Let's say the perimeter is 40.
Case 1-
As for the square, one side = 10.
Area of square $10^2$ = 100.
Case 2-
As for the rectangle -
a) Let's say the L is 2 and W is 18.
Area of rectangle 2 * 18 = 36.
b) If L is 10 and W is 10.
Area of rectangle = 10 * 10 = 100.
c) If L is 14 and W is 6,
Area of rectangle 14 * 6 = 84.
It will ALWAYS be smaller than or equal to the 100 Area of a square in above sub-cases.
So you can say Area of rectangle either smaller than or equal to the Area of square.
Case 3-
As for the circle -
2πr = 40
r = $\frac{140}{11}$
Area of circle $π * \frac{140}{11} * \frac{140}{11}$ = 127.27
So area of circle is greater than both.
Edit -
The area of a circle is $πr^2$, where r is the radius of the circle.
But r = $\frac{P}{2π}$, where P is the perimeter of the circle.
So the area of the circle is $\frac{P^2}{4π}$
The area of a square is $s^2$, where s is the side length.
But s = $\frac{P}{4}$
So the area of a square is $\frac{P^2}{16}$.
Since $\frac{1}{4π} > \frac{1}{16}$, the circle has more area than the square.
Edit - Rectangle and Square.
For Square perimeter = Rectangle perimeter
4S = 2(L + B)
S = 0.5(L + B)
Area of Square = $S^2 = 0.25[(L + B)^2]$
Area of rectangle = L*B
Area of Square - Area of Rectangle
= $0.25[(L + B)^2] - L*B$
= $0.25(L)^2 + 0.25(B)^2 + 0.5 LB - LB$
= $0.25(L)^2 + 0.25(B)^2 - 0.5 LB$
= $0.25[L^2 + B^2 - 2LB]$
= $0.25[(L - B)^2]$
Since (L-B)^2 is always greater than zero i.e. positive
then a square's area is greater than or equal a rectangle's area with a given perimeter.