Hamlet fought against Laertes, the brother of Ophelia and the son of Polonius. He was looking to kill Hamlet because of the deaths of Ophelia and Polonius. So, with Claudius, he plotted to have a fence match between the two of them.
Romeo and Juliet contains sword fights between the Montagues and the Capulets, resulting in death.
So does Hamlet. He dies at the end of the play in a sword fight.
Laertes, the relative of two people who Hamlet has accidentally killed. Hamlet thought it was a friendly Fencing match, but Laertes had secretly sharpened his sword and put poison on it. Hamlet dies of the poison, not the wound.
William Shakespeare wrote many many plays and in Romeo and Juliet there was a sword fight and also in Hamlet.
Hamlet dies because of a sword fight with Laertes, who tipped his sword with poison. Before he dies, Hamlet kills Laertes with the poisoned tip.
Osric. "A hit, a very palpable hit!"
A sword
sword & shield
The play about Hamlet was totally made up by William Shakespeare - there was no 'real' Hamlet.
As far as we know Shakespeare never fought with anyone.
History themed Plays: * King Henry IV Part 1 - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry IV Part 2 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry V - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry VI Part 1 - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry VI Part 2 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry VI Part 3 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry VIII - play by William Shakespeare * King John - play by William Shakespeare * Richard II - play by William Shakespeare * Richard III - play by William Shakespeare Tragedy themed Plays: * Antony and Cleopatra - play by William Shakespeare * Coriolanus - a Shakespearean play * Hamlet - play by William Shakespeare * Julius Caesar - play by William Shakespeare * King Lear - play by William Shakespeare * Macbeth - play by William Shakespeare * Othello - play by William Shakespeare * Romeo and Juliet - play by William Shakespeare * Timon of Athens - a Shakespearean play * Titus Andronicus - a Shakespearean play Comedy themed Plays: * Alls Well That Ends Well - play by William Shakespeare * As You Like It - play by William Shakespeare * Comedy of Errors - play by William Shakespeare * Cymbeline - a Shakespearean play * Love's Labour's Lost - a Shakespearean play * Measure for Measure - play by William Shakespeare * Merchant of Venice - play by William Shakespeare * Merry Wives of Windsor - play by William Shakespeare * Midsummer Nights Dream - play by William Shakespeare * Much Ado About Nothing - play by William Shakespeare * Pericles, Prince of Tyre - a Shakespearean play * Taming of the Shrew - play by William Shakespeare * The Tempest - play by William Shakespeare * Troilus and Cressida - a Shakespearean play * Twelfth Night - play by William Shakespeare * Two Gentlemen of Verona - a Shakespearean play * Winter's Tale - a Shakespearean play
Iago is a major character in Shakespeare's play Othello.
sword & shield
In Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," a rapier is a type of sword commonly used in duels during the play's time period. The character Tybalt is known for wielding a rapier and uses it in multiple fight scenes throughout the play.
black smiths played sword fight were they practiced there skills of sword fighting
The play about Hamlet was totally made up by William Shakespeare - there was no 'real' Hamlet.
In the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare, King Duncan was murdered by Macbeth using a dagger.
Laertes is the son of Polonius and brother to Ophelia whom Hamlet loves. King Claudius poisons Laertes's sword with the intent to kill Hamlet in the tragedy play by Shakespeare titled Hamlet.
Beowulf is loaned a sword by Unferth to fight Grendel's mother.
It comes from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. Those lines are spoken when Caesar is being murdered and he sees Marcus Brutus approaching him with a sword.
A Sword
A sword is used to cut stuff and fight with in battle
Japanese Sword Fight - 1903 was released on: USA: January 1903
Both Macbeth and Richard the Third by Shakespeare end with a big fight between the title character and his nemesis (Macduff in Macbeth and Richmond in Richard)