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Shakespearean Authorship

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Shakespearean authorship



 
 
The Shakespeare authorship question is the ongoing debate, first recorded in the early 18th century, about whether the works attributed to William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
 of Stratford-upon-Avon
Stratford-upon-Avon

Stratford-upon-Avon is a market town and civil parish in south Warwickshire, England. It lies on the River Avon, Warwickshire, south east of Birmingham and south west of the county town, Warwick....
 were actually written by another writer, or a group of writers. Among the numerous candidates that have been proposed, major claimants have included Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban King's Counsel , son of Nicholas Bacon by his second wife Anne Bacon, was an English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist, and author....
, Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
, William Stanley (6th Earl of Derby)
William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby was an English nobleman.He was a son of Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby and Lady Margaret Clifford. His mother was heiress presumptive of Elizabeth I of England from 1578 to her own death in 1596....
, and Edward de Vere
Oxfordian theory

The Oxfordian theory of Shakespearean authorship question holds that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford , wrote the Play and poems attributed to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon....
 (17th Earl of Oxford), who, since first being proposed in the 1920s, has remained the most prevalent alternate authorship candidate.• Love, Harold (2002).






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First Folio
The Shakespeare authorship question is the ongoing debate, first recorded in the early 18th century, about whether the works attributed to William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
 of Stratford-upon-Avon
Stratford-upon-Avon

Stratford-upon-Avon is a market town and civil parish in south Warwickshire, England. It lies on the River Avon, Warwickshire, south east of Birmingham and south west of the county town, Warwick....
 were actually written by another writer, or a group of writers. Among the numerous candidates that have been proposed, major claimants have included Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban King's Counsel , son of Nicholas Bacon by his second wife Anne Bacon, was an English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist, and author....
, Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
, William Stanley (6th Earl of Derby)
William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby was an English nobleman.He was a son of Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby and Lady Margaret Clifford. His mother was heiress presumptive of Elizabeth I of England from 1578 to her own death in 1596....
, and Edward de Vere
Oxfordian theory

The Oxfordian theory of Shakespearean authorship question holds that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford , wrote the Play and poems attributed to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon....
 (17th Earl of Oxford), who, since first being proposed in the 1920s, has remained the most prevalent alternate authorship candidate.• Love, Harold (2002). Attributing Authorship: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 194–209. ISBN 0521789486.
• Schoenbaum, Lives, 430–40.


Authorship doubters believe there is a lack of concrete evidence proving that the actor/businessman baptized as "Shakspere" of Stratford was responsible for the body of literary works that bear his name. Very little biographical information exists about him and, although much has been inferred from his writings, this lack of solid information leaves an enigmatic figure. Mainstream scholars, however, find the lack of information unsurprising, given that in Elizabethan / Jacobean England the lives of commoners were not as well documented as those of the gentry and nobility, and any such documents that might have existed would be unlikely to have survived until the present day.

A further argument against the mainstream view is the erudition of Shakespeare's works, including an enormous vocabulary of approximately 29,000 different words. Authorship doubters find it difficult to believe that a 16th-century commoner, with no university education, could be so well-versed in English language and literature, as well as a number of other disciplines including politics, law, medicine, astronomy and foreign languages.

While mainstream scholars reject all alternative candidates, interest in the authorship debate has grown, particularly among independent scholars, theatre professionals and some academicians. This trend has continued into the 21st century.

Overview


Mainstream view

Sonnets Titelblatt 1609
The mainstream
Mainstream

Mainstream is, generally, the common current of thought of the majority. It is a term most often applied in the The Arts . This includes:* something that is available to the general public;...
 view is that the author known as "Shakespeare" was the same William Shakespeare who was born in Stratford-upon-Avon
Stratford-upon-Avon

Stratford-upon-Avon is a market town and civil parish in south Warwickshire, England. It lies on the River Avon, Warwickshire, south east of Birmingham and south west of the county town, Warwick....
 in 1564, moved to London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
 and became an actor
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
, and "sharer" (part-owner) of the acting company called the Lord Chamberlain's Men
Lord Chamberlain's Men

The Lord Chamberlain's Men was a playing company that William Shakespeare worked at as an actor and playwright for most of his career. Formed at the end of a period of flux in the theatrical world of London, it had become, by 1603, one of the two leading companies of the city and was subsequently patronized by James I of England....
 (which owned the Globe Theatre
Globe Theatre

The Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare. It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613....
 and the Blackfriars Theatre
Blackfriars Theatre

Blackfriars Theatre was the name of a theatre in the Blackfriars, London district of the City of London during the English Renaissance theatre. The theatre began as a venue for boy player associated with the Elizabeth I of England chapel choirs; in this function, the theatre hosted some of the most innovative drama of Elizabeth and James I o...
 in London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
). Before his death in 1616, he divided his time between London and Stratford, where he retired around 1613. In 1623, seven years after his death (and after the death of most of the proposed authorship candidates), his plays were collected for publication in the First Folio
First Folio

Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies is the 1623 published collection of William Shakespeare's plays. Modern scholars commonly refer to it as the First Folio....
 edition.

Shakespeare of Stratford is further identified by the following evidence: He and the author of the works, "William Shakespeare," share a similar name; he left gifts to actors from the London company in his will; commendatory poems in the 1623 First Folio of Shakespeare's works refer to the "Swan of Avon" and his "Stratford monument". Mainstream scholars believe that the latter phrase refers to the funerary monument
Shakespeare's funerary monument

William Shakespeare's funerary monument is located inside Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon, Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, United Kingdom, the same church in which he was baptised....
 in Holy Trinity Church
Holy Trinity Church

Holy Trinity Church, or variations thereof, may refer to:...
, Stratford, which refers to Shakespeare as a writer (comparing him to Virgil
Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro was a classical Roman poet, best known for three major works?the Bucolics , the Georgics and the Aeneid?although several Appendix Vergiliana are also attributed to him....
 and calling his writing a "living art"), and was described as such by visitors to Stratford as far back as the 1630s. Additional evidence which Stratfordians cite to support the mainstream view include: A 1592 pamphlet by the playwright Robert Greene called Greene's Groatsworth of Wit, in which Greene chastises a playwright whom he calls "Shake-scene", calling him "an upstart crow" and a "Johannes factotum" (a "Jack-of-all-trades
Jack of all trades, master of none

"Jack of all trades, master of none" is a figure of speech used in reference to a person who is competent with many skills but is not outstanding in any particular one....
", a man able to feign skill), indicating that people were aware of a writer named Shakespeare. Also, poet John Davies
John Davies

John Davies may refer to:*John Davies of Hereford , poet and satirist*John Davies , lexicographer, translator, and editor of the 1620 Welsh edition of the Bible...
 once referred to Shakespeare as "our English Terence
Terence

Publius Terentius Afer , better known as Terence, was a playwright of the Roman Republic. His comedies were performed for the first time around 170–160 BC, and he died young probably in Greece or on his way back to Rome....
". Additionally, Shakespeare's grave monument in Stratford, built within a decade of his death, currently features him with a pen in hand, suggesting that he was known as a writer.

Critics of the mainstream view have challenged most if not all of the above assertions, claiming that there is no direct evidence which clearly identifies Shakespeare of Stratford as a playwright. These critics note that the only theatrical reference in his will (the gifts to fellow actors) were interlined - i.e.: inserted between previously written lines - and are thus subject to doubt; the term "Swan of Avon" can be interpreted in numerous ways; that Greene's Groatsworth of Wit could imply that Shakespeare was being given credit for the work of other writers; that Davies' mention of "our English Terence" is a mixed reference as Cicero
Cicero

Marcus Tullius Cicero was a Ancient Rome philosopher, statesman, lawyer, political theorist, and Constitution of the Roman Republic. Cicero is widely considered one of Rome's greatest rhetoric and prose stylists....
, Quintilian
Quintilian

Marcus Fabius Quintilianus was a Roman Empire rhetorician from Hispania, widely referred to in Middle ages schools of rhetoric and in Renaissance writing....
, Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne

Michel Eyquem de Montaigne was one of the most influential writers of the French Renaissance. Montaigne is known for popularizing the essay as a literary genre....
 and many contemporary Elizabethan scholars knew Terence as a front man for one or more Roman aristocratic playwrights.; and they assert that Shakespeare's grave monument was altered after its original creation, with the original monument merely showing a man holding a grain sack.

Authorship doubters

For authorship doubters, evidence that Shakespeare of Stratford was merely a front man for an undisclosed playwright arises from several circumstantial sources, including perceived ambiguities and missing information in the historical evidence supporting Shakespeare's traditional candidacy for authorship. In this regard, doubters cite the fact that there are large gaps in the historical record of Shakespeare's life, no surviving letter written by him is known to exist, and his three-page will lists no books, journals or plays, and makes no mention of the valuable shares in the Globe and Blackfriars Theatres that he supposedly owned.

In addition, doubters assert that the plays require a level of education (including knowledge of foreign languages) greater than that which Shakespeare is known to have possessed. They also cite the following: circumstantial evidence suggesting the author was deceased while Shakespeare of Stratford was still living; doubts of his authorship expressed by his contemporaries; plays that he appeared to be unavailable or unable to write; and perceived parallels between the characters and events in Shakespeare's works and the life of the favoured candidate - with a particular emphasis on the author's familiarity with life in the Elizabethan court.

