Audio Guide: Shakespeare's London Walking Tour (Self Guided), London
You might know him as “the Bard,” but to England, William Shakespeare is practically the patron saint of poetic plot twists. Born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon to John Shakespeare, a glove maker and town official, and Mary Arden from a prosperous farming family, young William started life with ink in his veins and Latin on his mind. Grammar school likely gave him his first taste of rhetoric. By the age of 18, he was already tying the knot with Anne Hathaway, who was eight years his senior. Together they had three kids, including twins, because, of course, Shakespeare did things in dramatic pairs...
In the late 1580s, our bard-in-the-making vanishes from the Stratford scene, only to reappear in London, elbow-deep in the chaotic genius of theaterland. He joins the Lord Chamberlain’s Men-later rebranded the King’s Men under the patronage of King James I-and juggles acting, managing, and writing like a true Renaissance multitasker.
South of the Thames in the rowdy, rent-cheap Southwark area, Shakespeare finds his creative stomping ground. His early plays likely debuted at places like the Boar’s Head Inn and Crosse Keys Inn, which were basically Elizabethan pop-up theaters with a pint. Then came the moment: the opening of the Globe theater in 1599. That’s when Hamlet, Othello, and King Lear took the stage, and audiences took to throwing everything except tomatoes...
Not far from The Globe, the Rose Theatre gave life to Shakespeare's bloodier tales like Titus Andronicus. But he didn’t just haunt the wings of playhouses-he lived it up near St. Olave Silver Street with the Mountjoy family (makers of theatrical costumes), worshiped at St. Helen’s Bishopsgate, and later bought some prime real estate at Blackfriars Gatehouse, which earned him a respectable address and a ticket to posh society, complete with ties to Saint Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe (yes, that's a real parish name).
Southwark Cathedral now proudly displays a statue and stained-glass nod to the man himself, and a monument to the First Folio stands as tribute to the ultimate director’s cut of his plays. Oh, and by St. Paul’s, there’s a plaque marking the only known letter addressed to Shakespeare-sent by a guy named Richard Quiney. Solid name, even better trivia...
By 1613, Shakespeare amassed great wealth through his theatrical success and retired to Stratford. He died in 1616, but his poetic ghost lingers on-in every soliloquy, every London alley, and every stage that dares to dream big. Because really, without London... we might’ve just called him “Will from Stratford.” And that just doesn’t have the same ring...
In the late 1580s, our bard-in-the-making vanishes from the Stratford scene, only to reappear in London, elbow-deep in the chaotic genius of theaterland. He joins the Lord Chamberlain’s Men-later rebranded the King’s Men under the patronage of King James I-and juggles acting, managing, and writing like a true Renaissance multitasker.
South of the Thames in the rowdy, rent-cheap Southwark area, Shakespeare finds his creative stomping ground. His early plays likely debuted at places like the Boar’s Head Inn and Crosse Keys Inn, which were basically Elizabethan pop-up theaters with a pint. Then came the moment: the opening of the Globe theater in 1599. That’s when Hamlet, Othello, and King Lear took the stage, and audiences took to throwing everything except tomatoes...
Not far from The Globe, the Rose Theatre gave life to Shakespeare's bloodier tales like Titus Andronicus. But he didn’t just haunt the wings of playhouses-he lived it up near St. Olave Silver Street with the Mountjoy family (makers of theatrical costumes), worshiped at St. Helen’s Bishopsgate, and later bought some prime real estate at Blackfriars Gatehouse, which earned him a respectable address and a ticket to posh society, complete with ties to Saint Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe (yes, that's a real parish name).
Southwark Cathedral now proudly displays a statue and stained-glass nod to the man himself, and a monument to the First Folio stands as tribute to the ultimate director’s cut of his plays. Oh, and by St. Paul’s, there’s a plaque marking the only known letter addressed to Shakespeare-sent by a guy named Richard Quiney. Solid name, even better trivia...
By 1613, Shakespeare amassed great wealth through his theatrical success and retired to Stratford. He died in 1616, but his poetic ghost lingers on-in every soliloquy, every London alley, and every stage that dares to dream big. Because really, without London... we might’ve just called him “Will from Stratford.” And that just doesn’t have the same ring...
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Shakespeare's London Walking Tour Map
Guide Name: Shakespeare's London Walking Tour
Guide Location: England » London (See other walking tours in London)
Guide Type: Self-guided Walking Tour (Sightseeing)
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.7 Km or 2.9 Miles
Guide Location: England » London (See other walking tours in London)
Guide Type: Self-guided Walking Tour (Sightseeing)
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.7 Km or 2.9 Miles
Sights Featured in This Walk
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