Wealthy families would either have their children tutored at home or send them to live with another wealthy family who had their own tutor.
Rich children had a governess until the age of 10. Then boys would be sent to public schools like Eton and Harrow. Girls would stay at home and learn the household duties like cooking and sewing.
This answer is an educated guess and not the response of a qualified historian. In the Tudor period, children of the upper classes would not have had to pack a lunch and go to school. They would have been taught at home by tutors and governesses, and only what they needed to know for their station in life. They would have been served meals by servants and would not have been carrying packed lunches to school. Peasant children and children of tradespeople did not go to school but worked on the land or at a trade for their families' well-being. Education of the sort we know had not begun when the Tudor period ended.
Tudor. She was the last of the Tudors. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_I_of_England
1890 it took a very long time to sort it out
You mean, did they have an era named after them?Yes, in a generic sort of way.Most call it the "Tudor Period."All the historical terms came much, much later when history was recorded, the Tudors would not have called it the Tudor Times
The celtic people did not have school's
The website schooldigger.com lets you search for schools in an area and sort them by ranking. The ranking of these schools can give you a good indication about how schools in the Tennessee area are.
They had to do many jobs like Slaves and Chimney Sweepers. They were also pickpocketers for the rich so they don't spend any money.
Rich Chocolate Cake
generally high schools offer jobs in places like the cafeteria and library.
He was sort of, he was born in a middle-class family.
Young children have soft bones which keep on growing.