On September 8, 2007, acclaimed British actors Derek Jacobi
Derek Jacobi

Sir Derek George Jacobi Order of the British Empire is an England actor and film director. Like Laurence Olivier, he bears the distinction of holding two knighthoods, Danish and British....
 and Mark Rylance
Mark Rylance

Mark Rylance is an English actor, theatre direction and playwright.As an actor, Rylance found success on stage and screen. For his work in theatre he has won Olivier Award and Tony Awards among others, and a British Academy of Film and Television Arts TV Award....
 unveiled a "declaration of reasonable doubt" on the authorship of Shakespeare's work, after the final matinee of I Am Shakespeare, a play investigating the bard's identity, performed in Chichester
Chichester

Chichester is a cathedral city status in the United Kingdom in West Sussex, England. It has a long history as a settlement; its Ancient Rome past and its subsequent importance in Anglo-Saxon times are only its beginnings....
, England. The "declaration" named 20 prominent doubters of the past, including Mark Twain
Mark Twain

Samuel Langhorne Clemens , better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an United Statesmerican author and humorist. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer....
, Orson Welles
Orson Welles

George Orson Welles , better known as Orson Welles, was an Academy Award-winning United States actor, director, writer and producer, who worked extensively in film, theatre, television, and radio....
, Sir John Gielgud
John Gielgud

Sir Arthur John Gielgud, Order of Merit , Companion of Honour was an England actor and singer, particularly known for his warm and expressive voice, which his colleague Alec Guinness likened to "a silver trumpet muffled in silk"....
 and Charlie Chaplin
Charlie Chaplin

Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin, Jr. Order of the British Empire , better known as Charlie Chaplin, was an Academy Award-winning England comedy film actor and filmmaker....
. The document was sponsored by the Shakespeare Authorship Coalition and has been signed by over 1,200 people, including 200 academics, to encourage new research into the question. Jacobi, who endorsed a group theory led by the Earl of Oxford, and Rylance, who was featured in the authorship play, presented a copy of the document to William Leahy
William Leahy

William Leahy is the name of a number of notable persons including:* William D. Leahy , American naval officer, colonial official, and diplomat...
, head of English at Brunel University
Brunel University

Brunel University is a university situated in West London, England....
, London.

Terminology


Stratfordians and anti-Stratfordians

Those who question whether William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon was the primary author of Shakespeare's plays are usually referred to as anti-Stratfordians, while those who have no such doubts are often called Stratfordians. Those who identify Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe, or the Earl of Oxford as the main author of Shakespeare's plays are commonly referred to as Baconians
Baconian theory

The Baconian theory of Shakespearean authorship holds that Sir Francis Bacon wrote the Play conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare....
, Marlovians
Marlovian theory

The Marlovian theory of Shakespearean authorship holds that Christopher Marlowe did not die on 30 May 1593 as the historical records show, his death having been faked, and that he survived long enough to be the main author of the poems and plays typically attributed to William Shakespeare....
, or Oxfordians
Oxfordian theory

The Oxfordian theory of Shakespearean authorship question holds that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford , wrote the Play and poems attributed to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon....
, respectively.

"Shakspere" vs. "Shakespeare"

There was no standardised spelling in Elizabethan England, and throughout his lifetime Shakespeare of Stratford's name was spelled in many different ways, including "Shakespeare". Anti-Stratfordians conventionally refer to the man from Stratford as "Shakspere" (the name recorded at his baptism) or "Shaksper" to distinguish him from the author "Shakespeare" or "Shake-speare" (the spellings that appear on the publications), who they claim has a different identity. They point out that most references to the man from Stratford in legal documents usually spell the first syllable of his name with only four letters, "Shak-" or sometimes "Shag-" or "Shax-", whereas the dramatist's name is consistently rendered with a long "a" as in "Shake". Stratfordians reject this convention, believing it implies that the Stratford man spelt his name differently from the name appearing on the publications. Because the "Shakspere" convention is controversial, this article uses the name "Shakespeare" throughout.

The idea of secret authorship in Renaissance England

In support of the possibility of Shakespeare as "frontman", anti-Stratfordians point to contemporary examples of Elizabethans discussing anonymous or pseudonymous publication by persons of high social status. Describing contemporary writers, the dramatist and pamphleteer Robert Greene
Robert Greene (16th century)

Robert Greene was an England author best known today for his pamphlet Greene's Groats-Worth of Wit, containing a polemic attack on William Shakespeare....
 wrote that "others ... which for their calling and gravity being loth to have any profane pamphlets pass under their hands, get some other Batillus [a minor Augustan poet] to set his name to their verses,".

Roger Ascham
Roger Ascham

Roger Ascham , England scholar and didactic writer, famous for his prose style, his promotion of the vernacular, and his theories of education....
 in his book The Schoolmaster discusses his belief that two plays attributed to the Roman dramatist Terence were secretly written by "worthy Scipio, and wise Lælius", because the language is too elevated to have been written by "a seruile stranger" such as Terence.

"Shake-Speare" as a pseudonym

According to literary historians Taylor and Mosher, "In the 16th and 17th centuries, the Golden Age of pseudonym
Pseudonym

A pseudonym, , is a fictitious alternative to a person's legal name. In some cases, pseudonyms are adopted because it is part of a cultural or organizational tradition, as in the case of Religious names used by members of some religious orders and "cadre names" used by Communist party leaders such as Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin....
s, almost every writer used a pseudonym at some time in his career". In this regard, many anti-Stratfordians question the hyphen that often appeared in the name "Shake-speare", which they believe indicated the use of such a pseudonym. Examples of oft-hyphenated names include Tom Tell-truth, Martin Mar-prelate (who pamphleteered against church "prelates") and Cuthbert Curry-nave, who "curried" his "knavish" enemies.

According to authorship researcher Mark Anderson, the hyphenated "Shake-speare" is another example in this vein, alluding to the patron goddess of art and literature, Athena, who sprang from the forehead of Zeus, shaking a spear. Stratfordians have responded that the hyphenated version was not consistent and that the hyphen was merely misplaced, so the issue should be discounted. Oxfordian Charlton Ogburn responded by noting that of the "32 editions of Shakespeare's plays published before the First Folio of 1623 in which the author was named at all, the name was hyphenated in fifteen – almost half." Further, it was hyphenated by John Davies in the famous poem which references the poet as "Our English Terence", by fellow playwright John Webster
John Webster

John Webster was an England Literature in English#Jacobean literature dramatist best known for his tragedies The White Devil and The Duchess of Malfi, often regarded as masterpieces of the early 17th-century English stage....
, and by the epigrammatist of 1639 who wrote, "Shake-speare, we must be silent in thy praise…". Ogburn notes that the hyphen was only used by other writers or publishers, and not by the poet himself (he did not use it in his personal dedications of his two long narrative poems). On this evidence, Ogburn concluded that the hyphenation was not inconsistent or misplaced, and did follow a pattern.

Debate points used by anti-Stratfordians


Shakespeare's education

Authorship doubters believe that the author of Shakespeare's works must have had a higher education
Higher education

Higher education refers to a level of education that is provided by university, vocational university, community colleges, liberal arts colleges, Institute of technology and other collegiate level institutions, such as Vocational school, trade schools and career colleges, that award academic degrees or professional certifications....
, as the writing of the works required a knowledge of contemporary science, medicine, astronomy, and several languages. They further assert that there is no evidence that Shakespeare of Stratford ever attained this education. In addition, the writer of the Shakespeare canon exhibited an exceptionally large vocabulary of over 29,000 different words - including word variations - almost five times that of the King James Version of the Bible
Bible

The Bible is the central religious text of Judaism and Christianity. The exact Books of the Bible is dependent on the religious traditions of specific denominations....
, which contains approximately 6,000 different words. "The plays of Shakespeare," said Henry Stratford Caldecott in an 1895 Johannesburg
Johannesburg

Johannesburg also known as Joburg, is the largest city in South Africa. Johannesburg is the province Capital of Gauteng the wealthiest province in South Africa, having the largest economy of any metropolitan region in Sub-Saharan Africa....
 lecture, "are so stupendous a monument of learning and genius that, as time passes and they are probed and searched and analysed by successive generations of scholars and critics of all nations, they seem to loom higher and grander, and their hidden beauties and treasured wisdom to be more and more inexhaustible; and so people have come to ask themselves not only, 'Is it humanly possible for William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
, the country lad from Stratford-on-Avon, to have written them?', but whether it was possible for any one man, whoever he may have been, to have done so."

The Stratfordian position is that Shakespeare was entitled to attend the The King's School
King Edward VI School Stratford-upon-Avon

King Edward VI School is a single sex grammar school in Stratford-upon-Avon in Warwickshire, England. The poet and playwright William Shakespeare may have attended KES , leading to the label of "Shakespeare's School."...
 in Stratford until the age of fourteen, where he would have studied the Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 poets and playwrights such as Plautus
Plautus

Titus Maccius Plautus , commonly known as Plautus, was a Ancient Rome playwright. His comedy are among the earliest surviving intact works in Latin literature....
 and Ovid
Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
. As the records of the school's pupils have not survived, Shakespeare's attendance cannot be proven.

The school or schools Shakespeare might have studied at are a matter of speculation as there are no existing admission or attendance records for Shakespeare at any grammar school, university or college. Though there is no evidence that Shakespeare attended a university
University

A university is an institution of higher education and research, which grants academic degrees in a variety of subjects. A university provides both undergraduate education and postgraduate education....
, a degree was not a prerequisite for a Renaissance dramatist; traditionally, scholars have assumed Shakespeare to be largely self-educated. A commonly cited parallel is his fellow dramatist Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson

Benjamin Jonson was an England English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satire plays, particularly Volpone, The Alchemist , and Bartholomew Fair, which are considered his best, and his Lyric poetry poems....
, a man whose origins were humbler than Shakespeare's, and who rose to become court poet. Like Shakespeare, Jonson never completed and perhaps never attended university, and yet he became a man of great learning (later being granted an honorary degree from both Oxford
University of Oxford

The University of Oxford , located in the city of Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation in the English-speaking world....
 and Cambridge
University of Cambridge

The University of Cambridge , located in Cambridge, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation university in the Anglosphere....
). However, there is clearer evidence for Jonson's self-education than for Shakespeare's. Several hundred books owned by Ben Jonson have been found signed and annotated by him but no book has ever been found which proved to have been owned or borrowed by Shakespeare of Stratford. Jonson, therefore, had access to a substantial library with which to supplement his education.

