Shakespeare notes:

When and when was Shakespeare born?

According to the baptismal register of the Holy Trinity parish church,
in Stratford-upon-avon, William Shakespeare’s birth date entry has been
registered for April 26, 1564. The actual date of Shakespeare's birth is not
known, but, traditionally, April 23, St George's Day, has been Shakespeare's
accepted birthday, and a house on Henley Street in Stratford, owned by William's
father, John, is accepted as Shakespeare's birth place. However, the reality is that
no one really knows when the great dramatist was born.

Describe his upbringing and education:
1. Children in Elizabethan England would usually start attending school in their
   fifth year. They would go to a ‘petty school’ (from French petit, ‘small’)
   attached to a town’s grammar school, and be taught there by a tutor known
   as an abecedarius, whose role, as the name suggests, was primarily to teach
   the boys to read. They would move on to the grammar school after two years,
   and stay there until age fourteen. It was a long day, beginning at six in the
   morning (in summer, seven in winter) and continuing until five in the
   afternoon, with breaks for meals and recreation. Sunday was the only day off.

2. Hornbooks: Children would come to petty school with their hornbook – a
   wood framed page covered with a transparent sheet made form a piece of
   cow’s horn. They were of many different kinds, but typically at the top of the
   page would be the letters of the alphabet, large and small, and underneath
   would be listed some basic syllables (ab, eb, ib, ba, be, bi, etc), often some
   numerals, and the Lord’s Prayer. Hornbooks are referred to twice in the
   plays. In Love’s Labour’s Lou, Mote tells Don Armado that Holofernes’
   teaches boys the hornbook. And in The Two Noble Kinsmen one of the
   countrymen tells the will eat a hornbook ere he fail.

3. The cross-row: In a hornbook, a cross was usually placed at the beginning of
   the top row of the alphabet, which accordingly came to be known as the
   ‘cross-row’. Only very young children, or people acting like them, would be
   using a cross-row.

4. After children had mastered their hornbook, they graduated to alphabetic
   readers (‘ABC books’) and the question-and-answer dialogues introducing
   them to formal Christianity (the Catechism) – the latter, along with some
   other prayers, taken from the 1559 Book of Common Prayer.

5. Studying Latin Plays: Among the Latin texts Shakespeare would have studied
   in grammar schiils were those by the comic dramatists Terence and Plautus.
   In some schools, it is known that the students practiced their Latin by acting
   scenes from their plays. Whether this happened in Stratford is a matter of
conjecture, but there is no doubt that these authors would have provided
   Shakespeare with his first scene of a five-act-play.

6. School-teachers: Who were Shakespeare’s teachers at Stratford grammar
   school? They were university graduates, some of whom went on to gain
   scholarly reputations in their own night. Students would receive a good
   education at their hands.

           1569 Walter Roche
           1571 Simon Hunt
           1575 Thomas Jenkins
           1579 john Cottom

    Shakespeare was only seven in 1571, so Walter Roche had probably left by
    the time he moved up from petty school into Stratford grammar school. Nor
    is it likely that he received tuition from John Cottom. WE do not know when
    Shakespeare left school, but after 1576 his father was in severe financial
    straits, so he may have to leave early to help in the family business, as some
    scholars have suggested. Simon Hunt and Thomas Jenkins must have been
    his two teachers.


What types of plays did Shakespeare write?
1. Histories: such as Richard II, I Henry Iv, etc.
2. Tragedies: such as Hamlet, King Lear
3. Comedies: such as As You Like It, Twelfth Night, A Midsummer Night's
   Dream, etc.
4. Romance: Romeo and Juliet

Shakespeare notes

  • 1.
    Shakespeare notes: When andwhen was Shakespeare born? According to the baptismal register of the Holy Trinity parish church, in Stratford-upon-avon, William Shakespeare’s birth date entry has been registered for April 26, 1564. The actual date of Shakespeare's birth is not known, but, traditionally, April 23, St George's Day, has been Shakespeare's accepted birthday, and a house on Henley Street in Stratford, owned by William's father, John, is accepted as Shakespeare's birth place. However, the reality is that no one really knows when the great dramatist was born. Describe his upbringing and education: 1. Children in Elizabethan England would usually start attending school in their fifth year. They would go to a ‘petty school’ (from French petit, ‘small’) attached to a town’s grammar school, and be taught there by a tutor known as an abecedarius, whose role, as the name suggests, was primarily to teach the boys to read. They would move on to the grammar school after two years, and stay there until age fourteen. It was a long day, beginning at six in the morning (in summer, seven in winter) and continuing until five in the afternoon, with breaks for meals and recreation. Sunday was the only day off. 2. Hornbooks: Children would come to petty school with their hornbook – a wood framed page covered with a transparent sheet made form a piece of cow’s horn. They were of many different kinds, but typically at the top of the page would be the letters of the alphabet, large and small, and underneath would be listed some basic syllables (ab, eb, ib, ba, be, bi, etc), often some numerals, and the Lord’s Prayer. Hornbooks are referred to twice in the plays. In Love’s Labour’s Lou, Mote tells Don Armado that Holofernes’ teaches boys the hornbook. And in The Two Noble Kinsmen one of the countrymen tells the will eat a hornbook ere he fail. 3. The cross-row: In a hornbook, a cross was usually placed at the beginning of the top row of the alphabet, which accordingly came to be known as the ‘cross-row’. Only very young children, or people acting like them, would be using a cross-row. 4. After children had mastered their hornbook, they graduated to alphabetic readers (‘ABC books’) and the question-and-answer dialogues introducing them to formal Christianity (the Catechism) – the latter, along with some other prayers, taken from the 1559 Book of Common Prayer. 5. Studying Latin Plays: Among the Latin texts Shakespeare would have studied in grammar schiils were those by the comic dramatists Terence and Plautus. In some schools, it is known that the students practiced their Latin by acting scenes from their plays. Whether this happened in Stratford is a matter of
  • 2.
    conjecture, but thereis no doubt that these authors would have provided Shakespeare with his first scene of a five-act-play. 6. School-teachers: Who were Shakespeare’s teachers at Stratford grammar school? They were university graduates, some of whom went on to gain scholarly reputations in their own night. Students would receive a good education at their hands. 1569 Walter Roche 1571 Simon Hunt 1575 Thomas Jenkins 1579 john Cottom Shakespeare was only seven in 1571, so Walter Roche had probably left by the time he moved up from petty school into Stratford grammar school. Nor is it likely that he received tuition from John Cottom. WE do not know when Shakespeare left school, but after 1576 his father was in severe financial straits, so he may have to leave early to help in the family business, as some scholars have suggested. Simon Hunt and Thomas Jenkins must have been his two teachers. What types of plays did Shakespeare write? 1. Histories: such as Richard II, I Henry Iv, etc. 2. Tragedies: such as Hamlet, King Lear 3. Comedies: such as As You Like It, Twelfth Night, A Midsummer Night's Dream, etc. 4. Romance: Romeo and Juliet