Fucked Up Beyond all Recognition:
Does anyone have any information on schools and orphans, how they lived in worked, duing the Elizabethan Age?
Yay- I'm the only one here.
The church has historically bore the brunt of caring for the sick and disabled- this included orphans. Around the 16th and 17th century we see in England the introduction of the Elizabethan Poor Laws- these were the first attempts following the Midieval world at social welfare-generalized, a model that the United States system (mingled with free enterprise and social darwanism) is based on.
Before, it was assumed religious duty that the poor and sick be cared for by the church, holy writ. What these laws did, in 1601, was make the parents responsible for their children (as it should be, all hail Elizabeth) and the focus was shifted towards the state= the state became patron, no longer the church.
For those, like orphans, who had no one to care for them, these laws gave them entitlement to benefits (room, board, education to a small degree) in much the way our system works in America where an orphan inherits the rights inherent to citizinship.
If you are looking to find the the poor things were chewed up and thrown out with the corn husk in Shakespeare's time, then I'm afraid you'll be sadly disappointed.