Possible proof of Shakespeare's self-education has been suggested: A. L. Rowse
A. L. Rowse

Alfred Leslie Rowse, Companion of Honour FBA , known professionally as A. L. Rowse and to his friends and family as Leslie, was a prolific Cornish people historian....
 notes that certain sources for his plays were sold at the shop of the printer Richard Field, a fellow Stratfordian of Shakespeare's age.

Some contemporary references have been interpreted to say that Shakespeare's works have not always been considered to require an unusual amount of education: Ben Jonson's tribute to Shakespeare in the 1623 First Folio states that his plays were great even though he had "small Latin and less Greek". And it has been argued, most vehemently by Dr Richard Farmer
Richard Farmer

Dr Richard Farmer was a William Shakespeare scholar and Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.The second son of Richard Farmer, 'woolman and maltster', he was educated in Leicester before going up to Emmanuel College, Cambridge....
, that a great deal of the classical learning he displays is derived from one text, Ovid's Metamorphoses, which was a set text in many schools at the time. Anti-Stratfordians such as Mark Anderson, however, believe this explanation does not counter the argument that the author also required a knowledge of foreign languages, modern sciences, warfare, aristocratic sports such as tennis, statesmanship, hunting, natural philosophy, history, falconry and the law. Similarly, what Shakespeare called "the first heire of my invention", the poem Venus and Adonis
Venus and Adonis (Shakespeare poem)

Venus and Adonis is one of Shakespeare's three longer poems....
, appears to draw extensively on Giambattista Marino's Adone, which was never translated.

Shakespeare's will


William Shakespeare's will is long and explicit, listing the possessions of a successful bourgeois in detail. However, the will makes no mention at all of personal papers, letters, or books (books were rare and expensive items at the time) of any kind. In addition, no early poems or manuscripts, plays or unfinished works are listed, nor is there any reference to the shares in the Globe Theatre
Globe Theatre

The Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare. It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613....
 that the Stratford man supposedly owned, shares that would have been exceedingly valuable.

At the time of Shakespeare's death, 18 plays remained unpublished. None of them are mentioned in his will (this contrasts with Sir Francis Bacon, whose two wills refer to work that he wished to be published posthumously). Anti-Stratfordians find it unusual that Shakespeare did not wish his family to profit from his unpublished work or was unconcerned about leaving them to posterity. They find it improbable that Shakespeare would have submitted all the manuscripts to the King's Men
King's Men (playing company)

The King's Men was the company of actors to which William Shakespeare belonged through most of his career. Formerly known as The Lord Chamberlain's Men during the reign of Elizabeth I of England, it became The King's Men in 1603 when James I of England ascended the throne and became the company's patron....
, the playing company
Playing company

In English Renaissance London, playing company was the usual term for a company of actors. These companies were organized around a group of ten or so shareholders , who performed in the plays but were also responsible for management....
 of which he was a shareholder. As was the normal practice at the time, Shakespeare's submitted plays were owned jointly by the members of the King's Men.

The 1604 problem


Some researchers believe certain documents imply the actual playwright was dead by 1604, the year continuous publication of new Shakespeare plays "mysteriously stopped", and various scholars have asserted that The Winter's Tale
The Winter's Tale

The Winter's Tale is a play by William Shakespeare, first published in the First Folio in 1623. Although it was listed as a comedy when it first appeared, some modern editors have relabeled the play a Romance ....
, The Tempest
The Tempest

The Tempest is a play by William Shakespeare, probably written in 1610?11, although some researchers have argued for an earlier dating. Its protagonist is the banished sorcerer Prospero, rightful Duke of Milan, who uses his magical powers to punish and forgive his enemies when he raises a tempest that drives them ashore....
, Henry VIII
Henry VIII (play)

The Famous History of the Life of King Henry the Eighth is a history play by William Shakespeare, based on the life of Henry VIII of England....
, Macbeth
Macbeth

Macbeth is a tragedy by William Shakespeare about a regicide and its aftermath. It is Shakespeare's shortest Shakespearean tragedy and is believed to have been written some time between 1603 and 1606, with 1607 being the very latest possible date....
, King Lear
King Lear

King Lear is a tragedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written between 1603 and 1606, and is considered one of his greatest works....
 and Antony and Cleopatra
Antony and Cleopatra

Antony and Cleopatra is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. It was first printed in the First Folio of 1623.The plot is based on Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Life of Markus Antonius and follows the relationship between Cleopatra VII of Egypt and Mark Antony from the time of the Roman-Persian Wars to Cleopatra's suicide....
, so-called "later plays", were composed no later than 1604. Researchers cite Shake-speare's Sonnets
Shakespeare's sonnets

Shakespeare's sonnets, or simply The Sonnets, is a collection of poems in sonnet form written by William Shakespeare that deal with such themes as love, beauty, politics, and death....
, 1609, which appeared with "our ever-living Poet" on the title page, words typically used eulogizing someone who has died, yet become immortal. Shakespeare himself used the phrase in this context in Henry VI, part 1 describing the dead Henry V as "[t]hat ever-living man of memory". Researchers also cite one contemporary document that strongly implies that Shakespeare, the Globe shareholder, was dead prior to 1616, when Shakespeare of Stratford died. For further information on the 1604 problem, see Oxfordian theory
Oxfordian theory

The Oxfordian theory of Shakespearean authorship question holds that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford , wrote the Play and poems attributed to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon....
.

The First Folio


The First Folio (1623), the first collected edition of Shakespeare's plays, has generated debates among authorship proponents, who have also raised questions about the well known Folio frontispiece. The engraving itself is usually attributed to Martin Droeshout the Younger. Born in 1601, Droeshout was 14 years old when Shakespeare died, seven years before the Folio's publication, so that he was unlikely ever to have known the playwright; because of this, authorship researchers have questioned the circumstances behind the work, including Jonson's assertion that the engraving was "true to life". Stratfordians respond that the assumption has long been that Droeshout worked from a sketch. Charlton Ogburn, author of The Mysterious William Shakespeare (1984), also noted that the curved line running from the ear to the chin makes the face appear more of a "mask" than a true representation of an actual person. Art historians see nothing unusual in these features.

Shakespeare's literacy

6 Known Signatures of Shakspeare
Shakespeare's wife Anne and daughter Judith seem to have been illiterate, suggesting that Shakespeare did not teach them to write, although it was normal for middle-class women in the 17th century to be illiterate.

Not one surviving letter, to or from Shakespeare, is known to exist. The Anti-Stratfordian position maintains it would only be logical for a man of Shakespeare's writing ability to compose numerous letters, and given the man's supposed fame they find it unbelievable that not one letter, or record of a letter, exists.

Shakespeare's class

Anti-Stratfordians believe that a provincial glovemaker's son who resided in Stratford until early adulthood would be unlikely to have written plays that deal so personally with the activities, travel and lives of the nobility. The view is summarized by Charles Chaplin: "In the work of greatest geniuses, humble beginnings will reveal themselves somewhere, but one cannot trace the slightest sign of them in Shakespeare. Whoever wrote [Shakespeare] had an aristocratic attitude." Orthodox scholars respond that the glamorous world of the aristocracy was a popular setting for plays in this period. They add that numerous English Renaissance playwrights, including Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
, John Webster
John Webster

John Webster was an England Literature in English#Jacobean literature dramatist best known for his tragedies The White Devil and The Duchess of Malfi, often regarded as masterpieces of the early 17th-century English stage....
, Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson

Benjamin Jonson was an England English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satire plays, particularly Volpone, The Alchemist , and Bartholomew Fair, which are considered his best, and his Lyric poetry poems....
, Thomas Dekker and others wrote about the nobility despite their own humble origins.

Anti-Stratfordians stress that the plays show a detailed understanding of politics, the law and foreign languages that would have been impossible to attain without an aristocratic or university upbringing. Orthodox scholars respond that Shakespeare was an upwardly mobile man: his company regularly performed at court and he thus had ample opportunity to observe courtly life. In addition, his theatrical career made him wealthy and he eventually acquired a coat of arms
Coat of arms

A coat of arms, more properly called an armorial achievement, armorial bearings or often just arms for short, in European tradition, is a design belonging to a particular person and used by them in a wide variety of ways....
 for his family and the title of gentleman, like many other wealthy middle class men in this period.

In The Genius of Shakespeare, Jonathan Bate points out that the class argument is reversible: the plays contain details of lower-class life in which aristocrats might have little knowledge. Many of Shakespeare's most vivid characters are lower class or associate with this milieu, such as Falstaff
Falstaff

Sir John Falstaff is a fictional character who appears in three plays by William Shakespeare as a companion to Prince Hal, the future King Henry V of England....
, Nick Bottom
Nick Bottom

Nick Bottom is a character in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream who provides comic relief throughout the play, and is famously known for getting his head transformed into that of an Donkey by the elusive Puck within the play....
, Autolycus
Autolycus

In Greek mythology, Autolycus was a son of Hermes and Chione . He was the husband of Neaera, or according to Homer of Amphithea. Autolycus fathered Anticlea and several sons of whom only Aesimus is named....
, Sir Toby Belch, etc. Anti-Stratfordians assert that while the author's depiction of nobility was highly personal and multi-faceted, his treatment of the peasant class was quite different, including comedic and insulting names (Bullcalfe, Elbow, Bottom, Belch), often portrayed as the butt of jokes or as an angry mob.

