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Another candidate for the true bard, ], was revealed in 1943 by writer ] in his ''Will Shakspere and the Dyer's hand''.<ref>{{Harvnb|Brooks|1943}}.</ref> Six years earlier Brooks had eliminated Shakespeare as the playwright by inventing the profession of Elizabethan "play broker" and arguing that brokering the plays was his true role in the deception, a view that was later adapted by Oxfordians.<ref>{{Harvnb|Wadsworth|1958|pp=135, 139–42.}}</ref> Another candidate for the true bard, ], was revealed in 1943 by writer ] in his ''Will Shakspere and the Dyer's hand''.<ref>{{Harvnb|Brooks|1943}}.</ref> Six years earlier Brooks had eliminated Shakespeare as the playwright by inventing the profession of Elizabethan "play broker" and arguing that brokering the plays was his true role in the deception, a view that was later adapted by Oxfordians.<ref>{{Harvnb|Wadsworth|1958|pp=135, 139–42.}}</ref>

Shakespeare, Oxford, and Bacon spoke to Percy Allen from the spirit world in 1947 through the use of the ] Hester Dowden in his ''Talks with Elizabethans Revealing the Mystery of "William Shakespeare"'' (1947), with the verdict that Oxford was the main writer with the other two merely editing lightly.<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2010|pp=224–8 (197–200}}.</ref> Allen had previously revealed that Oxford and Elizabeth were lovers and that the actor Shakespeare was their son in his ''Anne Cecil, Elizabeth, and Oxford'' (1934).<ref>{{Harvnb|Hackett|2009|pp=165–6.}}</ref>


Oxfordism and anti-Stratfordism declined in popularity and visibility during World War II and afterward, as academics attacked their methodology as unscholarly and their conclusions as ridiculous.<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2010|pp=228–30 (200–2).}}</ref> Copious archival research had failed to turn up the expected confirmation of Oxford or anyone else as the true author, and publishers lost interest in books advancing the same theories based on alleged circumstantial evidence. To bridge this evidentiary gap, Oxfordians joined the Baconians in finding myriad hidden clues and allusions in the Shakespeare canon placed there by Oxford to tip off future researchers.<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2010|pp=220–1 (194).}}</ref> Oxfordism and anti-Stratfordism declined in popularity and visibility during World War II and afterward, as academics attacked their methodology as unscholarly and their conclusions as ridiculous.<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2010|pp=228–30 (200–2).}}</ref> Copious archival research had failed to turn up the expected confirmation of Oxford or anyone else as the true author, and publishers lost interest in books advancing the same theories based on alleged circumstantial evidence. To bridge this evidentiary gap, Oxfordians joined the Baconians in finding myriad hidden clues and allusions in the Shakespeare canon placed there by Oxford to tip off future researchers.<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2010|pp=220–1 (194).}}</ref>

Revision as of 16:17, 5 January 2011

Shakespeare surrounded by (clockwise from top left): Oxford, Bacon, Derby and Marlowe, all of whom have been proposed as the true author.

The Shakespeare authorship question is the argument that someone other than William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon wrote the works traditionally attributed to him, and that the historical Shakespeare was merely a front to shield the identity of the real author or authors, who for reasons such as social rank, state security or gender could not safely take public credit. Although the idea has attracted much public interest, all but a few Shakespeare scholars and literary historians consider it a fringe belief with no hard evidence, and for the most part disregard it except to rebut or disparage the claims.

Scholars contend that the controversy has its origins in Bardolatry, the adulation of Shakespeare in the 18th century as the greatest writer of all time. To 19th-century Romantics, who believed that literature was essentially a medium for self-revelation, Shakespeare's eminence seemed incongruous with his humble origins and obscure life, arousing suspicion that the Shakespeare attribution might be a deception. In the intervening years the controversy has spawned a vast body of literature, and more than fifty authorship candidates have been proposed, including Francis Bacon, the Earl of Oxford, Christopher Marlowe, Mary Sidney, the Earl of Derby and the Earl of Rutland. Proponents believe that their candidate is the more plausible author in terms of education, life experience and social status, arguing that William Shakespeare of Stratford lacked the education, aristocratic sensibility or familiarity with the royal court they say is apparent in the works.

Those Shakespeare scholars who have responded to such claims hold that biographical interpretations of literature are unreliable in attributing authorship, and that the convergence of documentary evidence for Shakespeare's authorship—title pages, testimony by other contemporary poets and historians, and official records—is the same as that for any other authorial attribution of the time. No such supporting evidence exists for any other candidate, and Shakespeare's authorship was not questioned during his lifetime or for centuries after his death.

Despite the scholastic consensus, a relatively small but highly visible and diverse assortment of supporters, including some prominent public figures, have questioned the traditional authorship attribution. They campaign through publications, organizations, online discussion groups, and conferences to gain public acceptance of the authorship question as a legitimate field of academic inquiry and to promote one or another of the various authorship candidates.

