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Elizabethan Extracaganza!!
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Fairs, Feasts and Festivals
(with some superstitions and witchcraft in there somewhere too) (maybe the odd bit of hanging) (and some torture)
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LO: recap basic facts about Shakespeare, learn about what it was like to be a poor man in Shakespeare’s time Tuesday 22nd April Stick the Shakespeare picture in the centre of a clean page in your exercise books. Time allowed: 12 minutes
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This is a quick-fire quiz – be on ye balle!!
Quiz me up, I pray Stand up if you think the answers to the following questions are true. Remain seated if you think the answer is false. Record any true answers around your image of Shakespeare This is a quick-fire quiz – be on ye balle!!
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Shakespeare was born on 3rd March, 1971
Shakespeare’s father was a glove-maker His father was fined for making a dunghill outside his house He was born in Stratford-upon-Avon He had 12 brothers and sisters William was the oldest of 6 surviving children In Shakespeare’s day he had to start school at 6am and finish at 6pm, and work on Saturdays
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Shakespeare studied word processing, knitting, aeronautics and cycling at school
Shakespeare studied grammar, Latin, Greek, History, Maths and RE. Shakespeare couldn’t spell and had awful handwriting Shakespeare married a woman called Ivy Clare Fishpool Shakespeare was a boy-toy; he got married when he was 17 and his wife was 26.
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Shakespeare’s wife was pregnant when they got married
Shakespeare and his wife and twins called Alfonso and Hortense Shakespeare and his wife had twins called Hamnet and Judith Some of Shakespeare’s most famous plays are called Oliver, Cinderella and King Tut. Shakespeare wrote 37 plays Shakespeare wrote a play called ‘The Taming of the Shrew’
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Shakespeare died on his 52nd birthday
When he died, he left everything to his cat When he died, he left his wife the second best bed in his house and nothing else
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Fun Fun Fun! Watching criminals be hanged or lose their heads (YAY!)
Tormenting inmates at insane asylums (MMM!) Watching bear baiting (OOOO!) Seeing a play in a garden, pub or theatre (Oh, super darling. Pass the sausage rolls.)
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What era did Shakespeare live in?
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Plays as entertainment
Shakespeare’s plays taught people about society and about how human beings relate to each other and to the world they lived in They could be about rich men, poor men, royalty, peasants, ghosts, witches or fairies! In Elizabeth’s day, the Church was very important to the average poor Elizabethan. Shakespeare’s plays reflect the importance of religious festivals, feasts and fairs in the lives of ALL Elizabethans, even royalty.
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Going back in time… The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England Decorate your A2 sheets with the images, then record as many facts as you can around them. The winner gets _________ (fill in the blank)
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What do you think…. And what have you learnt?
Homework: Tell your parents FIVE facts that you have learnt today that you are pretty sure they didn’t know before.
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