Casca's actions were pivotal in the events that unfolded in Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar."
Julius Caesar did not change his mind. He was due to attend the meeting of the senate. Mark Antony was warned about the assassination plot and wanted to warn him. However, he was diverted by one of the plotters and Caesar remained unaware of the plot and went ahead with his schedule.