It has also been noted that in the 17th century, Shakespeare was not thought of as an expert on the court, but as a "child of nature" who "Warble[d] his native wood-notes wild" as John Milton
John Milton

John Milton II was an English poet, author, polemicist and civil servant for the Commonwealth of England. He is best known for his Epic poetry Paradise Lost and for his treatise condemning censorship, Areopagitica....
 put it in his poem L'Allegro. Indeed, John Dryden
John Dryden

John Dryden was an influential English poet, literary critic, translator, and playwright who dominated the literary life of English Restoration to such a point that the period came to be known in literary circles as the Age of Dryden....
 wrote in 1668 that the playwrights Beaumont and Fletcher
Beaumont and Fletcher

Beaumont and Fletcher were the English dramatists Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher , who collaborated in their writing during the reign of James I of England....
 "understood and imitated the conversation of Gentlemen much better" than Shakespeare, and in 1673 wrote of Elizabethan playwrights in general that "I cannot find that any of them had been conversant in courts, except Ben Jonson." Against this argument is the fact that it took Ben Jonson (who had a similar low class to Shakespeare) 12 years from his first play to obtain noble patronage from Prince Henry for his commentary The Masque of Queens
The Masque of Queens

The Masque of Queens, Celebrated From the House of Fame is one of the earlier works in the series of masques that Ben Jonson composed for the House of Stuart in the early seventeenth century....
 (1609). Anti-Stratfordians thus express doubt that the true author could have obtained the Earl of Southampton's patronage for one of his first published works, the long poem Venus and Adonis
Venus and Adonis (Shakespeare poem)

Venus and Adonis is one of Shakespeare's three longer poems....
 (1593).

Comments by contemporaries

Comments on Shakespeare by Elizabethan literary figures can be read as expressions of doubt about his authorship.

Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson

Benjamin Jonson was an England English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satire plays, particularly Volpone, The Alchemist , and Bartholomew Fair, which are considered his best, and his Lyric poetry poems....
 had a contradictory relationship with Shakespeare. He regarded him as a friend – saying "I loved the man" – and wrote tributes to him in the First Folio. However, Jonson also wrote that Shakespeare was too wordy: Commenting on the Players' commendation of Shakespeare for never blotting out a line, Jonson wrote "would he had blotted a thousand" and that "he flowed with that facility that sometimes it was necessary he should be stopped." In the same work, he scoffs at a line Shakespeare said "in the person of Caesar" (presumably on stage): "Caesar never did wrong but with just cause", which Jonson calls "ridiculous," and indeed the text as preserved in the First Folio carries a different line: "Know, Caesar doth not wrong, nor without cause / Will he be satisfied" (3.1). Jonson ridiculed the line again in his play The Staple of News, without directly referring to Shakespeare. Some anti-Stratfordians interpret these comments as expressions of doubt about Shakespeare's ability to have written the plays.

In Robert Greene's
Robert Greene (16th century)

Robert Greene was an England author best known today for his pamphlet Greene's Groats-Worth of Wit, containing a polemic attack on William Shakespeare....
 posthumous publication Greene's Groatsworth of Wit (1592; published, and possibly written, by fellow dramatist Henry Chettle
Henry Chettle

Henry Chettle was an England dramatist and miscellaneous writer of the Elizabethan era.The son of Robert Chettle, a London dyer, he was apprenticed in 1577 and became a member of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers in 1584, traveling to Cambridge on their behalf in 1588....
) a dramatist labeled "Shake-scene" is vilified as "an upstart Crowe beautified with our feathers", along with a quotation from Henry VI, Part 3
Henry VI, part 3

Henry the Sixth, Part 3, is a history play by William Shakespeare, believed written in approximately 1590, and set during the lifetime of King Henry VI of England....
. The orthodox view is that Greene is criticizing the relatively unsophisticated Shakespeare for invading the domain of the university-educated playwright Greene. Some anti-Stratfordians claim that Greene is in fact doubting Shakespeare's authorship. In Greene's earlier work Mirror of Modesty (1584), the dedication mentions "Ezops Crowe, which deckt hir selfe with others feathers" referring to Aesop
Aesop

File:Aesop pushkin01.jpgAesop , known only for the genre of fables ascribed to him, was by tradition a Slavery in Ancient Greece who was a contemporary of Croesus and Peisistratos in the mid-6th century BC in ancient Greece....
's fable (The Crow, the Eagle, and the Feathers) against people who boast they have something they do not.

In John Marston
John Marston

John Marston was an English people poet, playwright and satirist during the late Elizabethan and Literature in English#Jacobean literature periods....
's satirical poem The Scourge of Villainy (1598), Marston rails against the upper classes being "polluted" by sexual interactions with the lower classes. Seasoning his piece with sexual metaphors, he then asks:
Shall broking pandars sucke Nobilitie?
Soyling fayre stems with foule impuritie?
Nay, shall a trencher slaue extenuate,
Some Lucrece rape? And straight magnificate
Lewd Jovian Lust? Whilst my satyrick vaine
Shall muzzled be, not daring out to straine
His tearing paw? No gloomy Juvenall,
Though to thy fortunes I disastrous fall.
There is a tradition that the satirist Juvenal
Juvenal

The Satires are a collection of satire poems by the Latin author Juvenal written in the late 1st and early 2nd centuries A.D.Juvenal is credited with sixteen known poems divided among five scroll; all are in the Roman genre of Satire, which, at its most basic in the time of the author, comprised a wide-ranging discussion of society and soc...
 became "gloomy" after being exiled by Domitian
Domitian

Titus Flavius Domitianus , commonly known as Domitian, was a Roman Emperor who reigned from 14 September 81 until his death. Domitian was the last emperor of the Flavian dynasty, which ruled the Roman Empire between 69 and 96, encompassing the reigns of Domitian's father Vespasian , his elder brother Titus , and that of Domitian himself...
 having lampooned an actor that the emperor was in love with. So Marston's piece could be taken as being directed at an actor, and as questioning whether such a lower class "trencher slave" is extenuating (making light of) "some Lucrece rape". One interpretation is that it refers to The Rape of Lucrece
The Rape of Lucrece

The Rape of Lucrece is a narrative poem by William Shakespeare about the legendary Lucretia.In his previous narrative poem, Venus and Adonis , Shakespeare had included a dedicatory letter to his patron, the Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, in which he promised to write a "graver work"....
, with Shakespeare depicted as a "broking pandar" (procurer), implicitly questioning his credentials to "sucke Nobilitie", that is, attract the Earl of Southampton
Earl of Southampton

The title of Earl of Southampton was created three times in the Peerage of Peerage of England . The second creation was associated with a subsidiary title, Baron Wriothesley ....
's patronage of him.

Evidence in the poems

Anti-Stratfordians such as Charlton Ogburn
Charlton Ogburn

Charlton Ogburn, Jr. was an author and freelance professional writer. He was the author of over a dozen books and numerous magazine articles. The Marauders , his first person account of the Burma Campaign in World War II, may be his best-known work; it was later made into the film Merrill's Marauders ....
 have repeatedly used Shakespeare's sonnets as evidence for their positions. They cite Sonnet 76
Sonnet 76

Sonnet 76 is one of The Sonnets written by the English playwright and poet William Shakespeare. It's a member of the The Sonnets#Fair Youth sequence, in which the poet expresses his love towards a young man....
 as clear evidence of the author's confession of the need for such a ruse:

Why write I still all one, ever the same,
And keep invention in a noted weed,
That every word doth almost tell my name,
Showing their birth, and where they did proceed?


Geographical knowledge

Most anti-Stratfordians believe that a well-travelled man wrote the plays, as many of them are set in European countries and show great attention to local details. Orthodox scholars respond that numerous plays of this period by other playwrights are set in foreign locations and Shakespeare is thus entirely conventional in this regard. In addition, in many cases Shakespeare did not invent the setting, but borrowed it from the source he was using for the plot.

Even outside of the authorship question, there has been debate about the extent of geographical knowledge displayed by Shakespeare. Some scholars argue that there is very little topographical information in the texts (nowhere in Othello or the Merchant of Venice are the many canals of Venice
Venice

Venice is a city in northern Italy, the capital city of the Italian regions Veneto, a population of 271,251 . Together with Padua, Italy, the city is included in the Padua-Venice Metropolitan Area ....
 mentioned). Indeed, there are apparent mistakes: for example, Shakespeare refers to Bohemia
Bohemia

History...
 as having a coastline in The Winter's Tale
The Winter's Tale

The Winter's Tale is a play by William Shakespeare, first published in the First Folio in 1623. Although it was listed as a comedy when it first appeared, some modern editors have relabeled the play a Romance ....
 (the region is landlocked), refers to Verona
Verona

Verona is a city in Veneto, northern Italy, one of the seven provincial capitals in the region. It is one of the main tourist destinations in north-eastern Italy, thanks to its artistic heritage, several annual fairs, shows and operas, such as the lyrical season in the Arena, the ancient amphitheatre built by the Romans....
 and Milan
Milan

Milan is the second largest city of Italy, located in the plains of Lombardy. It is the capital in the Province of Milan, as well as the Regions of Italy capital of Lombardy....
 as seaports in The Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Two Gentlemen of Verona

The Two Gentlemen of Verona is a comedy by William Shakespeare from early in his career. It has the smallest cast of any of Shakespeare's plays, and is the first of his plays in which a heroine dresses as a boy....
 (the cities are inland), in All's Well That Ends Well
All's Well That Ends Well

All's Well That Ends Well is a play by William Shakespeare. It was probably written between 1601 in literature and 1608 in literature, and it was first published in the First Folio in 1623 in literature....
 he suggests that a journey from Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
 to Northern Spain
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
 would pass through Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
, and in Timon of Athens
Timon of Athens

The Life of Timon of Athens is a play by William Shakespeare about the legendary Athens misanthropy Timon of Athens , generally regarded as one of his most obscure and difficult works....
 he believes that there are substantial tides in the Mediterranean Sea
Mediterranean Sea

The Mediterranean Sea is a sea or Ocean off the Atlantic Ocean surrounded by the Mediterranean region and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Europe, on the south by Africa, and on the east by Asia....
, and that they take place once instead of twice a day.

