Julius Caesar.It says in the book that Brutus killed him because he was to ambitious..
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Julius Caesar was a victim of a conspiracy rather than a single person's betrayal. He did not intend to attend the senate meeting the morning of his death, but was talked in to going by Decius
Brutus. This was the Brutus that came closest to the meaning of "betrayal" in Caesar's case. A close second would be Trebonius,
who kept Marc Antony, Caesar's co-consul, from entering the senate and going to Caesar's rescue.
Julius Caesar was betrayed by his friend Marcus Junius Brutus who helped conspire to kill him along with other Roman senators.
March-Beware the Ides of March
Caesar: "Et tu, Brute? Then fall Caesar!" What surprised Caesar most when he was getting stabbed by seven swords is that the fact that one of his close friend betrayed him. Caesar was less surprised by others like Cassius to stab him but he wasn't okay with Brutus.
Did you mean "Et tu, Brute?" This phrase is famously attributed to Julius Caesar, who is said to have uttered it when he realized that his friend and ally, Brutus, was among those who betrayed and assassinated him. The phrase expresses Caesar's shock and disappointment at being betrayed by someone he trusted.
Caesarâ??s dying words indicate that he knew that his best friend betrayed him. Before that, Caesar never suspected his best friend Brutus in a plot to kill him.
Antony shows the commoners Caesar's wounds to emphasize the cruelty of the conspirators' actions. When he says "this was the most unkindest cut of all" he's referring to where Brutus stabbed Caesar. Since Brutus was his friend, he really betrayed Caesar. It was like a friend "stabbing you in the back."