The Romans considered the Ides of March as a deadline for settling debts. But – for our modern world – if you've heard of the Ides of March, it's probably thanks to William Shakespeare. In his play Julius Caesar, a soothsayer attracts Caesar's attention and tells him: Beware the ides of March.
They hated him. they believed the second he was elected that he'd try his very best to abolish slavery. so when he won the election states started to leave the union
When Europeans discovered New Zealand<span>, they wondered about the origins of the Māori people. Captain James Cook noticed that Polynesians and Māori had similar appearances and cultures. He believed they had migrated from the islands of South-East Asia</span>