Because it was written in the classical period.
DIE DIE DIE
when did Cristina die
According to ancient sources, the aged Aeschylus died when an eagle, carrying a turtle aloft so it could drop it on a rock and crush its shell, saw the elderly Aeschylus' bald head and unloaded the poor creature on him, killing him-and presumably the turtle as well. Such fanciful stories accreted naturally around the great tragedians and point, if not to any literal truth, to the abiding popularity and pre-eminence of classical drama in the ancient world.
No, he doesn't die
no, pablo Picasso did not die of smoking
Christian Wolff - baroque composer - died in 1773.
Ute Esbach has written: 'Die Ludwigsburger Schlosskapelle' -- subject(s): Architecture, Baroque, Baroque Architecture, Baroque Decoration and ornament, Decoration and ornament, Baroque, Schloss Ludwigsburg (Museum), Schloss Ludwigsburg (Museum). Kapelle
John Price - classical scholar - died in 1676.
James Bailey - classical scholar - died in 1864.
Thomas Falconer - classical scholar - died in 1792.
John Taylor - classical scholar - died in 1766.
Sigmund Benker has written: 'Philipp Dirr und die Entstehung des Barock in Baiern' -- subject(s): Baroque Art, Baroque Sculpture
Richard Campbell - classical musician - died on 2011-03-08.
Richard Petrovszky has written: 'Die \\' -- subject(s): Bronzes, Classical, Classical Bronzes, Handles
some dude
classical increases to where you can almost die!
When you throw a die, there are six possibilities. The probability of a number from 1 to 6 is 1/6. This is classical probability. Compare this with empirical probability. If you throw a die 100 times and obtain 30 sixes, the probability of obtaining a 6 is 30/100 or 0.3. Empirical probabilities change whereas classical probability doesn't.