- term
Caesarism in 1846, to
describe the state's
political subordination of the
Roman Catholic Church. In 1850,
Auguste Romieu defined Caesarism as the...
-
commemorations take
place on 15
March to
commemorate Caesar's death.
Julius Caesar is seen as the main
example of
Caesarism, a form of
political rule led by a charismatic...
-
Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus (born
Gaius Octavius; 23
September 63 BC – 19
August AD 14), also
known as
Octavian (Latin: Octavi****), was the
founder of...
-
Caesar's is a
restaurant inside a
hotel of the same name on
Avenida Revolución in Tijuana, Mexico. The
restaurant is best
known for
originating the Caesar...
-
Julius Caesar was ********inated by a
group of
senators on the Ides of
March (15 March) of 44 BC
during a
meeting of the
Senate at the
Curia of
Pompey of...
- In cryptography, a
Caesar cipher, also
known as
Caesar's cipher, the
shift cipher,
Caesar's code, or
Caesar shift, is one of the
simplest and most widely...
- A
Caesar salad (also
spelled Cesar, César and Cesare) is a
green salad of
romaine lettuce and
croutons dressed with
lemon juice (or lime juice), olive...
-
Dumar Norwill Simmonds (born
April 5, 1995),
known professionally as
Daniel Caesar, is a
Canadian singer and songwriter.
After independently building a following...
- Look up
Caesar,
Caesars, or
Cæsar in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Julius Caesar (100–44 BC) was a
Roman general and dictator.
Caesar or
Cæsar may also...
-
Tiberius Julius Caesar Augustus (/taɪˈbɪəriəs/ ty-BEER-ee-əs; 16
November 42 BC – 16
March AD 37) was
Roman emperor from AD 14
until 37. He
succeeded his...