Fundamentally, they are emotional. Their apparent reasons are fuelled by their dislike of Caesar's arrogance and their fear of his growing power.
Marc Antony, a Caesar loyalist, turned the crowd against the conspirators at Caesar's funeral by delivering his famous "Friends, Roman, countrymen" speech.
Anthony was a true friend of Caesar because he was with Caesar till the end. He made the people revolt against the conspirators. His speech was genuine and had emotions and feelings. He cleverly gains the sympathy of the people by reading them his will. Unlike Brutus he was a faithful friend of Caesar. He was willing to die in the hands of the conspirators with the same sword that killed Caesar.
Antony and Octaveous were both not conspirators against Caesar.
He is one of the conspirators against Julius Caesar
The primary subject of the play Julius Caesar is the conspirators who plotted against Julius Caesar. It portrays the conspiracy again Julius Caesar, his assassination, and the defeat of the conspirators at the Battle of Philippi.
The conspirators against Ceasar and Brutus, his friend.
There could have been anywhere from 30 to 40 conspirators in the plot against Caesar. All of them did not actually take part in the physical murder, but they were aware of the plot.
Marc Antony reads Julius Caesar's will to the crowd during his speech. He claims that Caesar had left money and property to the citizens of Rome, appealing to their emotions and turning them against the conspirators.
yes he was murdered by a group of conspirators who turned against him. brutus, his former friend, was convinced by the conspirators to join in and kill caesar.
well, because for one Antony is Caesar's friend and for two he wants revenge on the conspirators for killing his best friend. So to get revenge on the conspirators Antony is going to get the crowd to turn against the conspirators and get back at them for murdering Caesar.
the conspirators killed ceasar because he was ambitious
Antony's oration shows cunning, manipulation, and the ability to sway public opinion. He presents himself as grieving for Caesar while subtly inciting the crowd against the conspirators.