1 / 12

William Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Era

William Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Era. An Introduction. The Elizabethan Era. Named for Queen Elizabeth, the “Virgin Queen” Elizabeth became Queen at age 25; took over for her sister Mary after Mary’s death She never married Reigned as England’s sole Monarch for 45 years

marah-weiss
Download Presentation

William Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Era

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. William Shakespeare and the Elizabethan Era An Introduction

  2. The Elizabethan Era • Named for Queen Elizabeth, the “Virgin Queen” • Elizabeth became Queen at age 25; took over for her sister Mary after Mary’s death • She never married • Reigned as England’s sole Monarch for 45 years • Had a reputation as a fair, wise, virtuous, “otherworldly” Queen

  3. The Elizabethan Era cont’d • The “golden” age of England’s history • High point of the European Renaissance • Age of exploration and expansion of English territory and influence • Protestant Reformation took hold in England • Science, technology, art all flourished • Prosperity and peace were the trends

  4. The Life of William Shakespeare • Father John was a glover and tanner (of leather) • W.S. grew up in a family that saw its share of hard times—deep in debt, no coat of arms • Date of birth is not known—only baptism record was kept (April 26, 1564) • He had several siblings, but all died young • W.S. was lucky to live—he was a child during harsh plague years

  5. The Life of W.S. cont’d • Attended grammar school in Stratford-on-Avon • Not much is known about his teen years…he may have served as an apprentice to his father, or may have studied law • One thing’s for sure: at age 18, he married a woman named Anne Hathaway, who was eight years his senior

  6. W.S.’ Interesting Marriage • When William and Anne were married, Anne was three months’ pregnant with W.’s child • Susanna was born in 1583, and twins (Hamnet and Judith) arrived in 1585 • Hamnet died of an unknown cause at age 11 • Shakespeare left his wife and children in approximately 1585 for London…

  7. W.S.’ Interesting Career • It is assumed that Shakespeare abandoned his family to try his luck at acting and writing in London, the center of artistic life in England • “The Lost Years” (1585-1592): that time period at the beginning of W.S.’ life in London • No one knows for sure what he was doing, but it is assumed that he acted and wrote sonnets and plays while trying to establish himself as a respected theater professional

  8. W.S.’ Interesting Career cont’d • 1592: the first reference to Shakespeare as a known, but not necessarily respected, playwright • “An upstart crow, beautified with our feathers…” • 1593: S. had written several plays which captured the attention of the Earl of Southampton, who became his “patron” • PATRON: one who supports an artist financially while the artist works on his art • The Earl became the subject of much of S.’ poetry

  9. W.S.: Respect at Last • 1594: returned to theater and became a member of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, an acting troupe which performed for the Queen • S. wrote many plays during his time with the L.C.M.: Romeo and Juliet among them • He wrote the plays, acted in them, had part ownership in the Company, and eventually helped purchase the L.C.M.’s first theater, the Globe

  10. The Globe Theater

  11. W.S.: the Later Years • In 1596, the Shakespeare family finally received their coat of arms • 1n 1603, after the death of the Queen, The L.C.M. became the “King’s Men”—the only acting company allowed to perform for the new king James • In his will, W.S. left his wife, Anne, his “second-best bed” • S. retired back to Stratford in the early 1600s. He died in 1616, and left his estate to his daughter

  12. Fast Facts about W.S. • He wrote 38 plays and 154 sonnets • He is the most-performed playwright in history • Three types of plays: comedy, tragedy, history • Some assume that others must have written at least a few of the works that are attributed to him

More Related