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William Shakespeare
Playwright, actor, and poet, the
greatest English writer, born in Stratford-upon-Avon,
Warwickshire, C England, UK, the son of John Shakespeare, a
glover, and Mary Arden, of farming stock. Much uncertainty
surrounds his early life. He was the eldest of three sons, and
there were four daughters. He was educated at the local grammar
school, and married Anne Hathaway, from a local farming family,
in 1582, who bore him a daughter, Susanna, in 1583, and twins
Hamnet and Judith in 1585.
He moved to London, possibly in 1591, and became an actor.
During 1592-4, when the theatres were closed for the plague, he
wrote his poems ‘Venus and Adonis’ and ‘The Rape of Lucrece’.
His sonnets, known by 1598, though not published until 1609,
fall into two groups: 1 to 126 are addressed to a fair young
man, and 127 to 154 to a ‘dark lady’ who holds both the young
man and the poet in thrall. Who these people are has provided an
exercise in detection for numerous critics. The first evidence
of his association with the stage is in 1594, when he was acting
with the Lord Chamberlain's company of players, later ‘the
King's Men’. When the company built the Globe Theatre south of
the Thames in 1599, he became a partner, living modestly at a
house in Silver St until c.1606, then moving near the Globe. He
returned to Stratford c.1610, living as a country gentleman at
his house, New Place. His will was made in March 1616, a few
months before he died, and he was buried at Stratford. The
modern era of Shakespeare scholarship has been marked by an
enormous amount of investigation into the authorship, text, and
chronology of the plays, including detailed studies of the age
in which he lived, and of the Elizabethan stage. Authorship is
still a controversial subject for certain plays, such as Titus
Andronicus, Two Noble Kinsmen, Henry VI, part I, as is
Shakespeare's part in Timon of Athens, Pericles, Henry VIII, and
(the latest proposed addition to the canon) Edward III. This has
involved detailed studies of the various editions of the plays,
in particular the different quarto editions, and the first
collected works, the First Folio of 1623. It is conventional to
group the plays into early, middle, and late periods, and to
distinguish comedies, tragedies, and histories, recognizing
other groups that do not fall neatly into these categories.
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