gptkbp:instance_of
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gptkb:play
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gptkbp:adaptation
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gptkb:film_adaptation
gptkb:ballet
gptkb:opera
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gptkbp:based_on
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gptkb:Plutarch's_Lives
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gptkbp:character
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gptkb:Calpurnia
gptkb:Casca
gptkb:Lepidus
gptkb:Mark_Antony
gptkb:Cinna_the_Poet
gptkb:Portia
gptkb:Octavius_Caesar
gptkb:Soothsayer
Brutus' servant
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gptkbp:cultural_impact
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performed worldwide
inspired numerous adaptations
referenced in popular culture
studied in schools
influenced political rhetoric
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gptkbp:famous_quote
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gptkb:Et_tu,_Brute?
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars.
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gptkbp:first_performance
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1599
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gptkbp:genre
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gptkb:tragedy
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https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
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Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
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gptkbp:influence
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gptkb:theatrical_performances
Western literature
political discourse
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gptkbp:language
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English
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gptkbp:main_character
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gptkb:Cassius
gptkb:Brutus
gptkb:Julius_Caesar
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gptkbp:notable_performance
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gptkb:The_Globe_Theatre
gptkb:Royal_Shakespeare_Company
gptkb:theater
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gptkbp:plot
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gptkb:Mark_Antony's_speech
assassination of Julius Caesar
the conspiracy against Caesar
the role of fate
the theme of honor
Brutus' internal conflict
the conflict between public duty and personal loyalty
the aftermath of Caesar's death
the rise of Octavius Caesar
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gptkbp:setting
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gptkb:Roman_Empire
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gptkbp:theme
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gptkb:power
gptkb:betrayal
gptkb:friendship
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gptkbp:written_by
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gptkb:William_Shakespeare
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gptkbp:bfsParent
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gptkb:Caesar
gptkb:Mark_Antony
gptkb:Julius_Caesar
gptkb:Rome
gptkb:Pompey
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gptkbp:bfsLayer
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4
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