He married 26 year old Anne Hathaway on November 27, 1582. Together they had 3 children; a daughter Susanna, and twins Hamnet and Judith. Hamnet died at 11 of unknown causes, and was buried on August 11, 1596. After the birth of his twins, Shakespeare left few historical traces of where he had been. From 1585 to 1592 were known as the “lost years” of Shakespeare. His first biographer, Nicholas Rowe, stated a legend saying that Shakespeare fled his town to avoid the consequential prosecution put in place for deer poaching. Though, others believe he was working as an assistant schoolmaster in …show more content…
Around this time, Robert Greene had accused Shakespeare of attempting to reach the rank of educated writers; such as himself, Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas Nashe, in his playwright, Groats-Worth of Wit. This was just one of the countless remarks that Shakespeare received from jealousy of his natural talent. Shakespeare joined the leading playing company in London, Chamberlain’s company, in 1594. In 1599, he joined a group of Chamberlain's Men and formed what became to be the most famous theater of its time, the Globe. This company was awarded a royal patent by King James I after the death of Queen Elizabeth in 1603, and was renamed “King’s Men”. Shakespeare began to gain popularity, and continued to compose new pieces of writing. Shakespeare supposedly died on his 52nd birthday in 1616. Records tracing back to the church reveal that he was buried two days later on April 25. Shakespeare could work amazingly fast, writing two to three plays a year. His first plays were historical and romantic, later turning into a more political theme in about 1599. In the early 1600s, his writing changed yet again to tragedy, with pieces such as Lear, Othello, and Macbeth. Prior to the end of his career, he changed his writing style once and for all with romantic