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      • His father was a successful glove-maker and prominent local figure, while his mother, Mary, came from a wealthy landowning family. Shakespeare likely received his early education at the local grammar school, the King's New School, where he would have studied subjects such as Latin grammar, rhetoric, and classical literature.
      www.shakespeareretold.com/william-shakespeares-life
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  2. Jul 3, 2019 · What was William Shakespeare's school life like? What school did he attend? Was he top of the class? Unfortunately, there is very little evidence remaining, so historians have pulled together multiple sources to give a sense of what his school life would have been like.

    • Lee Jamieson
  3. www.shakespeare.org.uk › shakespeares-schoolShakespeare's School

    William Shakespeare 's education would have started at home. His mother, Mary Arden, would have told him fables and fairy tales during his early youth. Mary was certainly literate. She acted as the executor of her father’s will. The kinds of stories Mary told him are referred to much later in Shakespeare's plays.

  4. Shakespeare probably began his education at the age of six or seven at the Stratford grammar school, which is still standing only a short distance from his house on Henley Street.

  5. Shakespeare’s school years are not well documented, but there is plenty of information about school-life during Shakespeare’s time. William started at the King Edward VI Grammar School (called The King’s New School) when he was seven.

  6. The Biography of William Shakespeare. What type of Education did he have? When and what school did he attend? What lessons? What Teachers? University? What was life like in an Elizabethan Grammar School? What Punishments? Interesting information about the education, life and times of William Shakespeare; THE EDUCATION OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

  7. www.shakespeare.org.uk › shakespeares-schoolShakespeare's School

    Potter: The school’s records for that period haven’t survived, but he must have been there. His father was an alderman, and he could have had a free education, and the plays show that he knew the basic textbooks.

  8. Aug 25, 2017 · In Shakespeare’s time, middle class boys (and sometimes girls) who survived infancy—by no means a certainty—were enrolled in school by about age six. Education was increasingly important in the early modern period with the rise of social mobility; schooling was seen as a way of emulating the bookish gentry and ultimately bettering one’s ...

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