Answers to these objections have been made by other scholars (both orthodox and anti-Stratfordian). One explanation given for Bohemia having a coastline is the author's awareness that the kingdom of Bohemia at one time stretched to the Adriatic. More likely, the same geographical mistake was already present in Shakespeare's source, Robert Greene's Pandosto, and the play merely reproduced it. It has been noted that The Merchant of Venice demonstrates detailed knowledge of the city, including the obscure facts that the Duke held two votes in the City Council, and that a dish of baked doves was a time-honored gift in northern Italy. Shakespeare also used the local word, "traghetto", for the Venetian mode of transport (printed as 'traject' in the published texts). Anti-Stratfordians suggest that the above information would most likely be obtained from first-hand experience of the regions under discussion and conclude that the author of the plays could have been a diplomat, aristocrat or politician.

Mainstream scholars assert that Shakespeare's plays contain several colloquial names for flora and fauna that are unique to Warwickshire
Warwickshire

Warwickshire is a landlocked non-metropolitan county in the West Midlands of England. The county town is Warwick, although the largest town is Nuneaton in the far north of the county....
, where Stratford-upon-Avon is located, for example 'love in idleness
Love in Idleness

Love-in-idleness is one of the many old names for the pansy. Shakespeare uses the name in A Midsummer Night's Dream where Oberon takes revenge on Titania and sends Puck to retrieve the flower:...
' in A Midsummer Night's Dream
A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream is a romantic love Shakespearean comedies by William Shakespeare, suggested by "The Knight's Tale" from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, written around 1594 to 1596....
. These names may suggest that a Warwickshire native might have written the plays. Researchers point out that the Earl of Oxford owned a manor house in Bilton, Warwickshire
Bilton, Warwickshire

Bilton is an area of Rugby, Warwickshire in Warwickshire and a Ward of the Rugby borough. It comprises much of the western half of the town....
, although records show that he leased it out in 1574 and sold it in 1581.

Candidates and their champions


History of alternative attributions

According to the anti-Stratfordian viewpoint, the first indirect statements regarding suspicions as to the authorship of "Shakespeare's" works come from the Elizabethans themselves: As early as 1595 the poet Thomas Edwards
Thomas Edwards (poet)

Thomas Edwards was the author of two Ovid inspired epic poems Cephalus and Procris; Narcissus. He has been identified as probably the Shropshire law student who transferred from Furnival's Inn to Lincoln's Inn in June 1587; here Edwards shared a room with a known friend of John Donne....
 published his Narcissus
Thomas Edwards (poet)

Thomas Edwards was the author of two Ovid inspired epic poems Cephalus and Procris; Narcissus. He has been identified as probably the Shropshire law student who transferred from Furnival's Inn to Lincoln's Inn in June 1587; here Edwards shared a room with a known friend of John Donne....
 and L'Envoy to Narcissus
Thomas Edwards (poet)

Thomas Edwards was the author of two Ovid inspired epic poems Cephalus and Procris; Narcissus. He has been identified as probably the Shropshire law student who transferred from Furnival's Inn to Lincoln's Inn in June 1587; here Edwards shared a room with a known friend of John Donne....
 in which he seems to hint at "Shakespeare's" identity as an aristocrat - whilst referring to the poet of Venus and Adonis Edwards addresses him as one dressed "in purple robes", purple being a symbol of aristocracy; Elizabethan satirists, Joseph Hall in 1597 and John Marston
John Marston

John Marston was an English people poet, playwright and satirist during the late Elizabethan and Literature in English#Jacobean literature periods....
 in 1598 imply that Francis Bacon is the author of Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece; around the turn of the seventeenth century, Gabriel Harvey
Gabriel Harvey

Gabriel Harvey was an England writer. Harvey was a notable scholar, though his reputation suffered from his quarrel with Thomas Nashe. Henry Morley, writing in the Fortnightly Review , brought evidence from Harvey's Latin language writings showing that he was distinguished by quite other qualities than the pedantry and conceit usually as...
, Cambridge don and scholar, left marginalia in his copy of Chaucer's works that implied that he believed Sir Edward Dyer
Edward Dyer

Sir Edward Dyer was an England courtier and poet....
 was the author of at least Venus and Adonis. According to authorship researcher Diana Price, all of these were, however, veiled references in the authorship debate that were never, although coming very close at times, explicitly stated.

The first direct statements of doubt about Shakespeare's authorship were made in the 18th century, when unorthodox views of Shakespeare were expressed in three allegorical stories. In An Essay Against Too Much Reading (1728) by a 'Captain' Golding, Shakespeare is described as merely a collaborator who "in all probability cou'd not write English". In The Life and Adventures of Common Sense (1769) by Herbert Lawrence, Shakespeare is portrayed as a "shifty theatrical character ... and incorrigible thief". In The Story of the Learned Pig (1786) by an anonymous author described as "an officer of the Royal Navy", Shakespeare is merely a front for the real author, a chap called Pimping Billy.

Around this time, James Wilmot
James Wilmot

James Wilmot was a Warwickshire clergyman and scholar who was the earliest known proponent of the theory that Francis Bacon was the true author of Shakespeare's works....
, a Warwickshire clergyman and scholar, was researching a biography on Shakespeare. He traveled extensively around Stratford, visiting the libraries of country houses within a radius of fifty miles looking for records or correspondence connected with Shakespeare or books that had been owned by him. By 1781, Wilmot had become so appalled at the lack of evidence for Shakespeare that he concluded he could not be the author of the works. Wilmot was familiar with the writings of Francis Bacon and formed the opinion that he was more likely the real author of the Shakespearean canon. He confided this to one James Cowell. Cowell disclosed it in a paper read to the Ipswich Philosophical Society in 1805 (Cowell's paper was only rediscovered in 1932).

These reports were soon forgotten . However, Bacon would emerge again in the 19th century as the most popular alternative candidate when, at the height of bardolatry
Bardolatry

Bardolatry is a term that refers to the excessive adulation of William Shakespeare, combining the words "bard" and "idolatry". Shakespeare has been known as "the Bard" since the nineteenth century....
, the "authorship question" was popularised. Many 19th century doubters, however, declared themselves agnostics and refused to endorse an alternative. The American populist poet Walt Whitman
Walt Whitman

Walter Whitman was an United States Poetry of the United States, essayist, journalism, and humanism. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and literary realism, incorporating both views in his works....
 gave voice to this skepticism when he told Horace Traubel, "I go with you fellows when you say no to Shaksper: that's about as far as I have got. As to Bacon, well, we'll see, we'll see." Starting in 1908, Sir George Greenwood engaged in a series of well-publicized debates with Shakespearean biographer Sir Sidney Lee and author J.M. Robertson. Throughout his numerous books on the authorship question, Greenwood contented himself to argue against the traditional attribution of the works and never supported the case for a particular alternative candidate. In 1922, he joined John Thomas Looney, the first to argue for the authorship of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford was an Elizabethan era courtier, playwright, poet, sportsman, patron of numerous writers, and sponsor of at least two acting companies, Oxford's Men and Oxford's Boys, and a company of musicians....
, in founding The Shakespeare Fellowship, an international organization dedicated to promoting discussion and debate on the authorship question.

The poet and playwright Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
 has also been a popular candidate during the 20th century. Many other candidates -- among them de Vere's son in law William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby
William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby was an English nobleman.He was a son of Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby and Lady Margaret Clifford. His mother was heiress presumptive of Elizabeth I of England from 1578 to her own death in 1596....
 -- have been suggested, but have failed to gather large followings.

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford


The most popular later-day candidate is Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. This theory was first proposed by J. Thomas Looney
J. Thomas Looney

This article is about the teacher. For the mobster, see John Patrick Looney.John Thomas Looney , pronounced "Loney", was the originator of a theory about the Shakespearean authorship question of Shakespeare's plays....
 in 1920, whose work persuaded Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud

Sigmund Freud , born Sigismund Schlomo Freud , was an Austrian psychiatrist who founded the psychoanalysis of psychology. Freud is best known for his theories of the unconscious mind and the defense mechanism of Psychological repression and for creating the clinical practice of psychoanalysis for curing psychopathology through dialogue...
, Orson Welles
Orson Welles

George Orson Welles , better known as Orson Welles, was an Academy Award-winning United States actor, director, writer and producer, who worked extensively in film, theatre, television, and radio....
, Marjorie Bowen, and many other early 20th-century intellectuals. The theory was brought to greater prominence by Charlton Ogburn's The Mysterious William Shakespeare (1984), after which Oxford rapidly became the favored alternative to the orthodox view of authorship. Advocates of Oxford are usually referred to as Oxfordians.

Oxfordians base their theory on what they consider to be multiple and striking similarities between Oxford's biography and numerous events in Shakespeare's plays. Oxfordians also point to the acclaim of Oxford's contemporaries regarding his talent as a poet and a playwright; his closeness to Queen Elizabeth I and Court life; underlined passages in his Bible that they assert correspond to quotations in Shakespeare's plays; parallel phraseology and similarity of thought between Shakespeare's work and Oxford's remaining letters and poetry; his extensive education and intelligence, and his record of travel throughout Italy, including the sites of many of the plays themselves.

Supporters of the orthodox view would dispute most if not all of these contentions. For them, the most compelling evidence against Oxford is that he died in 1604, whereas they contend that a number of plays by Shakespeare may have been written after that date. Oxfordians, and some conventional scholars, respond that orthodox scholars have long dated the plays to suit their own candidate, and assert that there is no conclusive evidence that the plays or poems were written past Oxford's death in 1604. For a dating of Shakespeare's plays according to the Oxfordian theory, see Chronology of Shakespeare's plays – Oxfordian
Chronology of Shakespeare's plays – Oxfordian

The precise Chronology of Shakespeare's plays as they were first written is impossible to determine, as there is no authoritative record, and many of the plays were performed many years before they were published....
.

Some mainstream scholars also consider Oxford's published poems to bear no stylistic resemblance to the works of Shakespeare. Oxfordians counter that argument by pointing out that the published Oxford poems are those of a very young man, and as such are juvenilia
Juvenilia

Juvenilia is a term applied to literary, musical or artistic works produced by an author during his or her youth.The term was first recorded in 1622 in George Wither's poetry collection Ivvenilia....
. They support this argument by citing parallels between Oxford's poetry and Shakespeare's early play, Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet

Romeo and Juliet is a Shakespearean tragedy written early in the career of playwright William Shakespeare about two young "Star-crossed" whose untimely deaths ultimately unite their feuding families....
.

