Ides of March Marked Murder of
Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar's bloody assassination
on March 15, 44 B.C., forever marked
March 15, or the Ides of March, as a
day of infamy. It has fascinated
scholars and writers ever since.
From the National Geographic News,
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The
soothsayer's warning to
Julius Caesar,
"Beware the Ides of March," has
forever imbued that date with a
sense of foreboding. But in Roman
times the expression "Ides of March"
did not necessarily evoke a dark
mood—it was simply the standard way
of saying "March 15." Surely such a
fanciful expression must signify
something more than merely another
day of the year? Not so. Even in
Shakespeare's
time, sixteen centuries later,
audiences attending his play
Julius Caesar wouldn't have
blinked twice upon hearing the date
called the Ides.
The term Ides comes from the
earliest Roman
calendar,
which is said to have been devised
by
Romulus,
the mythical founder of
Rome.
Whether it was Romulus or not, the
inventor of this calendar had a
penchant for complexity. The Roman
calendar organized its months around
three days, each of which served as
a reference point for counting the
other days: