He lived in Stafford on Avon and in London.
He also wrote poems.
write plays/sonatas A sonata is musical composition. There is no evidence that Shakespeare composed music.
Shakespeare, like everyone else in England was required by law to belong to the Church of England. This was a form of Protestant Christianity.
We do not have any information about what Shakespeare's favourite anything was, so don't bother asking. Neither Shakespeare or anyone else at the time thought it was worth recording.
William Shakespeare's plays were so well done that Queen Elizabeth asked him to have them performed in her castle. It is not said that Shakespeare's plays were performed in a different public theatre.
Shakespeare was entertained the same as anyone else, when he had time.
William Shakespeare of course, who else would have. There's always been an argument in the background that Shakespeare was the "Front Man", and the plays were actually written by someone else, with a variety of names being suggested.
Well, for a start, he's dead. And when he was alive he was not foreign so long as you were an Englishman. Being foreign is like being somewhere else--it totally depends where you are coming from.
He did not. William Shakespeare did not write novels. They were an unknown form in his day. Shakespeare wrote plays which is a totally different literary form. The plots for his plays were almost all taken from stories or history books or biographies he had read or plays by other people which he had seen. He made changes in these plots but he started out with a story he got from somewhere else.
Probably William Shakespeare 1564-1616. But depending on the school, it might be anyone else called Shakespeare. It could be William Shakespeare Jr. ?-1950, the inventor of the even-winding fishing reel.
yes
No
He also wrote poems.
Shakespeare's children were Susanna, Judith, and Hamnet whether he was in London, Stratford, or anywhere else.
write plays/sonatas A sonata is musical composition. There is no evidence that Shakespeare composed music.
you have to find it somewhere else
All of the evidence we have goes to say that he did. That is to say, all of the plays were published either without an author's name or with Shakespeare's name on them, and never with anyone else's name. They were exclusively performed by theatrical companies of which the actor William Shakespeare was a member, and were published by members of that company. Records of the same plays being played at court and elsewhere credit William Shakespeare with having written them. And never anyone else. On the other hand there is no evidence that anyone other than William Shakespeare of Stratford, the actor with the King's Men, wrote those plays. Nobody ever credits them to anyone else. There was nobody else by the name of William Shakespeare that we know of and nobody else called Shakespeare who was a writer. People did not write plays under a pseudonym in those days, and nobody at that time ever suggested that "William Shakespeare" was a pseudonym. You may say that is not absolute proof. Perhaps not, but absolute proof is not required for anything which we regularly accept as true. The proof that Shakespeare did indeed write what he is credited with is more than sufficient for us to accept it as fact.