he won the war against turkish fleet because their ships sunk in storm.
Yes, Othello was foolish in the play. He had believed the lies that Iago told him that Cassio was sleeping with his wife Desdemona. And the fact that Desdemona had been wrongfully unfaithful to him. These incidents were not true led him to believe that it is all real. So definitely Othello was mistakenly foolish indeed. He had found out that Desdemona was innocent but a little bit too late when Othello ultimately committed suicide out of horrifying guilt. From another point of view it is a bit harsh to call Othello foolish. He is subjected to a sophisticated campaign of manipulation by Iago, who is a master at it. Very few people would have been able to resist Iago, mostly because he always appeared to resist saying that Desdemona and Cassio were having an affair, which made his suggestion that they were the more plausible. Othello, the play starts with the possibility of a war against the 'Ottomites,' which rhymes with sodomites. But anyway, Othello is supposedly a successful army leader, and the play sets out to show how and why he is successful as a man of war. He lives in a violent universe, and his solutions are violent. The war is transported to the war of the sexes, as there is a lot of talk about the relations between men and woman, in regard to love and marriage.
Iago is, although he is more likely to get others to do bad things than to do them himself. He does murder Roderigo, after egging him on to kill Cassio. He also induces Othello to murder Desdemona.The villain in Othello is Iago as he twists Othello's mind and gets him to kill Desdemona, steals from Roderigo and kills him, kills Emilia, wounds Cassio and ruins his job.
The Shakespearean play 'Macbeth' began and ended with Scotland at war with another country. In Act 1 Scene 2, King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] received the reports of victory for his rule and for Scotland against the seemingly overwhelming numbers of invading Norwegians and rebellious Scotsmen. So the play began with war between King Duncan I of Scotland and King Sweno [c. 1016-1035] of Norway. In Act 5 Scene 2, the 10,000 man strong army of Siward, Earl of Northumberland and General of the English forces, had crossed Scotland's border with northern England. They already were advancing towards Birnam Wood, as one stage on route to their final destination of Macbeth's royal residence at Dunsinane Castle. And so the play ended with war between King Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] of Scotland and Sainted King Edward the Confessor [c. 1003-January 5, 1066] of England.
"The king" here is Macbeth. He is exasperated by the attempts of Malcolm to raise an army against him. Therefore he "prepares for some attempt of war", and what does it mean to prepare for war? To raise an army, train and arm soldiers, that sort of thing.
The War of the Roses ended with the accession of Henry VII to the English throne.
King Edward The 4th
He ended the War of the Roses, after winning the battle f Bosworth Field. Straight afterwoods, he got crowned in London.
It started in 1455 and ended in 1485.
The protagonists in the Wars of the Roses were the grand children and other descendants of King Edward III. King Edward III
Henry Tudor, who was crowned King Henry VII.
King Williams War
Lancastrian Faction.
No, Henry VII was on the Yorkist side in the War of the Roses. He was the founder of the Tudor dynasty and won the crown by defeating King Richard III, a Lancastrian, at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485. Henry VII's victory effectively ended the war and marked the beginning of the Tudor period in England.
It was called The War of The Roses or The Cousins War because the House of Lancaster and the House of York were actually related by blood to a previous King, both houses thought that they had the right to the throne.
Edward III
He won the war of the roses and was the first Tudor king