Julius Caesar (Shakespeare play)
Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Julius Caesar (Shakespeare play)’
In The Copybook
Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Julius Caesar (Shakespeare play)’
In The Copybook
On a visit to England in 1599, Swiss doctor Thomas Platter found time to pop across the Thames and take in a show.
In 1599, Swiss physician Thomas Platter and his older half-brother, Felix, paid a visit to England, then ruled by Elizabeth I. Two o’clock in the afternoon of Tuesday September 21st found Thomas at a theatre ‘across the water’ in Southwark. He may have attended the fading Rose; but most scholars assume he crowded into the brand new Globe to watch one of Mr Shakespeare’s much-admired plays.
Marullus was disgusted at the way that the fickle people of Rome turned so easily from one hero to another.
In 60 BC, three rivals for control of the Roman Republic, Pompey, Crassus and Caesar, formed the Triumvirate, an uneasy alliance. Crassus died in 53 out in Syria. Caesar defeated Pompey in Greece in 48, and Pompey’s sons in Spain in 45. He returned home to popular adoration, and in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Marullus was disgusted by this celebration of victory for Roman over Roman.