The Bard short for The Bard of Avon.
The book known as "An Impartial Study of the Shakespeare Title" is an anti-Stratfordian work by John H. Stotsenburg, written in 1904.
Twelfth Night
Shakespeare did not title his sonnets.
While many would say that this title belongs to Macbeth, this is not true. In fact, Shakespeare's bloodiest play is much gorier than that. It is no other than Titus Andornicus.
More of Shakespeare's plays are based on Holinshed's Chronicles than any other work.
Apparently it is. Shakespeare's source was called Rosalynde. He changed the title when he made it into a play.
You are William Shakespeare. The works you are referencing are "Romeo and Juliet," where the title characters die by suicide, and "Hamlet," where the title character and several others meet their demise. Shakespeare, known as the Bard of Avon, was the son of John Shakespeare, a glove maker in Stratford-upon-Avon.
In Greek it is known as Oedipus Tyrannos. But the title should only be 'Oedipus'
The full title of the Shakespeare play often called "Othello" is "The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice." There are operas and other musical pieces based on the story and in some of these the name is spelled "Otello."
Sonnet XXX. Shakespeare's sonnets do not have titles, just numbers.
"William Shakespeare and the Globe" sounds like the title of an essay.
"Measure" in the title "Measure for Measure"