Macbeth resorted to murder, to consolidate his power and thereby to satisfy his ambitions. He killed his sovereign, King Duncan, to rule Scotland. He killed the royal guards, to blame them for King Duncan's murder and to keep them from being potential witnesses against him. He killed his best friend, Banquo, whose family line was prophesied as inheriting the throne. He killed Macduff's family, because the witches had warned him to beware of Macduff. He killed Young Siward, and countless others, because he could.
He kills innocent people because they have connection to the murder or king Duncan
That was his character's role.
Sunday Evening down at the pub
The three assassins that were hired by Macbeth kill Banquo as he is walking with his son to the palace for a dinner that Macbeth invited him to.
She is 100% responsible for it. At the beginning of Act I Scene 7 Macbeth decides that it would do no good to kill the king. However, Lady Macbeth totally turns his decision around by playing on his masculinity and pride.
Lady Macbeth does not convince Macbeth to kill Macduffs family. She convinces him to kill the King at the start of the play, but after that she has no input in the decisions he makes. Macbeth chooses to have Macduffs family killed so that he may seize the Macduff castle for his own. The witches also tell him to 'beware Macduff' when he visits them and so he feels threatened by him. Macbeth doesn't actually personally kill Macduffs family either, he hires the same thugs that he hires to assassinate Banquo and Fleance to murder him.
At the end of the play Macduff gave Macbeth two choices; surrender and live under the rightful king of Scotland or die. Macbeth chose death.
In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," the idea that people should be killed originates primarily from Lady Macbeth. She is the one who convinces Macbeth to kill King Duncan in order to fulfill the witches' prophecy and secure his place as king.
Sunday Evening down at the pub
The three assassins that were hired by Macbeth kill Banquo as he is walking with his son to the palace for a dinner that Macbeth invited him to.
She is 100% responsible for it. At the beginning of Act I Scene 7 Macbeth decides that it would do no good to kill the king. However, Lady Macbeth totally turns his decision around by playing on his masculinity and pride.
Macbeth hires two murderers to kill Banquo and Fleance in the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare.
In the script of Shakespeare's play, "Macbeth," the last character that Macbeth kills is Young Siward in the final battle.
Lady Macbeth does not convince Macbeth to kill Macduffs family. She convinces him to kill the King at the start of the play, but after that she has no input in the decisions he makes. Macbeth chooses to have Macduffs family killed so that he may seize the Macduff castle for his own. The witches also tell him to 'beware Macduff' when he visits them and so he feels threatened by him. Macbeth doesn't actually personally kill Macduffs family either, he hires the same thugs that he hires to assassinate Banquo and Fleance to murder him.
Macbeth is deadly but not as deadly as his wife Lady Macbeth, who is the one encouraging him into all his killings. Upon her orders it was that he found himself killing Banquo and hiring three murderers to kill King Duncan and many more later on in the play.
Lady Macbeth is a fictional character in William Shakespeare's play "Macbeth". She does not physically kill anyone herself in the play, but she influences her husband to commit murder. Indirectly, her actions contribute to multiple deaths, including King Duncan, Banquo, Lady Macduff and her children.
That's the technique Lady Macbeth used to enlist Macbeth in the plot to kill Duncan.
In his dreams. Macbeth does not kill Macduff, it's the other way around. Macduff kills Macbeth at the end of Act V, at the end of the play. It is interesting that, although Macbeth is based (extremely loosely) on a historical character, there was no historical Macduff.
At the end of the play Macduff gave Macbeth two choices; surrender and live under the rightful king of Scotland or die. Macbeth chose death.