Shakespeare's plays are all about questioning authority: kings are deposed; bad people (Iago) triump over good ones (Cassio); your parents don't always know best (the behaviour of the parents in Romeo and Juliet is the cause of all the trouble).
In the Middle Ages people had a general sense that God was in his heaven, and all was right with the world. In the Renaissance people started to ask if that was true.
Shakespeare is always asking difficult questions, which is a very Renaissance thing to do. And he never makes any direct reference to Christian faith in any of his plays:- religious doubt was also a very Renaissance characteristic.
Im sorry if i cant explain this well enough. european powers such as spain and italy attempted to expand their influence and land ownership. they also wantedto build national pride. They brought their language their aswell, hence why many people in north africa speak english from britain,
I think you're looking for the Knights of Labor!