Sir Francis Bacon

In 1856, William Henry Smith
William Henry Smith (politician)

William Henry Smith was an English people bookseller and newsagent of the family firm W H Smith, who expanded the firm and introduced the practice of selling books and newspapers at railway stations....
 put forth the claim that the author of Shakespeare's plays was Sir Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban King's Counsel , son of Nicholas Bacon by his second wife Anne Bacon, was an English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist, and author....
, a major scientist, philosopher, courtier, diplomat, essayist, historian and successful politician, who served as Solicitor General
Solicitor General

The term Solicitor General or Solicitor-General may refer to:* Solicitor-General of Australia, the second law officer of state and public servant representing the Attorney-General in court proceedings...
 (1607), Attorney General
Attorney General

In most common law jurisdictions, the attorney general, or attorney-general, is the main legal advisor to the government, and in some jurisdictions he or she may in addition have executive responsibility for law enforcement or responsibility for public prosecutions....
 (1613) and Lord Chancellor
Lord Chancellor

The Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, or Lord Chancellor, is a senior and important functionary in the government of the United Kingdom....
 (1618).

Smith was supported by Delia Bacon
Delia Bacon

Delia Bacon, a sister of Leonard Bacon, , is best known for her work on Shakespearean authorship.She was born in Tallmadge, Ohio and became a teacher in schools in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York, and then, until about 1852, conducted, in various Eastern United States cities, classes for women in history and literature by methods she...
 in her book (1857), in which she maintains that Shakespeare's work was in fact written by a a group of writers, including Francis Bacon, Sir Walter Raleigh
Walter Raleigh

Sir Walter Raleigh or Ralegh, was a famed English writer, poet, soldier, courtier and explorer.Raleigh was born to a Protestant family in Devon, the son of Walter Raleigh and Catherine Champernowne....
 and Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser

Edmund Spenser was an important England poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem celebrating, through fantastical allegory, the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I....
, who collaborated for the purpose of inculcating a philosophic system, for which they felt that they themselves could not afford to assume the responsibility. She professed to discover this system beneath the superficial text of the plays. Constance Mary Fearon Pott (1833–1915) adopted a modified form of this view, founding the Francis Bacon Society in 1885, and publishing her Bacon-centered theory in Francis Bacon and his secret society (1891).

Since Bacon commented that play-acting was used by the ancients "as a means of educating men's minds to virtue," a non-esoteric view is that Bacon acted alone and to serve his Great Instauration project he left his moral philosophy to posterity in the Shakespeare plays (e.g. the nature of good government exemplified by Prince Hal in Henry IV, Part 2). Having outlined both a scientific and moral philosophy in his Advancement of Learning (1605) only Bacon's scientific philosophy was known to have been published during his lifetime (Novum Organum 1620).

Supporters of Bacon draw attention to similarities between specific phrases from the plays and those written down by Bacon in his wastebook, the Promus, which was unknown to the public for a period of more than 200 years after it was written. A great number of these entries are reproduced in the Shakespeare plays often preceding publication and the performance dates of those plays. Bacon confesses in a letter to being a "concealed poet" and was on the governing council of the Virginia Company when William Strachey's letter from the Virginia colony arrived in England which, according to many scholars, was used to write The Tempest. There is also evidence that it was not Shakspere's company who gave the first known performance of The Comedy of Errors on Innocent's Day 1594-5 but the Gray's Inn Players, and there is further evidence that this was a company that Bacon controlled (see Baconian theory
Baconian theory

The Baconian theory of Shakespearean authorship holds that Sir Francis Bacon wrote the Play conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare....
 article).

Despite the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley's testimony that "Lord Bacon was a poet", the main argument usually levelled against Bacon's candidacy is that what little poetry has been attributed to Bacon is abrupt and stilted unlike Shakespeare's.

Christopher Marlowe

Christopher Marlowe
A case for the gifted young playwright and poet Christopher Marlowe
Christopher Marlowe

Christopher "Kit" Marlowe was an Kingdom of England Playwright, poet and translator of the Elizabethan era. The foremost English Renaissance theatre tragedy next to William Shakespeare, he is known for his blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own mysterious and untimely death....
 was made as early as 1895, but the creator of the most detailed theory of Marlowe's authorship was Calvin Hoffman
Calvin Hoffman

Calvin Hoffman, born Leo Hochman , was an American theater press agent and writer who popularized the notion that playwright Christopher Marlowe was the actual author of the works attributed to William Shakespeare....
, an American journalist whose book on the subject, The Murder of the Man who was Shakespeare, was published in 1955.

Marlowe created a stir with his literary output while attending Cambridge as a scholarship student. The young writer, whose translations of Ovid
Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso was a Roman Empire poet known as Ovid to the English language-speaking world, who wrote about love, seduction, and Roman mythology transformation....
 were ordered publicly burned by the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, was the first to translate Ovid's Amores into English. His translation and adaptation into blank verse of Lucan's Pharsalia is one of the earliest English verses written in unrhymed iambic pentameter and has influenced poets from Milton to Wordsworth. While still a university student, Marlowe's play Doctor Faustus was produced in London and shortly after he earned his M.A.
Master of Arts

The Magister Artium, Magister in Artibus, or Master of Arts degree is an academic degree of medieval origin which has later acquired different characteristics in different educational systems....
 and left Cambridge his play Tamburlaine the Great appeared on the London stage for 200 performances.

Marlowe was said to have been murdered in 1593 by a group of spies, including Ingram Frizer
Ingram Frizer

Ingram Frizer was an England figure of the late 16th century and early 17th century who is perhaps best known for killing playwright Christopher Marlowe in the home of Eleanor Bull on 30 May 1593....
, a servant of Thomas Walsingham
Thomas Walsingham

Thomas Walsingham was an England chronicler....
, Marlowe's patron. A theory has developed that Marlowe, who may well have been facing an impending death penalty for heresy, was saved by the faking of his death (with the aid of people in high places such as Thomas Walsingham and Marlowe's possible employer, Lord Burghley
William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley

William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley , Knight_of_the_Garter was an England statesman, the chief advisor and good friend of Elizabeth I of England for most of her reign , twice Secretary of State and Lord High Treasurer from 1572....
) and that he subsequently wrote the works credited to William Shakespeare.

Supporters of Marlovian theory also point to stylometric tests and studies of parallel phraseology, which seem to prove how "both" authors used similar vocabulary and a similar style..

Mainstream scholars find the argument for Marlowe's faked death unconvincing. They also find the writing of Marlowe and Shakespeare very different, and attribute any similarities to the popularity and influence of Marlowe's work on subsequent dramatists such as Shakespeare.

Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke

In 2007, The Master of Shakespeare by AWL Saunders proposed a ‘new’ candidate; Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke (1554-1628). Greville was an aristocrat, courtier, statesman, sailor, soldier, spymaster, literary patron, dramatist, historian and poet. He was educated at Shrewsbury School
Shrewsbury School

Shrewsbury School is a Independent School located in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, Shropshire, England. It is one of the original nine English public schools as defined by the Public Schools Act 1868, and is now a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference....
, where he met his lifelong friend Sir Philip Sidney
Philip Sidney

Sir Philip Sidney became one of the Elizabethan era most prominent figures. Famous in his day in England as a poet, courtier and soldier, he remains known as the author of Astrophel and Stella , The Defence of Poetry , and The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia ....
, and Jesus College, Cambridge
Jesus College, Cambridge

Jesus College in the University of Cambridge was founded in 1496 on the site of a Benedictine nunnery by John Alcock , then Bishop of Ely. It has been traditionally believed that the nunnery was turned into a college because the nunnery had gained a reputation for promiscuity....
. On his return to England from traveling in Europe, he worked for Sir Francis Walsingham
Francis Walsingham

Sir Francis Walsingham is usually remembered as the "spymaster" of Queen regnant Elizabeth I of England. Walsingham is frequently cited as one of the earliest practitioners of modern intelligence both for espionage and for domestic security....
 as an ‘intelligencer’ and again traveled extensively all over Europe. He became a great favorite of Elizabeth I of England
Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I was List of English monarchs and Queen of Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death. Sometimes called The Virgin Queen, Gloriana, or Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth was the fifth and last monarch of the House of Tudor....
, was Clerk to the Council of Wales and the Marches, Treasurer of the Navy
Treasurer of the Navy

The Treasurer of the Navy was an office in the Great Britain government between the mid-16th and early 19th century. The office-holder was responsible for the financial maintenance of the Royal Navy....
 and from 1614-1621 Chancellor of the Exchequer
Chancellor of the Exchequer

The Chancellor of the Exchequer is the title held by the British Cabinet of the United Kingdom Minister who is responsible for all economic and financial matters....
. After the death of his father in 1606, Fulke became Recorder
Recorder (legal office)

The term Recorder refers to the highest legal officer of a particular area.Formerly, a Recorder was a certain magistrate or judge having criminal and civil jurisdiction in a city or borough....
 of Stratford-upon-Avon and he held that post until his own death in 1628.

