History XVIII Illustration and Summary

John Reynolds and unknown artist, The Triumphs of God’s Revenge […] (London: Printed for R. Gosling, and Sold by J. Osborn, 1726), 251 (excerpt).

God’s Revenge against the Crying and Execrable Sin of Murther.
An Italian History.
History XVIII. [History 18/30]
Romeo (the Lacquy of  Borlary) kills Radegonda, the Chamber-maid of the Lady  Felisanna in the street, and is hanged for the same;  Borlary  afterwards  hireth  Castruchio  (an Apothecary) to poyson her Husband Seignior Planeze: for the which  Castruchio  is hanged, and his body thrown into the River, and  Borlary  is beheaded, and then burnt.