Thomas Mann.
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
A play by Christopher Marlowe called, 'The Jew of Malta' is thought to be have inspired Shakespeare, as it made a revival before he wrote the play. It involves an evil Jew who is punished by being boiled in a cauldron, and was full of anti-semitism, much like the Merchant of Venice.
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
William Shakespeare was the author
Opinions vary. It was one of his earlier plays, possibly at about the same time as Romeo and Juliet and Midsummer Night's Dream, in the mid 1590s.
Thomas Mann.
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
A play by Christopher Marlowe called, 'The Jew of Malta' is thought to be have inspired Shakespeare, as it made a revival before he wrote the play. It involves an evil Jew who is punished by being boiled in a cauldron, and was full of anti-semitism, much like the Merchant of Venice.
Shakespeare's play was never called The Jew of Venice. It was always The Merchant of Venice. You may have been thinking of Christopher Marlowe's play, The Jew of Malta.
Marco Polo
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
That's debatable, I wrote a seminar paper about it for the university. She is a powerful character and different from the other female characters in Shakespeare's play. She has a big part in the play The Merchant of Venice
Venice. That's why the play's called The Merchant of Venice.
You will find Portia and Shylock in the play of Hamlet.