To look at the full document, click on the document and it will take you to a corresponding page with access. First is a guide to important and unfamiliar terms with their definitions, locations in the text, and an IPA standard pronunciation guide to the word. They are listed in alphabetical order. I used the International Phonetic Association's guide to IPA for the pronunciations and the definitions were obtained using the Merriam-Webster dictionary. This was the first work I did with the text, searching through the script for unfamiliar words or words that changed the context in time.
The second document provides a list of allusions used in Julius Caesar, and this work was done my second time reading Julius Caesar. These allusions are categorized by geographical, historical, and mythological allusions referenced in Julius Caesar, and contain the location in the text and the definition and origin of the allusion.
The final document contains short character descriptions and brief analyses of each character, their background, and their motivations. This analysis took more than reading the text and included looking for outside sources of historical analysis of the characters of the play and the historiography of their interpretations. I also wanted to look at the historical figures that these characters represented, and how our knowledge about these characters has changed over time. The bottom of the page includes a small image carousel with captioned photographs of statues of historical figures discussed in the play that had either a statue or a painting done of them. I gathered these as a part of my study of the characters, but few of the character's historical counterparts have lasting paintings or statues apart from the most prominent men in Roman culture.