<span>The Bard's paternal grandfather was Richard Shakespeare
(d. 1561), a farmer in Snitterfield, a village four miles northeast of
Stratford. ... Robert Arden had accumulated much property, and when he
died, he named his daughter (Shakespeare's mother) Mary, only sixteen at the time, one of his executors.</span>
Answer:Also can be called the “turning point”.
Explanation:
The beginning of the story where the author introduces the setting, characters, and other important information the readers need to know. A series of events that builds from the beginning of the story. Rising action is where the author builds interest and tension in the story.
Answer:
<em> Both boys and girls wore a special locket, given to them at birth, called a bulla. A bulla was an amulet, a protective charm against evil. Girls wore their bulla until their wedding night, when it was set aside with other childhood things, like her toys. Boys wore their bulla every day until they were 16 or 17 and became full Roman citizens, with the right to vote and hold office and marry. Both boys and girls wore tunics. Boys wore tunics down to their knees, with a crimson border. In the home, girls wore a simple tunic with a belt at the waist. When girls went outside, the wore a tunic that reached their feet.</em>
:)