William Shakespeare did not write anything in the King James version of the bible.
Probably with a quill pen on paper.
He probably wrote it to suck up to the new king, James I, who was also quite separately Kimg of Scotland, then a separate country.
Shakespeare had probably written at least three plays before he was mentioned in a pamphlet in 1592.
He was probably taught to write when he was five or six. That was the usual age to begin schooling.
Mainly iambic pentameter. Please see the link.
Shakespeare didn't write most of his work down, and was transcribed by spectators of the audience who wrote down what was happening. But Shakespeare is the author of his works, but probably did join with other writers.
If Shakespeare had a lover, we don't know who it was. Likewise, he didn't dedicate his plays to anyone. If someone said to him, "Please if you love me Willie darling write me a play about Titus Andronicus" we have no record of it.
Not really. He could not offend the monarch of course, and the king or queen might command a performance of a play. However, Shakespeare's bread and butter was the public who bought tickets to go to the theatre. Those were the people he wrote to please.
In England, certainly. In London, almost as certainly. At a writing desk, very probably.
NO
None. Shakespeare was not hired by royalty to write. He was hired by his playing company to write. Even when the king was the patron of the company, he did not involve himself in the running of it. As an actor Shakespeare performed many times before Queen Elizabeth and King James, often in his own plays, but he did not write the plays for these occasions. He wrote them for the public theatres.