They speak out at Hero's wedding.
Speak against Hero
Well, lots of people actually, including Beatrice and Benedick. What's strange is that Margaret, who should know what really happened, does not speak up to contradict what Claudio and Don Pedro are saying.
the life of Macbeth
Julius Caesar and William Shakespeare could not have had any form of relationship due to the fact Julius Caesar lived from 100-46 B.C.E. and William Shakespeare lived from from April 1564- April 1616 C.E. There is a tragedy by Shakespeare about Julius Caesar and the conspiracy against him.
In Shakespeare's Much Ado Don Pedro is a prince of Aragon who has recently completed a successful military campaign (we are not told against whom) and is stopping with his friend Leonato the governor of Messina on his way home.
Young boys played female parts. It was against the law for women to act.
Claudio's problem in "Much Ado About Nothing" is primarily caused by misunderstanding and deception. He believes the false accusations made against Hero and is quick to publicly shame her without seeking the full truth. This lack of trust and hasty judgment creates conflict and leads to the unraveling of his relationship with Hero.
claudio speaks against hero
The phrase "to rise against" was used in the play Hamletby William Shakespeare. It is in the soliloquy "to be or not to be..." It was probably used as a phrase on occasion before that, but this use made it very well known.
Religious instability, disrcimination against catholics, the start of the Renaissance in England and in a few years the advent of William Shakespeare
There are two intertwined plotlines in Much Ado About Nothing. First there is Beatrice and Benedick, who have to be "brought into a mountain of affection the one with the other" despite the fact that both of them rail against love and most particularly against each other. The second is the troubled wooing of Claudio and Hero. Claudio is a gullible and deeply suspicious man, who is easy prey for Don John's suggestions that Don Pedro is trying to steal Hero from him, or that Hero slept with another man on the eve of her wedding to Claudio. The former plot makes for a lot of lively dialogue, the latter for a lot of lively action.
Nothing--the Puritans were against theatre and when they got control of the country they banned it. Instead of watching lewd entertainments like Shakespeare plays, they went to church and listened to very long sermons for free.