No he did not. He attributed his plays to his wife Anne Hathaway and others like his son Hamnet, who died
It was William Shakespeare. Some people argue that some of his works should be attributed to other writers, but there is little to justify this.
They're generally called Shakespeare's plays. Sometimes they are called by the type of plays they are: histories, tragedies and comedies. That's how they are referred to in the First Folio, the first compendium of the plays.
Yes, but there is a question as to whether he wrote the plays attributed to him. This doubt is known as the authorship quandry
wrote all the plays attributed to him.
Shakespeare was the most successful playwright of his day, and a popular sonneteer. Others copied him, and some attributed plays to him just to lure audiences into the theater.
They are called anti-Stratfordians, since their position is more defined by the negative idea that Shakespeare did not write his plays than by the positive idea that someone else (Bacon, Marlowe, Oxford, Queen Elizabeth, Pocahantas, Lope de Vega etc.) did.
william shakespeare wrote the play romeo and juliet.
some of them were called sonnets
The first volume of Shakespeare's Collected Plays was called the First Folio and was published in 1623.
They are called Anti-Stratfordians.
plots and even lines of verse in Shakespeare resemble those known to have been written by other writers
When the first Complete Shakespeare edition (called the First Folio) was published, it was called "William Shakespeare's Histories, Tragedies and Comedies" and all the plays were put into one of those three categories.