no sir-ee
Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's plays. Other theories may be entertaining but have no evidence to support them.
We don't know. This happened during Shakespeare's "Lost Years" about which we have no information.
He was Shakespeare's patron when he wrote Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, both of which are dedicated to him.
I presume you are asking for his motivation for writing, not his motivation for marrying his wife, for example. Shakespeare wrote primarily because it was his job. It helped him make money so he could support his family.
They are two characters from the play Julius Caesar by Shakespeare. They are executed, when trying to decrease the support for Caesar.
None. There is no actual evidence that anyone apart from William Shakespeare, an undoubted man, wrote his plays.
I presume you are asking for his motivation for writing, not his motivation for marrying his wife, for example. Shakespeare wrote primarily because it was his job. It helped him make money so he could support his family.
William Shakespeare's primary benefactor was likely the patronage of the Earl of Southampton, Henry Wriothesley. Southampton supported Shakespeare during his early career, and many scholars believe that Shakespeare dedicated his narrative poems, "Venus and Adonis" and "The Rape of Lucrece," to him as a gesture of gratitude. This support was crucial in establishing Shakespeare's reputation and financial stability as a playwright and poet.
Factors which some people cite to support their idea that Shakespeare and Anne did not have a happy marriage are that they lived apart for many years after the birth of the twins, and had no further children, and also Shakespeare's will which only mentions his wife in the gift of his "second-best bed".
We know so little about Shakespeare's life that we do not know when he decided to be an actor and writer, whether his parents were then alive, or whether he told them at all, never mind what their reaction might have been.
Yes! Shakespeare's name was really Shakespeare. His whole name was William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare was a writer of drama. They are great dramas but they do not have a political effect. They did not have a political effect on England, never mind the continent. This is not to say that politicians have never tried to co-opt Shakespeare. In Shakespeare's lifetime the Earl of Essex tried to use Shakespeare's Richard II to get people to support his coup. The Nazis used The Merchant of Venice to advance their anti-Semitic agenda. And generally speaking each generation has found ways to make Shakespeare say what they want to hear and to support their social vision. Such attempts never have a lasting effect, because a new generation always comes along and interprets the plays differently.