It was, Montresor had premeditated to murder Fortunato in his vault.
Fortunato is sealed up in the crypt
At the end of the story, Fortunato is chained to the wall by Montressor, who quickly builds a wall. He chains Fortunato to the wall, and since the wall Montressor built traps in Fortunato, Fortunato soon dies.
At the end of the story "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe, Fortunato is left chained and entombed alive in the catacombs by Montresor as revenge for the insults he suffered. He is doomed to die a slow and agonizing death, with no chance of escape.
Fortunato is the victim in the Edgar Allen Poe story, "The Cask of Amontillado." In the story, he angers the protagonist, Montresor. So, Montresor decides to wall him up alive in his basement.
Starvation. Monstresor bricked him up inside a catacomb.
Fortunato was chained to a wall in a small room in Montresor's cellar and then sealed in while still alive by Montresor building a brick wall across the entrance to the room. The reader never sees Fortunato die but has no doubt of it once Montresor says that the wall has remained undisturbed for 50 years.
He was killed because apparently he made Montresor felt he always insulted him in some way. The story does not clarify why, but that's all it says.
Probably by unfortunato means
Fortunato is left in the cellar to die.
Montresor shows Fortunato a trowel.
The main characters in "The Cask of Amontillado" are Montresor, the narrator seeking revenge, and Fortunato, the victim lured into Montresor's trap. The story revolves around Montresor's elaborate plan to exact his revenge on Fortunato for an unspecified insult.
Although Montresor tells Fortunato that the Amontillado is at the end of the passageway, in reality it is the niche in which Fortunato will be imprisoned and left to die. In that sense it is the end of Fortunato's life that is at the end of the passageway.
In "The Cask of Amontillado," the major epiphany occurs when Montresor reveals his true intentions to Fortunato, sealing Fortunato's fate. Montresor's motive for revenge becomes clear, as does his cold and calculated nature. This moment exemplifies the dark turn of events in the story, leading to Fortunato's tragic end.
The Murder of Fortunato at the end of the story was the Resolution. The Problem began at the insult to montresor and it ended (or was Resolved) by His Murder.
fortunato
The simple answer is that you must read the story first because it will tell you what happens in the end. That is what a story is for.
It is not mentioned in the short story specifically why Montresor was insulted by Fortunato except that it was verbal.
It depends on the purpose of the story. Revealing Fortunato's transgression could add depth to the characters and their motives, making the story more complex. However, keeping it a mystery can create suspense and allow readers to speculate on the characters' motivations. Ultimately, it comes down to how the revelation would impact the themes and message of the story.
He died at the end
Montresor ends his story with "In pace requiescat" (May he rest in peace) as a way to show his satisfaction and contentment with the revenge he enacted on Fortunato. It signifies his belief that Fortunato deserved the punishment he received and that Montresor has achieved closure over the incident.
The antagonist is Fortunato.