
His EuTu
Brutus is Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell. GOP Leadership Is Going to Fund Sanctuary
Cities going against the President agenda.
Not
only has the MSM, The Democrats have thrown everything at him except the
kitchen sink. They have tried Collusion, Fraud, and Sexual Harassment, if you
can think of they have tried it. So Far Trump is still standing tall and keeps
on target of America First agenda. be
The Ides of March (Latin: Idus Martiae, Late Latin: Idus Martii)[1] is a day on
the Roman calendar that
corresponds to 15 March. It was marked by several religious
observances and was notable for the Romans as a deadline for
settling debts.[2] In 44 BC, it
became notorious as the date of the assassination of
Julius Caesar which made the Ides of March a turning point in Roman
history.
The Ides of March is best known as
the date on which Julius Caesar was
assassinated in 44 BC. Caesar was stabbed to death at a meeting of the Senate. As many as 60 conspirators, led
by Brutus and Cassius,
were involved. According to Plutarch,[19] a seer had warned that harm
would come to Caesar no later than the Ides of March. On his way to the Theatre of Pompey, where he would be
assassinated, Caesar passed the seer and joked, "The Ides of March are
come", implying that the prophecy had not been fulfilled, to which the
seer replied "Aye, Caesar; but not gone."[19] This meeting is famously
dramatised in William Shakespeare's
play Julius Caesar,
when Caesar is warned by the soothsayer to "beware the Ides of
March."[20][21] The Roman biographer Suetonius[22]identifies the "seer" as
a haruspex named Spurinna.
Caesar's death was a closing event in
the crisis of the
Roman Republic, and triggered the civil war that would result in the rise
to sole power of his adopted heir Octavian (later known as Augustus).[23] Writing
under Augustus, Ovid portrays the murder
as a sacrilege, since Caesar was also the Pontifex Maximus of Rome and a priest
of Vesta.[24] On the fourth anniversary of
Caesar's death in 40 BC, after achieving a victory at the siege of Perugia, Octavian executed 300 senators and knights who had fought against him
under Lucius
Antonius, the brother of Mark Antony.[25] The executions were one of a
series of actions taken by Octavian to avenge Caesar's death. Suetonius and the
historian Cassius Dio characterised
the slaughter as a religious
sacrifice,[26][27] noting that it occurred on the
Ides of March at the new altar to the deified Julius.