Most likely this is referring to the marriage of Romeo and Juliet.
Because Hamlet is the instrument for his own destruction, and the events in the play are riddled with death and hardship. In particular, the story ends with Hamlet, Laertes, Claudius and Gertrude all lying dead on the stage, a common ending for Shakespearean tragedies.
MACBETH
Tragedy of Otranto happened in 1997.
A Trampwoman's Tragedy was created in 1903.
Walkerton Tragedy happened in 2000.
A Shakespearean tragedy is a play; it isn't real.
No. Macbeth was classified as a Shakespearean Tragedy.
The Clandestine Marriage - 1999 is rated/received certificates of: Iceland:L UK:15
Shakespeare's longest tragedy and longest play is Hamlet.
As is usual in Shakespearean tragedy, the corpses of the protagonists remind us that this is a tragedy.
A tragedy normally centers on a single individual.
Both are written in iambic pentameter
frankly speaking....both......he was an amazing dramatist...
Failure, adversity, misfortune, catastrophe, struggle, wreck, etc.
The question sounds as if it is intnded to be a research paper.
Ram Bilas Sharma has written: 'Essays on Shakespearean tragedy'
No, "Romeo and Juliet" is not a Greek tragedy. It is a Shakespearean tragedy that takes place in Verona, Italy. The play follows the story of two young lovers from feuding families, the Montagues and Capulets.