
Introduction to the play
Shakespeare may have written Julius Caesar as the first of his plays to be performed at the Globe, in 1599. For it, he turned to a key event in Roman history: Caesar’s death at the hands of friends and fellow politicians. Renaissance writers disagreed over the assassination, seeing Brutus, a leading conspirator, as either hero or villain. Shakespeare’s play keeps this debate alive.
The Folger Shakespeare
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Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.
I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.
The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interrèd with their bones.
—Antony
Act 3, scene 2, lines 82-85
There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune
—Brutus
Act 4, scene 3, lines 249-250
From the audio edition of Julius Caesar
Full recording available from Simon & Schuster Audio on CD and for download.
Julius Caesar in our collection
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Essays and resources from The Folger Shakespeare
Julius Caesar
Learn more about the play, its language, and its history from the experts behind our edition.
About Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar
An introduction to the plot, themes, and characters in the play
Reading Shakespeare’s Language
A guide for understanding Shakespeare’s words, sentences, and wordplay
An Introduction to This Text
A description of the publishing history of the play and our editors’ approach to this edition
Textual Notes
A record of the variants in the early printings of this text
A Modern Perspective
An essay by Coppélia Kahn
Further Reading
Suggestions from our experts on where to learn more
Shakespeare and his world
Learn more about Shakespeare, his theater, and his plays from the experts behind our editions.
Shakespeare’s Life
An essay about Shakespeare and the time in which he lived
Shakespeare’s Theater
An essay about what theaters were like during Shakespeare’s career
The Publication of Shakespeare’s Plays
An essay about how Shakespeare’s plays were published
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Teaching Julius Caesar
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Early printed texts
Julius Caesar was published for the first time in the 1623 First Folio, and that text is the source of all later editions of the play.