During Shakespeare's life in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, London was a bustling, vibrant city marked by significant social and economic change. It was a center of trade and commerce, with a growing population that included a diverse mix of people from different backgrounds. The city was also a hub of culture and the arts, epitomized by the emergence of the theatre, where Shakespeare's works gained immense popularity. However, London also faced challenges such as overcrowding, sanitation issues, and outbreaks of plague.
Same as it is now, a pharmacist, a druggist.
William Shakespeare has been a writer for most of his life. His earliest performances of his plays were on the London stage by 1592.
queen Elizabeth and king James he was around for the end of the Tudors and beginning of Stuarts era
No.
For the first thirty-nine years of it.
Same as it is now, a pharmacist, a druggist.
He was living in London, a full-time actor trying to make a break into the playwriting business.
William Shakespeare has been a writer for most of his life. His earliest performances of his plays were on the London stage by 1592.
Queen Elizabeth I was queen for all but the last 13 years of Shakespeare's life.
the war
he got AIDs
queen Elizabeth and king James he was around for the end of the Tudors and beginning of Stuarts era
No.
Nobody knows--that's why this period is his life is called The Lost Years. At some point he left Stratford and at some other point he ended up associated with the London theatrical crowd but when and how nobody knows.
The beautiful market town of Stratford-upon-Avon, which lies on the River Avon in Warwickshire, England.He lived about half his life in London, England but his hometown was always Stratford-upon-Avon in Warwickshire.
For the first thirty-nine years of it.
By "town house" I presume you want to know the name of his house in London, as opposed to that in Stratford. His Stratford house was called New Place. But in London he mostly lived in rented accommodations and only bought a house in London toward the end of his life when he was ready to retire. It was called the Blackfriars Gatehouse.