Well, she was to be buried somewhere, clearly, but where? Capulet says "As rich shall Romeo by his lady lie." which sounds like they are to be buried together. (It does not seem to mean that Capulet will also build a golden statue to Romeo although that has been suggested. The statue to Juliet is to be "raised" and Romeo is to "lie") But they are suicides which means they cannot be buried in consecrated ground, which means neither the Capulet or Montague vault. Presumably their parents would be able to afford somewhere better than under the road or in a ditch--just not in a churchyard.
On a slab in the family tomb. Fortunately they did not have embalmers.
The Prince
After he is banished from Verona, he will have to risk being put to death if he wants to be with Juliet in Verona. Of course, if Julet were to come to him, he wouldn't have to do anything, now, would he?
When Romeo learns of Juliet's death, he decides to purchase a deadly poison so he can join Juliet in death. He plans to go to Juliet's tomb, take the poison, and die next to her.
Friar Lawrance's plan for Juliet is that he will give her a drug that is supposed to put her in a death- like slumber for 24 hours so her family will think she is dead and he will send a letter to Romeo telling him that Juliet is waiting for him.
she fakes her death.
In "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare, Count Paris is saddened by Juliet's death and offers to help Lord Capulet with funeral arrangements. He is portrayed as a noble character who genuinely cared for Juliet and is devastated by her untimely death.
The Nurse explains the circumstances of Tybalt's death to Juliet because Tybalt is Juliet's cousin.
Balthazar tells him about Juliet's death and burial.
Juliet was his only child. He will have no heirs.
the prince
Yes, the death of Romeo and Juliet did end all fighting in Verona.