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  2. Although Latin, ‘Et tu Brute‘ is one of the most famous quotations from English literature, from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar play. It is uttered by Julius Caesar in one of the most dramatic, violent and bloody scenes, in which a group of murderers – including Brutus – gang up on their victim, Julius Caesar, to stab him to death, then ...

  3. The quote appears in Act 3 Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, [1] where it is spoken by the Roman dictator Julius Caesar, at the moment of his assassination, to his friend Marcus Junius Brutus, upon recognizing him as one of the assassins.

  4. Even in 1599, the year Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar was staged, the phrase ‘Et tu Brute’ appeared in Ben Jonson’s Every Man out of his Humour, so it was almost certainly a thoroughly established phrase in theatre, even a cliché, when Shakespeare used it. But what precisely does ‘Et tu, Brute?’ mean?

  5. The History of the Quotation. Professor George L. Craik, in his comprehensive philological commentary on Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, explains: The only ancient authority, I believe, for this famous exclamation is in Suetonius, I. 82, where Caesar is made to address Brutus (And thou too, my son?).

    • the Ides of March is a cursed day like Friday the 13th. Whenever the Ides of March is referenced in modern pop culture it usually has a dark and foreboding connotation.
    • Caesar was told by a soothsayer to "Beware the Ides of March" Perhaps it was this famous ominous warning that forever darkened this date in the calendar.
    • Caesar’s right-hand man Brutus led the conspiracy. Although most will think of Brutus in the same league as Judas when it comes to betrayals, he was not, in fact, the main ringleader of the assassins, nor was he Caesar’s right-hand man.
    • Caesar was killed in the grand hall of the Senate House. When the death of Caesar is imagined it’s often pictured in the grand hall of the Senate House or on the steps just in front of it, neither of which was actually the case.
  6. Et tu Brute’ is really an invention of Shakespeare’s, taking his lead from the writings of Suetonius. It is the best-known line from his play Julius Caesar, 1599. As in many of his plays, Shakespeare massaged historical record for dramatic effect.

  7. 77. Et tu, Brute! "And thou, too, Brutus!" There seems to be no ancient authority for these famous words. They do not occur in Plutarch; but, as has been pointed out many times, this very exclamation is found in two different works which were printed shortly before Shakespeare wrote "Julius Caesar."

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