Greville was famous for his friendship with, and biography of Sir Philip Sidney, and his long tempestuous love affair with Philip's sister; Mary Sidney
Mary Sidney

Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke n?e Mary Sidney , was one of the first England women to achieve a major reputation for her literary works, translations and literary patronage....
, Countess of Pembroke. Greville is also regarded as a generous patron of many of the leading writers of the day including Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Nashe
Thomas Nashe

Thomas Nashe was an England Elizabethan pamphleteer, poet and satirist. He was the son of the minister of religion William Nashe and his wife Margaret ....
, Samuel Daniel
Samuel Daniel

Samuel Daniel was an England English poetry and History of England....
 and three Poets Laureate; Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser

Edmund Spenser was an important England poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem celebrating, through fantastical allegory, the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I....
, Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson

Benjamin Jonson was an England English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satire plays, particularly Volpone, The Alchemist , and Bartholomew Fair, which are considered his best, and his Lyric poetry poems....
 and William Davenant
William Davenant

Sir William Davenant , also spelled D'Avenant, was an England poet and playwright. Along with Thomas Killigrew, Davenant was one of the rare figures in English Renaissance theatre whose career spanned both the Literature in English#Caroline and Cromwellian literature and Literature in English#Restoration literature eras, and who was a...
. Greville was a member of all the leading literary circles of the day: The Areopagus
Areopagus (poetry)

The Areopagus is a speculated or hinted poetry movement centered around Edmund Spenser and Gabriel Harvey. The label is used as a critical shorthand for a group of poets that included Spenser, Harvey, Edward Dyer and Sir Philip Sidney....
, the Wilton House
Wilton House

Wilton House is an English country house situated at Wilton, Wiltshire near Salisbury in Wiltshire. It has been the country seat of the Earl of Pembroke for over 400 years....
 Circle
, The Southampton Circle, the University Wits
University Wits

University Wits were a group of late 16th century english playwrights who were educated at the universities . Prominent members of this group were Christopher Marlowe,John Lyly,Thomas Lodge,George Peele, Robert Greene and Thomas Nashe....
 (associated) and The School of Night
The School of Night

The School of Night is a modern name for a cabal of men centered on Sir Walter Raleigh that was once referred to in 1592 as the "School of Atheism." The cabal supposedly included poets and scientists such as Christopher Marlowe, George Chapman, Thomas Harriot, Richard Baines , and one of Marlowe's killers, Ingram Frizer....
; his claim to have been the ‘Master of Shakespeare’ and the author of a ‘lost’ play called Antony and Cleopatra. When compared to the ‘Stratfordian’ profiles of William Shakespeare from the First Folio (1623), it is proposed that Greville matches each ‘profile’. Greville of Stratford had a house in Henley Street, he was the friend and patron of Ben Jonson. He had 'small Latin and less Greek' and had built a ‘monument without a tomb’ (in Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick
Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick

The Collegiate Church of St Mary is the Church of England parish church in the town of Warwick, England. It lies in the centre of the town just east of the market place....
). Greville lived in Warwick Castle
Warwick Castle

Warwick Castle is a medieval castle in Warwick, the county town of Warwickshire, England. It sits on a cliff overlooking a bend in the River Avon, Warwickshire....
 on the River Avon and his family's crest was a swan. Greville's profiles are also a match with the Stratfordian ‘life’ of the author of the plays and poems. He was the close friend and protégé of the Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton
Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton

Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton , one of William Shakespeare's patrons, was the second son of Henry Wriothesley, 2nd Earl of Southampton, and his wife Mary Browne, Countess of Southampton, daughter of the Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu....
. He was the enemy of Sir Thomas Lucy
Thomas Lucy

Sir Thomas Lucy was a magistrate and an Protestantism living in Charlecote near Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire who, under Elizabeth I, ] Catholic families in the area], including William Shakespeare's maternal relatives, the Mary Shakespeare and the famous Jesuit, Edmund Campion....
 of Charlecote (Judge Shallow). He frequented Mistress Quyney's Stratford tavern (and the Bear and the Swan). He frequented the Mermaid Tavern
Mermaid Tavern

The Mermaid Tavern was a tavern on Cheapside in London during the Elizabethan era, located east of St. Paul's Cathedral on the corner of Friday Street and Bread Street....
. He frequented Wilton House, Essex House
Essex House (London)

Essex House was a house in London, built around 1575 for Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester and originally called Leicester House.The property occupied the site where the Outer Temple, part of the London headquarters of the Knights Templar, had previously stood , and was immediately adjacent to the Middle Temple, then one of the four principa...
 and Titchfield
Titchfield

Titchfield is a village in southern Hampshire, by the River Meon. The village has a history stetching back to the 6th century. During the medieval period, the village operated a small port and market....
. He was the literary collaborator (and lover) of Mary Herbert. He was the close friend and literary collaborator of Samuel Daniel
Samuel Daniel

Samuel Daniel was an England English poetry and History of England....
. He was the literary ‘godfather’ of William Davenant
William Davenant

Sir William Davenant , also spelled D'Avenant, was an England poet and playwright. Along with Thomas Killigrew, Davenant was one of the rare figures in English Renaissance theatre whose career spanned both the Literature in English#Caroline and Cromwellian literature and Literature in English#Restoration literature eras, and who was a...
. He was the friend and literary collaborator of John Florio. He distributed propaganda for his friend Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex

Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex , a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I of England, is the best-known of the many holders of the title "Earl of Essex." He was a military hero and royal favourite, but following a poor campaign against Irish rebels during the Nine Years War in 1599, he defied the Queen and was executed for treason....
. He wrote poetry in completion with Sidney, Spenser and Daniel (Sonnets). He was the friend and literary collaborator of Thomas Nashe
Thomas Nashe

Thomas Nashe was an England Elizabethan pamphleteer, poet and satirist. He was the son of the minister of religion William Nashe and his wife Margaret ....
. He was the friend (and spymaster) of Marlowe. He was the close friend (and cousin) of the Earl of Rutland. He was the close friend and collaborator of Francis Bacon. He had literary works stolen from Kings Place, Hackney and piratically published in 1609.

Group Theory

In the 1960s, the most popular general theory was that Shakespeare's plays and poems were the work of a group rather than one individual. A group consisting of De Vere, Bacon, William Stanley, Mary Sidney, and others, has been put forward, for example. This theory has been often noted, most recently by renowned actor Derek Jacobi
Derek Jacobi

Sir Derek George Jacobi Order of the British Empire is an England actor and film director. Like Laurence Olivier, he bears the distinction of holding two knighthoods, Danish and British....
, who told the British press "I subscribe to the group theory. I don't think anybody could do it on their own. I think the leading light was probably de Vere, as I agree that an author writes about his own experiences, his own life and personalities."

Other candidates

In a March 2007 lecture at the Smithsonian Institution, John Hudson proposed a new authorship candidate, the Jewish poet Aemelia (Emilia) Bassano Lanier
Emilia Lanier

Emilia Lanier, also spelled Aemilia Lanyer, was the first Englishwoman to assert herself as a professional poet through her single volume of poems, Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum ....
 (1569-1645), the first woman in England to publish a book of poetry Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611). Born in London, into a family of Marrano
Marrano

Marranos or secret Jews were Sephardi who were forced to adopt Christianity under threat of expulsion but who continued to practice Judaism secretly, thus preserving their Jewish identity....
 Jewish musicians who came from Venice
Venice

Venice is a city in northern Italy, the capital city of the Italian regions Veneto, a population of 271,251 . Together with Padua, Italy, the city is included in the Padua-Venice Metropolitan Area ....
 and were of Moorish ancestry, Hudson posited that Lanier fit many aspects of the biographical profile described in the plays. A.L Rowse proposed Lanier as the 'dark lady' of the Sonnets. She was also the longterm mistress of Lord Hunsdon, the man in charge of the English theatre and the patron of the Lord Chamberlain's Men
Lord Chamberlain's Men

The Lord Chamberlain's Men was a playing company that William Shakespeare worked at as an actor and playwright for most of his career. Formed at the end of a period of flux in the theatrical world of London, it had become, by 1603, one of the two leading companies of the city and was subsequently patronized by James I of England....
. Hudson proposed that, as a hidden Jew, this explained the use of Hebrew and Jewish religious allegories in the plays. Also, unlike Mr Shakespeare, she died poor, depised, lacking honor and proud titles, as described in Sonnets numbers 37,29,81, 111 and 25.

In The Truth Will Out, published in 2005, Brenda James, a part-time lecturer at the University of Portsmouth
University of Portsmouth

The University of Portsmouth is a university in Portsmouth, England.The University is the 5th most popular destination in the UK for EU students and the 10th most popular destination for overseas students....
, and Professor William Rubinstein, professor of history at Aberystwyth University, argue that Henry Neville, a contemporary Elizabethan English diplomat and distant relative of Shakespeare, is possibly the true author of the plays. Neville's career placed him in the locations of some of the plays at approximately the dates of their authorship.

Other candidates proposed include Mary Sidney
Mary Sidney

Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke n?e Mary Sidney , was one of the first England women to achieve a major reputation for her literary works, translations and literary patronage....
; William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby
William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby was an English nobleman.He was a son of Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby and Lady Margaret Clifford. His mother was heiress presumptive of Elizabeth I of England from 1578 to her own death in 1596....
 ; Sir Edward Dyer
Edward Dyer

Sir Edward Dyer was an England courtier and poet....
; or Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland
Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland

Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland was the son of John Manners, 4th Earl of Rutland.He married Elizabeth Sidney , on 5 March 1599.He died in 1612, aged 35 and his titles passed to his brother, Francis Manners, 6th Earl of Rutland....
 (sometimes with his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Philip Sidney
Philip Sidney

Sir Philip Sidney became one of the Elizabethan era most prominent figures. Famous in his day in England as a poet, courtier and soldier, he remains known as the author of Astrophel and Stella , The Defence of Poetry , and The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia ....
, and her aunt Mary Sidney
Mary Sidney

Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke n?e Mary Sidney , was one of the first England women to achieve a major reputation for her literary works, translations and literary patronage....
, Countess of Pembroke, as co-authors). At least fifty others have also been proposed, including the Irish rebel, William Nugent, Catholic martyr St Edmund Campion
Edmund Campion

Saint Edmund Campion, S.J. was an England Jesuit priest and martyr....
; and Queen Elizabeth
Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I was List of English monarchs and Queen of Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death. Sometimes called The Virgin Queen, Gloriana, or Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth was the fifth and last monarch of the House of Tudor....
 (based on a supposed resemblance between a portrait of the Queen and the engraving of Shakespeare that appears in the First Folio). Malcolm X
Malcolm X

Malcolm X , also known as Hajji Malik El-Shabazz , was an African American Muslim minister, public speaker, and human rights activist. To his admirers, he was a courageous advocate for the rights of African Americans, a man who indicted white America in the harshest terms for its crimes against black Americans....
 argued that Shakespeare was actually King James I
James I of England

James VI and I was List of monarchs of Scotland as James VI, and List of English monarchs and King of Ireland as James I. He ruled in Kingdom of Scotland as James VI from 24 July 1567, when he was only one year old, succeeding his mother Mary I of Scotland....
.

