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Constables were and are police officers. In Shakespeare's time they were unpaid officers of the parish (sort of a volunteer police force) with powers to investigate crime, to arrest those found committing crimes and to bring them before a justice to have charges laid and, in most cases, disposed of. Because these officers were unpaid and, for the most part, untrained, they were not the cream of the crop. The constables Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing and Elbow in Measure for Measure are humourously dimwitted, but that probably has a basis in fact. England would not see a full-time, paid police force until the early nineteenth century.
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
the puritans wanted to close down the theaters in Shakespeare time
Ben Jonson, Shakespeare's friend and fellow playwright.
How where foreigners such as the Spanish, Portuguese, the French, the Jews, and the Africans treated in England during Shakespeare's time?
Police!
At least for part of Shakespeare's time, she was Mrs. William Shakespeare.
The role of children, in Shakespeare's time and at any other time, is to learn how to be adults.
There was an outbreak of plague in Stratford at about the time of Shakespeare's birth but Shakespeare didn't get it.
The plague hit England around the time of Shakespeare
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
No , but Shakespeare was , and remains , famous .
Constables were and are police officers. In Shakespeare's time they were unpaid officers of the parish (sort of a volunteer police force) with powers to investigate crime, to arrest those found committing crimes and to bring them before a justice to have charges laid and, in most cases, disposed of. Because these officers were unpaid and, for the most part, untrained, they were not the cream of the crop. The constables Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing and Elbow in Measure for Measure are humourously dimwitted, but that probably has a basis in fact. England would not see a full-time, paid police force until the early nineteenth century.
She wasn't alive during "Shakespeare's time". She was born 300 years after Shakespeare's daughter Susannah. Women could and did write during "Shakespeare's time" but not women who had not yet been born.
No, there is no evidence of plague in Stratford at the time Shakespeare died.
Shakespeare never left England.
Shakespeare was entertained the same as anyone else, when he had time.