nephews king Richard
I am assuming that you are asking about the character in Shakespeare's plays Henry VI Part III and Richard III, and not about the real king. Although the real king certainly killed people, he just as certainly didn't kill as many as Shakespeare made out. So who all did Richard kill in the plays? We won't count all the soldiers he killed in the course of the War of the Roses, although there were a lot of them, seeing as how he was a great soldier. But he and his brothers killed Edward, son of Henry VI after he was captured in battle, and then Richard went to the Tower and dispatched Henry VI himself. From here on, he does not kill anyone himself, but he hires a couple of murderers to kill his brother Clarence, then has Ratcliff execute Rivers, Grey and Vaughan, has Lovel and Ratcliff execute Hastings, has Tyrell kill his two nephews, and has Buckingham executed by a sheriff. Somewhere in there his wife Anne dies, although it is not explained how. The easy quick reference? In Act V Scene 3 of Richard III the ghosts of Prince Edward, King Henry VI, Clarence, Rivers, Grey, Vaughan, Hastings, the two princes, Queen Anne, and Buckingham all haunt him on the eve of the battle of Bosworth field.
No. Richard Pryor was never reported to have had AIDS.
Richard Pawelitzki has written: 'Gleiwitz'
Richard Skinner has written: 'The Red Dancer'
The speaker in the poem 'Richard Cory' is an unnamed member of the lower class. 'Richard Cory' was written by Edwin Arlington Robinson.
Which king Richard?
Richard M. Nixon did not kill himself. He died a natural death.
Yes Richard III did indeed kill his nephew Edward V.
A Cross-Country Trip to Kill Richard Nixon was created in 1990.
Your question is vague. Richard I was a crusader; I assume that the people he charged at waving his broadsword planned to kill him in self-defence. I do not know why this is in the William Shakespeare category. Shakespeare did not write about Richard I
No, I think your getting mixed up with Richard III.
No, he didn't kill anyone. He shot a woman, though. (#3.01)
crackhead
Cause
Most likely, although there exists no written proof. The Princes were locked in the tower where very few people had access to them and nobody would have dared to kill them on anything but Richard's orders.
Richard III didn't actually kill everyone. Athough there has been speculation that he killed his nephews (The Princes in the Tower) and his wife, as well as ministers and his subjects, there is not proof that he killed "everyone". Most of it was made up by the Tudors, who defeated Richard III in battle (Bosworth Field).
Because he was trying to defy his father way of making him feel powerless by literally interpreting the command to kill a kitten.