The area of Harfleur is 4,210,000.0 square meters.
Harfleur's population is 5,297.
Siege of Harfleur happened in 1415.
Henry v was the king who leads his army to victory over the french at harfleur
David Auradou was born on November 13, 1973, in Harfleur, Seine-Maritime, France.
Vikash Dhorasoo was born on October 10, 1973, in Harfleur, Seine-Maritime, France.
On the stage, usually. Sometimes under the stage, like the Ghost in Hamlet, or over it, like Jupiter in Cymbeline, or on the balcony behind it like Juliet in Romeo and Juliet or the Mayor of Harfleur in Henry V, but generally on the stage.
It was a major English victory against France during the Hundred-years war. While it was not especially significant strategically it has always been very famous. Most people think this is because the English were heavily outnumbered and worn out after the lengthy siege of Harfleur.
The general consensus is that there were two levels of seats under the roof, if those are the galleries you are asking about. The modern Globe has two and it looks like pictures of the original Globe. If you are talking about the gallery above the stage that was Juliet's balcony or the walls of Harfleur, there was only one.
Everyone who is not Henry himself is a minor character, which means that there are an awful lot of them, from Bardolph the thief to Alice, the maid to the Queen of France, from Williams, the common English soldier to Mountjoy, herald of the French, from the mayor of Harfleur to the treacherous Earl of Cambridge, from Mistress Quickly to the Dauphin of France.
The quotation is from Henry V: I will not leave the half-achieved Harfleur Till in her ashes she lie buried. "Her" and "she" refer to the city of Harfleur which is being given a feminine gender here. "Till" is of course the word "until". And Shakespeare has done one of those reversals for poetry's sake which are so common with him and many other poets: "Down the road I walked" instead of "I walked down the road" or "Over the hill she lives" instead of "She lives over the hill" The word "lie" is not "lies" because it is in the subjunctive mood, a grammatical usage becoming less and less frequent among English speakers, but going strong in many other languages. So, "I will not leave . . . Harfleur" 1. "Till in her ashes she lie buried" 2. "Till in its ashes it lie buried" (reversing feminine gender) 3. "Until in its ashes it lie buried" (changing contraction) 4. "Until it lie buried in its ashes" (reversing poetic syntax) 5. "Until it lies buried in its ashes" (subjunctive to indicative) I hope you could figure it out long before we got to 5.
Henry V, in the play Henry V. He is encouraging his troops to storm a breach in the walls of Harfleur. The speech which follows is one of the two famous speeches from the play and one of the most famous in all of Shakespeare.
In Act 1, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's "Henry V," two battles mentioned are the Battle of Agincourt and the Battle of Harfleur. These battles are referenced in the context of King Henry's military campaigns in France, highlighting his determination and the challenges faced by the English forces. This scene sets the stage for the themes of honor and leadership that permeate the play.