The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet

GPTKB entity

Statements (50)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instanceOf gptkb:play
gptkbp:adaptation gptkb:West_Side_Story
gptkb:Romeo_+_Juliet_(1996_film)
gptkb:Gounod's_Roméo_et_Juliette_(opera)
gptkb:Romeo_and_Juliet_(1968_film)
gptkbp:author gptkb:William_Shakespeare
gptkbp:basedOn gptkb:Arthur_Brooke's_The_Tragical_History_of_Romeus_and_Juliet
gptkbp:countryOfOrigin gptkb:England
gptkbp:firstFolio 1623
gptkbp:firstPerformed 1597
gptkbp:firstQuarto 1597
gptkbp:genre tragedy
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet
gptkbp:influenced popular culture
romantic tragedy genre
gptkbp:language English
gptkbp:literaryPeriod Elizabethan
gptkbp:mainCharacter gptkb:Paris
gptkb:nurse
gptkb:Benvolio
gptkb:Lady_Montague
gptkb:Lord_Montague
gptkb:Lady_Capulet
gptkb:Lord_Capulet
gptkb:Romeo_Montague
gptkb:Tybalt
gptkb:Friar_Laurence
gptkb:Juliet_Capulet
gptkb:Mercutio
gptkbp:notableQuote O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?
A plague o' both your houses!
Thus with a kiss I die.
For never was a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo.
gptkbp:numberOfActs 5
gptkbp:originalTitle gptkb:The_Most_Excellent_and_Lamentable_Tragedie_of_Romeo_and_Juliet
gptkbp:publishedIn 1597
gptkbp:publisher gptkb:Cuthbert_Burby
gptkbp:secondQuarto 1599
gptkbp:setting Verona, Italy
gptkbp:shortName gptkb:Romeo_and_Juliet
gptkbp:subject forbidden love
family conflict
star-crossed lovers
gptkbp:theme death
fate
love
youth
family feud
gptkbp:bfsParent gptkb:Romeo_and_Juliet_First_Quarto
gptkbp:bfsLayer 7