Francis Carr proposed that Francis Bacon was Shakespeare and the author of Don Quixote. A 2007 film called Miguel and William, written and directed by Inés París, explores the parallels and alleged collaboration between Cervantes
Cervantes

Cervantes refers to:...
 and Shakespeare. This romantic comedy shows Shakespeare spending the years 1586 to 1592 in Madrid
Madrid

Madrid is the Capital and largest city of Spain. It is the Largest cities of the European Union by population within city limits in the European Union after Greater London and Berlin, and its Madrid metropolitan area is the Largest urban areas of the European Union in the European Union after Paris aire urbaine, Greater London Urban Area, a...
 where he enjoys a great friendship with Cervantes.

See also


Further reading


Mainstream/Neutral/Questioning

  • Bertram Fields
    Bertram Fields

    Bertram Fields is a Harvard-trained American lawyer famous for his work in the field of entertainment law; he has represented many of the leading studios, as well as individual celebrities including The Beatles, Warren Beatty, James Cameron, Mike Nichols, Joel Silver, Tom Cruise, Dustin Hoffman, and John Travolta....
    , Players: The Mysterious Identity of William Shakespeare (2005)
  • H. N. Gibson, The Shakespeare Claimants (London, 1962). (An overview written from an orthodox perspective).
  • Greenwood, George The Shakespeare Problem Restated. (London: John Lane, 1908).
  • Shakespeare's Law and Latin. (London: Watts & Co., 1916).
  • Is There a Shakespeare Problem? (London: John Lane, 1916).
  • Shakespeare's Law. (London: Cecil Palmer, 1920).
  • E.A.J. Honigman: The Lost Years, 1985.
  • John Michell, Who Wrote Shakespeare? (London: Thames and Hudson, 1999). ISBN 0-500-28113-0. (An overview from a neutral perspective).
  • Irvin Leigh Matus
    Irvin Leigh Matus

    Irvin Leigh Matus, born July 25, 1941, in Brooklyn, New York, is an author and library researcher based in Washington, D.C., United StatesAlthough he has never graduated from College, Mr....
    , Shakspeare, in Fact (London: Continuum, 1999). ISBN 0-8264-0928-8. (Orthodox response to the Oxford theory).
  • Ian Wilson: Shakespeare - The Evidence, 1993.
  • Scott McCrea: "The Case for Shakespeare", (Westport CT: Praeger, 2005). ISBN 0-275-98527-X.
  • Bob Grumman: "Shakespeare & the Rigidniks", (Port Charlotte FL: The Runaway Spoon Press, 2006). ISBN 1-57141-072-4.


Oxfordian

  • Mark Anderson, "Shakespeare" By Another Name: The Life of Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, The Man Who Was Shakespeare (2005).
  • Al Austin and Judy Woodruff, The Shakespeare Mystery, 1989 Frontline documentary. . (Documentary film about the Oxford case.)
  • Fowler, William Plumer Shakespeare Revealed in Oxford's Letters. (Portsmouth, New Hampshire: 1986).
  • Hope, Warren and Kim Holston The Shakespeare Controversy: An Analysis of the Claimants to Authorship, and their Champions and Detractors. (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland and Co., 1992).
  • J. Thomas Looney, Shakespeare Identified in Edward de Vere, Seventeenth Earl of Oxford. (London: Cecil Palmer, 1920). . (The first book to promote the Oxford theory.)
  • Malim, Richard (Ed.) Great Oxford: Essays on the Life and Work of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, 1550-16-4. (London: Parapress, 2004).
  • Charlton Ogburn Jr., The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Man Behind the Mask. (New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1984). (Influential book that criticises orthodox scholarship and promotes the Oxford theory).
  • Diana Price, Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography: New Evidence of An Authorship Problem (Westport, Ct: Greenwood, 2001). . (Introduction to the evidentiary problems of the orthodox tradition).
  • Sobran, Joseph, Alias Shakespeare: Solving the Greatest Literary Mystery of All Time (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1997).
  • Stritmatter, Roger The Marginalia of Edward de Vere's Geneva Bible: Providential Discovery, Literary Reasoning, and Historical Consequence. 2001 University of Massachusetts PhD dissertation.
  • Ward, B.M. The Seventeenth Earl of Oxford (1550-1604) From Contemporary Documents (London: John Murray, 1928).
  • Whalen, Richard Shakespeare: Who Was He? The Oxford Challenge to the Bard of Avon. (Westport, Ct.: Praeger, 1994).


Baconian

  • N. B. Cockburn, The Bacon Shakespeare Question - the Baconian theory made sane, 740 pages, private publication, 1998
  • Peter Dawkins: The Shakespeare Enigma, Polair Publ., London 2004, ISBN 0-9545389-4-3 (engl.)
  • Amelie Deventer von Kunow, (1924)
  • Penn Leary, , (n.d.)
  • Fellows, Virginia M., (2006) ISBN-13: 978-1-932890-02-5.


Marlovian

  • Daryl Pinksen, Marlowe's Ghost, 2008
  • William Urry, "Christopher Marlowe and Canterbury".
  • Mark Eccles, "Christopher Marlowe in London".
  • Wilbur Gleason Zeigler, "It Was Marlowe".
  • A.D. Wraight and Peter Farey, "Shakespeare, New Evidence".
  • A.D. Wraight, "the Story the Sonnets Tell".
  • David Rhys William, "Shakespeare, Thy Name is Marlowe".
  • John Edwin Bakeless, "The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe".


Rutlandian

  • Karl Bleibtreu: Der Wahre Shakespeare, Munich 1907, G. Mueller
  • Lewis Frederick Bostelmann: Rutland, New York 1911, Rutland publishing company
  • Celestin Demblon: Lord Rutland est Shakespeare, Paris 1912, Charles Carrington
  • Pierre S. Porohovshikov (Porokhovshchikov): Shakespeare Unmasked, New York 1940, Savoy book publishers
  • Ilya Gililov: The Shakespeare Game: The Mystery of the Great Phoenix, New York : Algora Pub., c2003., ISBN 0-87586-182-2, 0875861814 (pbk.)
  • Brian Dutton: Let Shakspere Die: Long Live the Merry Madcap Lord Roger Manner, 5th Earl of Rutland the Real "Shakespeare", c.2007, RoseDog Books - most recent study of the Rutland theory.


Academic authorship debates

  • Jonathan Hope, The Authorship of Shakespeare's Plays: A Socio-Linguistic Study (Cambridge University Press, 1994). (Concerned with the 'academic authorship debate' surrounding Shakespeare's collaborations and apocrypha, not with the false identity theories).
  • Robert L. Birch, MSLS, discusses the nature of academic debate of historical issues, not their effect on library practice.


External links


General Non-Stratfordian

  • , home of the "Declaration of Reasonable Doubt About the Identify of William Shakespeare" -- a concise, definitive explanation of the reasons to doubt the case for the Stratford man. Doubters can read, and sign, the Declaration online.
  • , survey of all the authorship candidates, a site patronised by the actor Mark Rylance and Dr William Leahy of Brunel University, UK
  • , an examination of the authorship debate, overview of the major and minor candidates for authorship of the canon, literary collaboration and the group theory, bibliography and forum.


Mainstream

  • (includes several articles defending the orthodox position)
    • , from Atlantic Monthly, 1991
  • Shakespeare As Autodidact
  • Brief overview of the rise of anti-Stratfordianism.
  • Brief overview.
  • - created by a biographer of Oxford who does not believe he wrote Shakespeare


Oxfordian

  • current research on the Oxfordian theory
  • . Archive of materials on the authorship question, especially from an Oxfordian perspective.
  • , challenging the methods and conclusions of Stratfordian David Kathman
  • (Website for a PBS documentary; includes several articles)
  • (collection of Joseph Sobran's Oxfordian columns. Sobran's Alias Shakespeare is mentioned here, also.)
  • A yearly academic conference at Concordia University in Portland, Oregon
    Concordia University (Portland, Oregon)

    Concordia University is a Christian university affiliated with the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod and the Concordia University System located in northeast Portland, Oregon....
     on Oxfordian theory


Baconian

  • N. Cockburn, The Bacon–Shakespeare Question, private publication 1998
  • - the first official champions of the Baconian cause. Since 1886 the Francis Bacon Society has engaged with the authorship question and publishes the journal Baconiana .


Marlovian

  • (website for a TV documentary)
  • (collection of articles, documents and links)
  • (a sceptical review of a Marlovian book)
  • (a Marlovian website/blog started in May 2008)


Other candidates

  • Shakespeare was in fact a disguised Cervantes
  • Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. Website for the book The Master of Shakespeare, 2007
  • I Am Shakespeare Webcam Daytime Chat-Room Show by Mark Rylance. A new production by former Artistic Director of The Globe Theatre on the Shakespeare authorship debate.
  • - Website for a book by Robin P. Williams
    Robin Williams (writer)

    Robin Patricia Williams is an United States educator and writer of computer-related books. She is particularly known for her Style guide The Mac is Not a Typewriter and The Non-Designer's Design Book, as well as numerous manuals for various Mac OS operating systems and applications, including The Little Mac Book....
     on Mary Sidney's authorship
  • (original Russian text)
  • - Website for a book on Sir Henry Neville's authorship
  • - Animated decryption of the Dedication to the Sonnets revealing Henry Neville's name
  • (promotes the Earl of Derby)