Ah, the time when Shakespeare was scribbling away was known as the Elizabethan era. It was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, hence the clever name. So, if you're ever time traveling and need to catch a show at The Globe, that's the period you're looking for.
It's called the Elizabethan Age or the English Renaissance.
He lived during the Renaissance period.
It can be said that he was writting in the Queen Elizabeth's era or also known as "The Golden Age".This period, and some years before and after are also known as The Renaissanseor it is the Elizabethan eraThe era in which Shakespeare lived is sometimes called the Elizabethan Era.
in 2009 we don t remenber William Shakespeare's life
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
Hamlet was written around 1600.
It's called the Elizabethan Age or the English Renaissance.
He lived during the Renaissance period.
It can be said that he was writting in the Queen Elizabeth's era or also known as "The Golden Age".This period, and some years before and after are also known as The Renaissanseor it is the Elizabethan eraThe era in which Shakespeare lived is sometimes called the Elizabethan Era.
in 2009 we don t remenber William Shakespeare's life
shakesperae time! (: <33
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
It's impossible to know how old Shakespeare was when he wrote any of the sonnets. All we know is that they were written before they were published in 1609 when he was 45. Two of them, numbers 138 and 144 were published in 1599, ten years earlier. This will give some idea of the period of time Shakespeare wrote them.
He lived between 1564 and 1616. Part of his life was lived in what is called the Elizabethan Era (the reign of Elizabeth I) and sometimes called the English Renaissance. The period after 1603 is sometimes called the Jacobean Period.
People who could write at the time Shakespeare wrote most likely wrote. I assume at least one of your (the reader or who the reader is reading to) ancestors wrote unless I'm wrong somehow.
Ben Jonson John Dunne (not so sure)
Answer Shakespeare's twins, Hamnet and Judith were born in 1585 and there is a record of their baptism in Stratford-Upon-Avon. It may be assumed that Shakespeare was living in Stratford at that time. From 1585 until 1592, when a London critic wrote about one of his plays, there is no record, official or otherwise, of where he lived or what he did. This period is known as "Shakespeare's lost years."