Latin mostly, as well as divinity and a certain amount of arithmetic. He was taught his letters and basic catechism in a dame school (taught at home by a woman) before moving on to grammar school.
Latin. Lots of Latin. And things written in Latin like Ovid and Plutarch.
reading&writing, Latin, Rhetoric,
he studied news paper and his mom
Latin, Latin and more Latin.
dontt havv i clue x :D
It is believed that he attended the King's Grammar School in Stratford. This is based on the fact that this was the only grammar school in Stratford and that Shakespeare seems to have had a good grasp of the standard grammar school curriculum. The school's records have been destroyed and so cannot be used to confirm this hypothesis.
At Stratford Grammar School
William Shakespeare attended the Stratford-upon-Avon Grammar School, which was also the school that taught him Latin. During the 16th century it was common for Latin to be taught in grammar schools.
Shakespeare went to the Stratford Grammar School (called King Edward VI School nowadays, then called the King's New School) at around age 6 or 7. There may have been some rudimentary instruction in letters, divinity etc. at a "Dame School", a kind of home school run by local women.
The grammar school in Stratford, then called the King's New School had been founded by King Edward VI (Queen Elizabeth I's brother). Shakespeare probably attended it from the ages of 9 to 15 or so, from 1573 to 1579. However there is no documentation to prove that he even went to that school, never mind when. We can only guess from what was typical and from the fact that he had a good knowledge of the schoolbooks of the era.
It is believed that he attended the King's Grammar School in Stratford. This is based on the fact that this was the only grammar school in Stratford and that Shakespeare seems to have had a good grasp of the standard grammar school curriculum. The school's records have been destroyed and so cannot be used to confirm this hypothesis.
At Stratford Grammar School
Grammar Schools ran six days a week, with Sunday off. Unfortunately the school records for the late sixteenth century at the Stratford Grammar School (now King Edward VI School, Stratford) no longer exist, so we cannot confirm when or if Shakespeare attended there or when or if he finished.
William Shakespeare would have attended King Edward IV Grammar School in Stratford-upon-Avon from the age of 7 in 1571 and left school and formal education when he was fourteen in 1578
William Shakespeare attended the Stratford-upon-Avon Grammar School, which was also the school that taught him Latin. During the 16th century it was common for Latin to be taught in grammar schools.
The records of the grammar school in Stratford for the mid-sixteenth century no longer exist, so we cannot even prove that Shakespeare studied there, never mind when he finished. It's an open question.
Shakespeare attended Grammar School in Stratford. Grammar schools in those days focused on the knowledge of 'classical', mostly Latin grammar. So the books he used would have been mostly the works of ancient Roman authors like Vergil, Ovid and Cicero.
Shakespeare went to the Stratford Grammar School (called King Edward VI School nowadays, then called the King's New School) at around age 6 or 7. There may have been some rudimentary instruction in letters, divinity etc. at a "Dame School", a kind of home school run by local women.
in Stratford
The grammar school in Stratford, then called the King's New School had been founded by King Edward VI (Queen Elizabeth I's brother). Shakespeare probably attended it from the ages of 9 to 15 or so, from 1573 to 1579. However there is no documentation to prove that he even went to that school, never mind when. We can only guess from what was typical and from the fact that he had a good knowledge of the schoolbooks of the era.
He most likely was educated up to 13 years old at Stratford grammar school.
Although the records of the only school in Stratford that he is likely to have attended have unfortunately been destroyed, it's a safe bet that he attended the King's New School (now Edward VI school) in Stratford. The classical allusions he uses in the plays are consistent with the school curriculum, not the university one. Shakespeare was made fun of by Robert Greene for not having a university education.