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.
England
Two monarchs reigned during Shakespeare's career: Elizabeth I and James I
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
Desribe the political climate in England during the time Shakspear was writing?
He started off a as a traveller but then he built a theatre which he then performed in.
William Shakespeare had a history of writing plays during a long and successful career as an actor. He started when he was about twenty-four, and finished when he was about forty-nine.
England
During his entire career, Shakespeare was based in London, England.
King Henry
Two monarchs reigned during Shakespeare's career: Elizabeth I and James I
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
Desribe the political climate in England during the time Shakspear was writing?
Queen Elizabeth I
During those years Shakespeare was alive, and for many of them he was writing, which was a good thing.
Since two people were on the throne during Shakespeare's career, there have to be two answers to this question. The father of Elizabeth I was Henry VIII, king of England. The father of James I was Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley and husband, at the time, of Mary, Queen of Scots.
I'm not sure you know what you are asking or what a literary career is. A literary career is not a kind of disease you catch; it is a lifetime of writing, and only stops when you stop writing. Shakespeare began writing in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, although we do not know exactly when or what prompted him to do it. Very possibly he had started acting and had written a poem or two which gave him the idea that he might write plays too and make some extra cash. This would prove helpful to a man who was trying to support a wife and three small children. His early plays (which he may have written with the help of an older and more experienced playwright) were well-enough received that he was encouraged to write more, and he continued writing them long after Queen Elizabeth was dead.
Oscar Wilde began his writing career in the late 19th century, around the 1880s. He is best known for his works such as "The Picture of Dorian Gray" and "The Importance of Being Earnest." His writing style and wit made him a prominent figure in literary circles during the Victorian era.