Clearly anyone who was writing plays before Shakespeare did was a pre-Shakespearean dramatist. This includes the Greeks (Aeschylus, Sophocles, Aristophanes and Euripedes) and the Romans (Seneca, Plautus).
It also includes those playwrights in the English tradition who came before Shakespeare, such as Nicholas Udall, author of Ralph Roister Doister, William Stevenson, probable author of Gammer Gurton's Needle, John Pickering, author of Horestes, and Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville, co-authors of Gorbaduc. These are all plays from the 1560's or earlier. Some plays of this period, such as Horestes, were the last of the medieval morality plays, of which the most famous is the anonymous Everyman which was played well into the 16th century. All of these were the seeds from which Elizabethan drama as we know it sprung in the 1570s.
The Elizabethan Era was also called ( and known as) The Golden Age
horse and carige
Disturbance eg.of the mind
Queen Elizabeth I - that's why it is known as the Elizabethan age! She reigned from 1558 to 1603.
16 - 20 mostly at 17 or 18 a young woman was married. it was legal for them to get married at 12
Galileo was the most famous Elizabethan/Jacobean scientist, credited with inventing the telescope among other things. Galileo was the most famous Elizabethan/Jacobean scientist, credited with inventing the telescope among other things.
Why was the jacobean age called the jacobean age?
Shakespeare lived in the reigns of two English monarchs, Elizabeth I and James I, whose reigns are known as the Elizabethan Age and the Jacobean Age respectively.
If it hadn't been for the Elizabethan Age, Shakespeare would have lived most of his life in a timeless limbo. If the years 1558 to 1603 hadn't existed, Shakespeare would have appeared in the Jacobean Age at the age of 39 already, with only 13 years of his life left to live.
Elizabethan clothing is clothing during the Elizabethan age. In other words, this is the age of Shakespeare and the bubonic plague.
Answer 1His period of active production was approximately 1590-1613. Parts of this period are variously called the Elizabethan Age (referring to Queen Elizabeth I), The Jacobean Period (referring to King James I), and The English Renaissance. In European History the time period is generally called the English Renaissance. However, specifically peaking in English history William Shakespeare's career coincided with the reigns of Queen Elizabeth I and King James I. Many consider this to be England's Golden Age.Answer 2William Shakespeare's career coincided with the reigns of Queen Elizabeth I and King James I. Queen Elizabeth's reign was the Elizabethan period, sometimes called "The Golden Age." King James reign is known as the "Jacobean" age - Jacob being a variation of the name "James." This period, and some years before and after are also known as The Renaissance. It is generally called the Elizabethan era, however in all honesty only about half of Shakespeare's life was during Elizabeth I's rule. Though she only lived 3 years into the 17th century, most of it is also considered Elizabethan because most of the same customs remained intact. William Shakespeare lived from 1564-1616, meaning all but the last 13 years of his life were lived during the Elizabethan period of English history.
Shakespeare wrote lots of plays not one of which was named "elizabethan age". The time he lived in was called the Elizabethan Age after Queen Elizabeth 1st.
The era called the Elizabethan Age was a time of many changes and developments. This is why it was also called the Golden Age in English history.
The Elizabethan Age was a period in English history when Queen Elizabeth I ruled. It lasted from 1558 to 1603 and has been considered by historians as the golden age in English history. The Elizabethan Age was most famous for theatre, featuring playwrights like William Shakespeare.
The Elizabethan Era was also called ( and known as) The Golden Age
Corny Catching Tracts was written by Robert Greene in 1608 in the form of pamphlets in Elizabethan age.
What does it take to become a great writer?