Shakespeare’s Et tu, Brute has been influential in shaping a tradition that interprets Caesar’s last words as an expression of shock at Brutus’ betrayal. Yet this interpretation is not suggested in the ancient sources that attest the tag καὶ σύ, τέκνον (‘you too, son’). This article argues that Caesar’s dictum evokes a formula of funerary epigrams, which refers to death as the common lot of all mortals. The epitaphic connotations of καὶ σύ or tu quoque feature in epic poetry, a connection that lends a Homeric dimension to Caesar’s last words. The dictator’s oral epitaph predicts the death of Brutus as a consequence of his involvement in the assassination. It means ‘You too, son, will die’. The Greco-Roman belief that a dying man can foresee...
Recent scholarship on early Christian martyrdom tends to be sceptical towards the traditional pictur...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan’s...
In the Rome of julius Caesar, language is power and characters rise or fall on the basis of their ab...
En este artículo se estudia el discurso fúnebre de Marco Antonio en la obra de Shakespeare Julio Cé...
Abstract – In Die fröhliche Wissenschaft Nietzsche states that to Brutus “Shakespeare consecrated hi...
[Extract] In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, the conspirator Cassius bitterly describes the pos...
The speeches delivered at Caesar’s funeral by Brutus and Antony in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar are ...
Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar' is historically linked to the assassination of President Lincoln and t...
School of Andrea Mantegna (16th Century), Italian The Triumph of Caesar: The Senators Engraving ...
In many sources, Caesar is said to have wept and become indignant at the sight of Pompey’s head pres...
This thesis argues that the characters of Titurius Sabinus and Quintus Cicero, as depicted by Caesar...
“‘Peace, ho! Brutus speaks.’ And speaks. And speaks. And except for a couple of fatal blows that he ...
The extant life of Julius Caesar by Suetonius begins with the dictator Sulla predicting that Caesar ...
Resumen: En este artículo se estudia el discurso fúnebre de Marco Antonio en la obra de Shakespeare ...
This paper analyses Marcus Antonius's funeral oration in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar as an exam...
Recent scholarship on early Christian martyrdom tends to be sceptical towards the traditional pictur...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan’s...
In the Rome of julius Caesar, language is power and characters rise or fall on the basis of their ab...
En este artículo se estudia el discurso fúnebre de Marco Antonio en la obra de Shakespeare Julio Cé...
Abstract – In Die fröhliche Wissenschaft Nietzsche states that to Brutus “Shakespeare consecrated hi...
[Extract] In William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, the conspirator Cassius bitterly describes the pos...
The speeches delivered at Caesar’s funeral by Brutus and Antony in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar are ...
Shakespeare's 'Julius Caesar' is historically linked to the assassination of President Lincoln and t...
School of Andrea Mantegna (16th Century), Italian The Triumph of Caesar: The Senators Engraving ...
In many sources, Caesar is said to have wept and become indignant at the sight of Pompey’s head pres...
This thesis argues that the characters of Titurius Sabinus and Quintus Cicero, as depicted by Caesar...
“‘Peace, ho! Brutus speaks.’ And speaks. And speaks. And except for a couple of fatal blows that he ...
The extant life of Julius Caesar by Suetonius begins with the dictator Sulla predicting that Caesar ...
Resumen: En este artículo se estudia el discurso fúnebre de Marco Antonio en la obra de Shakespeare ...
This paper analyses Marcus Antonius's funeral oration in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar as an exam...
Recent scholarship on early Christian martyrdom tends to be sceptical towards the traditional pictur...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan’s...
In the Rome of julius Caesar, language is power and characters rise or fall on the basis of their ab...