You can't kill his legacy
You can't kill his legacy
You can't kill his legacy
This meme explained: Cut your vegetables like you cut a Caesar.
Nha, you just have to gain the chicken's trust and the stab it on the back.
How I imagine his personality based on the story about how Caesar trolled pirates who held him for ransom, I bet Caesar would get a kick out of this meme.
But first he would have to learn meme culture . Like i have to learb who caesar is can someone give a tldr i would love to know.
Julius Caesar was a Roman emperor who is famous for being betrayed by his council (and possibly son depending how much your read into suetonius's 12 Caesars) and stabbed in the back by like 20 people at the same time. the salad pictured is called a Caesar salad, but it wasnt invented by Julius Caesar it's just commonly attributed to him in meme culture as a joke.
The two answers here are pretty bad, so here's my take as a history nerd.
Gaius Julius Caesar was a highly ambitious Roman politician who through very clever political manoeuvering and incredible military success (considered a military genius) forged a path to almost complete power after winning the civil war and beating the opposing senators, spearheaded by Pompey and Cato. After becoming dictator for life, he was assassinated on the ides of March (the 15th) in 44BC by a group of opposing senators, which included his adopted son Brutus (daughter of his long time lover Cornelia). After the assassination Rome again fell into civil war, with Gaius Julius Octavianus eventually becoming the first Roman emperor, now usually known as emperor Augustus.
Caesar was never an emperor, but the word emperor in many languages is directly based on Caesars name. For example: czar in Russian, kaiser in German and keizer in Dutch.
In 1st Century BC, Caesar was the most famous Roman Emperor whose authority grew to be the foremost power in all of Europe, Middle East, and Africa. His legionnaires were military forces that went on foot across deserts and mountains, sometimes laying roads along the way, which spread Latin to the entire Western World which later laid the foundation for French, English, Spanish, and other language adaptations. Because of him, phrases such as "All Roads Lead to Rome" and "When in Rome, do as the Romans do" exist.
The Roman Senators and leaders in multiple branches of Government realized that Caesar's power had become something like that of a King, which directly opposed the ideology of Roman Democracy, so three of his good friends took him out back and murdered him. If you trust the words of 16th century poets, then they stabbed Julius exactly 37 times.
His lineage continued to rule Rome for about a century, meaning the aforementioned assassination failed completely.
Ave Caesar!
Fun fact: the ceasar salad was invented in Tijuana in the 1920s?
And The salad has, in turn, killed many (romaine lettuce prone to bacteria)
I suspect Caesar the guy had more people killed than Caesar salads but I admit I do not have proof.
Fun fact: The Caesar salad was created in Mexico from what I knew.
Ironically, after a bunch of salad ingredients had gone bad and the head chef had to scramble for a menu, if I recall the story correctly.
Can't see a Caesar and not want a Caesar
That's the one with fish juice right?
What'd you say about my ex wife?
This is my Roman Empire
I’ve been playing Expeditions Rome and the pronunciation of the Roman names is quite interesting.
Yah, because salad is Latin for salted vegetables.
Caesar is a title not a name. Like emperor, czar, king...
Oh boy, you're gonna have fun learning where the name of the tittle comes from...
Caesar Salad is from the 1920's. A restauranteur and Italian immigrant named Caesar Cardini served it in Tijuana, Mexico.
It had nothing to do with ancient Romans. Bad meme, do your homework next time.
His rival across town was named Brutus.
He sounds dangerous, or at least if you're an emperor.
A Brutus Salad you say? Intriguing...
How many ages hence
Shall this our lofty scene be acted over
In states unborn and accents yet unknown!
Yea tru, thank u Shakespeare
I'm sure that with him being an Italian immigrant, the name Caesar has NOTHING to do with ancient Rome. Absolutely zero link there.
Caesar salad was invented in Mexico, but the basic message here remains true
It was an Italian immigrant, though.
We need one more twist to make this a truly great factoid.
That immigrant's name? Caesar Mario, father of the Mario Brothers of Mushroom Kingdom fame.
Got em ... because that Italian immigrant most likely had 0.00000000000000000001% DNA relation to Julius Caesar
He was probably also 1/32nds Cherokee too