Where is Romeo sent because of his banishment?



MantuaBenvolio explains the fight to Prince EscalusPrince EscalusMercutio. Mercutio is the cousin of Prince Escalus and Count Paris, and is a close friend of Romeo and his cousin Benvolio.

Where did Romeo hide after being banished?

R&J ACT 3 QUESTIONS

A B
3. What penalty does Prince Escalus decree for Romeo after Tybalts death? Romeo is banished to Mantua.
4. Who tells Juliet of Tybalt’s death? The Nurse tells Juliet of her cousins death
5. Where does Romeo go to hide after he kills Tybalt? Romeo hides in Friar Laurence’s cell.

Where did Romeo went first after the banishment?

In act 3, scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet, Friar Laurence tells Romeo to go to Mantua, a town about 40 miles south of Verona, after Prince Escalus banishes Romeo from Verona for killing Tybalt.

What happens after Romeo gets banished?





After hearing that he is to be exiled, Romeo acts with customary drama: he is grief-stricken and overcome by his passion. He collapses on the floor. Romeo refuses to listen to reason and threatens to kill himself.

Where does Romeo go?

Romeo and Juliet

Question Answer
1. To which city does Romeo go after being exiled from Verona? Mantua
2. Why is Romeo banished? Romeo kills Tybalt
3. In Act I, what are the four (4) ways Romeo describes love? Too rough, too rude, too boisterous, and it pricks like a thorn.

What scene does Romeo find out he is banished?

Act III: Scene 3

Summary and Analysis Act III: Scene 3. Friar Laurence tells Romeo that the Prince has sentenced him to banishment rather than death. Romeo is distraught because he regards banishment as a form of living death when he cannot be with Juliet.



Where is Mantua Romeo and Juliet?



Lombardy

Mantua, Italy. Mantua is a beautiful fortified city surrounded on three sides by manmade lakes. It’s in the Northern Italian region of Lombardy and less than an hour away by train from Verona.

Where does Romeo and Juliet take place?

Verona

Verona is the setting of virtually the whole of Romeo and Juliet. It is used as the setting in three of Shakespeare’s plays – The Taming of the Shrew, The Two Gentlemen of Verona and Romeo and Juliet – but it is unknown if Shakespeare ever visited the city.