"Venganza" is a Spanish equivalent of "revenge."
The Spanish word is a feminine noun. Its singular definite article is "la" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "una" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "Behn-GAHN-tsah" at the beginning of a sentence or following a word that begins with a vowel. The pronunciation is "vehn-GAHN-tsah" after a word ending in a vowel.
revenge
To get revenge
venganza
The Spanish Tragedy is most definitely a revenge tragedy. In fact it is the first of its kind. It is the play that the revenge tragedies of the English renaissance imitate, making them revenge tragedies. While Hamlet is the most famous revenge tragedy of the period, The Spanish Tragedy was without a doubt the most influential.
got a horse and ran
I'm pretty sure it is spanish for vengence or revenge.
Do the spanish fandago with chang
Yes, there was a ship named The Revenge in 1588. It was a famous English galleon commanded by Sir Richard Grenville. The ship is best known for its valiant stand against a larger Spanish fleet during the Battle of Flores, part of the Anglo-Spanish War. The Revenge ultimately sank after a fierce battle, but Grenville's defense became legendary.
She wasn't, Queen Elizabeth 1st wanted revenge on the Spanish king for attacking English ships
Shakespeare wrote two revenge tragedies, Hamlet and Titus Andronicus. Let's see if some suggested elements fit both plays and two other famous revenge tragedies, Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy and Webster's The White Devil: 1. A play within a play: Hamlet yes, Spanish Tragedy yes, Devil no, Titus not really, unless you count Tamora dressing up as Revenge. 2. Ghosts: Hamlet yes, Spanish Tragedy yes, Devil and Titus no. 3. Murder/death: You betcha, lots of both in all four plays 4. Madness: Yes, there is feigned madness in The White Devil and Hamlet and real madness in the Spanish Tragedy, Titus and Hamlet. 5. Personifications of Revenge: Yes in Spanish tragedy and Titus, no in the others 6. Feigned reconciliation: Spanish Tragedy yes, Titus yes, Hamlet yes, Devil no. 7. Moors: Titus yes, White Devil yes, the others no. 8. Disguise: In The White Devil and Titus, and also in The Revenger's Tragedy, another revenge tragedy 9. Adultery: Implied in Hamlet, yes in the White Devil and Titus, not in the Spanish Tragedy.
"The Spanish Tragedy" was written by Thomas Kyd, an English playwright believed to have written the play around 1587. It is considered one of the earliest examples of a revenge tragedy in English literature.
Kyd's play The Spanish tragedy was far and away the most popular play in Elizabethan England, so much so that it spawned a whole new genre of play: the revenge tragedy. It starts out with the Spanish lord Lorenzo and his Portuguese prisoner Balthazar. Lorenzo and Balthazar quickly become friends. Balthazar falls in love with Lorenzo's sister Bel-Imperia. However, she seems to be falling for Horatio, son of Hieronymo. They murder Horatio which drives Hieronymo's wife crazy and she kills herself. Hieronymo vows revenge and plans an entertainment for the king: the play Soliman and Perseda. While he's working on that, two more people die as a result of Lorenzo's machinations. The performance of the play is a bloodbath. In his "performance", Hieronymo actually kills Lorenzo and Bel-imperia kills Balthazar. Bel-imperia kills herself and Hieronymo bites his own tongue out to prevent himself from naming Bel-Imperia as his accomplice, murders Lorenzo's father and kills himself. The stage ends up littered with corpses with only minor characters left to drag them off.