Edward VI and Mary I
Jane Seymour
Adele lourédes
Elizabeth I and James I
The two monarchs on the throne during the lifetime of William Shakespeare (c1564 - 1616), were Queen Elizabeth I (1533 - 1603) and King James I (1566 - 1625).
For instance theatre, dog fights, bear baiting, cock fights ...
Elizabeth I established an English Protestant church of which she was the head. This evolved into the Church of England. The Elizabethan age is remembered as a golden era of English culture Ð this is the time of William Shakespeare. Also during her reign, the English defeated the widely feared Spanish Armada.
England
Thomas Morley was a late-Renaissance composer, active during the life of William Shakespeare. He was one of the most important and prolific composers of English madrigals, and his settings of songs from Shakespeare's plays are, along with those of Robert Johnson, the only contemporary ones still surviving.
The two English monarchs who lived in Shakespeare's lifetime were Elizabeth I and James I.
Two monarchs reigned during Shakespeare's career: Elizabeth I and James I
The two monarchs on the throne during the lifetime of William Shakespeare (c1564 - 1616), were Queen Elizabeth I (1533 - 1603) and King James I (1566 - 1625).
Desribe the political climate in England during the time Shakspear was writing?
William Shakespeare started writing tragedies because he thought the tragic plots used by other English writers were lacking artistic purpose and form. he wrote it during somewhere close to 1592
During the 16th century, the English monarchs were members of the Tudor family. They included Henry VII, Henry VIII, and ended with Elizabeth I.
During those years Shakespeare was alive, and for many of them he was writing, which was a good thing.
Shakespeare lived and wrote in the Elizabethan Era, the English Renaissance.
The exact date when Shakespeare began writing is not known; it was between 1585 and 1592. This was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, known as The Elizabethan Era or The Golden Age. This period is also called The Renaissance.
Shakespeare lived and wrote during a time when England was still Catholic. His writing style and choice of vocabulary is directly connected to what we call Elisabethan English -- named for the queen reigning during Shakespeare's time. Therefore Shakespeare's influence on religion is most evident in the writing style of the King James translation of the Bible. Although no longer considered as authoritative or accurate as once believed, the King James translation is still considered the most eloquent and it remains the most pervasively published.
The poems and plays of William Shakespeare are representative of the English Renaissance. Shakespeare's works, such as "Romeo and Juliet," "Hamlet," and "Macbeth," are considered some of the greatest achievements of English literature during this period.
Shakespeare was born in 1564 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, as she reigned from 1558 until 1603. He died in 1616 during the reign of James I (James VI of Scotland while they were still separate countries). Shakespeare's first plays were written in 1590, under Elizabeth, and his last in 1612 under James.