Everyday life in the teeming metropolis during William Shakespeare's
time in the city. Shakespeare's London was a bustling, teeming
metropolis that was growing so rapidly that the government took
repeated, and ineffectual, steps to curb its expansion. From
contemporary letters, journals and diaries, a vivid picture emerges of
this fascinating city, with its many opportunities and also its
persistent problems. By far the largest city in the country, it was the
centre of government, the law and the church, the focus of politics and
culture. It had a vigorous economy, with a range of industries and a
lucrative trade in luxury goods for the courtiers and wealthy citizens.
Growth produced overcrowding and high mortality, with shockingly high
death tolls during the periodic plague epidemics, yet London attracted
an endless stream of people, who were absorbed into its diverse
communities and economic structures. Here the first playhouses were
built, patronised by large audiences, who were treated to a rich and
varied diet of plays to keep them, and the court, entertained. The
London that Shakespeare knew was an expanding, changing and exciting
city.