Overview

Note: In compliance with the terminology used discussing the Shakespeare authorship question, as used in this article the term "Stratfordian" refers to the position that William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon was the primary author of the plays and poems traditionally attributed to him, while "anti-Stratfordian" refers to those who believe that some other author wrote the works.

Anti-Stratfordian thesis and argument

The Shakespeare canon exhibits such breadth of learning, profound wisdom, and intimate knowledge of the Elizabethan and Jacobean court and politics, anti-Stratfordians say, that no one but a highly educated nobleman or court insider could have written them. The historical documentary remains of William Shakespeare of Stratford (excepting literary records and commentary) consist of mundane personal records—vital records of his birth, marriage, and death, tax records, lawsuits to recover debts, and real estate transactions—and lack any documented record of education, all of which anti-Stratfordians say indicate a person very different from the author reflected in the works.

Anti-Stratfordian arguments share several characteristics. They all attempt to disqualify William Shakespeare as the author due to perceived inadequacies in his education or biography; they all offer supporting arguments for a more acceptable substitute candidate; and they all postulate some type of conspiracy to protect the author's true identity, a conspiracy that also explains why no documentary evidence exists for any other candidate and why the historical records confirm Shakespeare's authorship.

Standards of evidence

At the core of the argument is the nature of acceptable evidence used to attribute works to their authors. Anti-Stratfordians rely on what they designate as circumstantial evidence: similarities between the characters and events portrayed in the works and the biography of their preferred candidates; literary parallels between the works and the known literary works of their candidate, and hidden codes and cryptographic allusions in Shakespeare's own works or texts written by contemporaries. By contrast, academic Shakespeareans and literary historians rely on the documentary evidence in the form of title page attributions, government records such as the Stationers' Register and the Accounts of the Revels Office, and contemporary testimony from poets, historians, and those players and playwrights who worked with him, as well as modern stylometric studies, all of which converge to confirm William Shakespeare's authorship. These criteria are the same as those used to credit works to other authors, and are accepted as the standard methodology for authorship attribution.

Arguments against Shakespeare's authorship

Very little is known about the personal lives of some of the most prolific and popular Elizabethan and Jacobean playwrights, such as Thomas Kyd, George Chapman, Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, Thomas Dekker, Philip Massinger, and John Webster. Much more is known about some of their colleagues, such as Ben Jonson, Christopher Marlowe, and John Marston, because of their educational records, close connections with the court or run-ins with the law. Almost uniquely in Shakespeare's case, however, the lacunae in his biography are adduced to draw inferences, which are then treated as circumstantial evidence against his fitness as an author. This method of arguing from an absence of evidence, common to almost all anti-Stratfordian theories, is known as argumentum ex silentio, or argument from silence. Further, this gap has been taken by some as evidence for a conspiracy to expunge all traces of Shakespeare from the historical record by a government intent on perpetuating the cover-up of the true author's identity. Thus, it has been argued that the records of the Stratford grammar school may have been destroyed to hide proof that Shakespeare did not attend it.

Shakespeare's background

John Shakespeare's house, believed to be Shakespeare's birthplace, in Stratford-upon-Avon.

Shakespeare was born, raised, married, and died in Stratford-upon-Avon, a market town about 100 miles northwest of London with around 1,500 residents at the time of his birth; he kept a household there during his London career. The town was a centre for the slaughter, marketing, and distribution of sheep and wool, as well as tanning, and produced an Archbishop of Canterbury and a Lord Mayor of London. Anti-Stratfordians often portray the town as a cultural backwater lacking the environment necessary to nurture a genius such as Shakespeare, and from the earliest days have often depicted him as greedy, stupid, and illiterate.

Shakespeare's father, John Shakespeare, was a glover and town official who married Mary Arden, one of the Ardens of Warwickshire, a family of the local gentry. Both signed their names with a mark, and no other examples of their writing are extant. This is often used as evidence that Shakespeare was raised in an illiterate home. There is also no evidence that Shakespeare's two daughters were literate, save for two signatures by Susanna that appear to be laboriously "drawn" instead of written with a practiced hand. His other daughter, Judith, signed a legal document with a mark.

Anti-Stratfordians say that Shakespeare's background is incompatible with the cultured author displayed in the Shakespeare canon, which they say exhibits an intimacy with court politics and culture, foreign countries, and aristocratic sports such as hunting, falconry, tennis and lawn-bowling. They say the works show little sympathy for upwardly mobile types such as John Shakespeare and his son, and that the author portrays individual commoners comically and as objects of ridicule and groups of commoners alarmingly when congregated in mobs.

Shakespeare's education and literacy

Shakespeare's signatures have often been cited as evidence for his illiteracy.

The lack of documentary evidence for Shakespeare's education is a staple of anti-Stratfordian arguments, as well as his literacy or lack of it. The King's New School in Stratford, a free school chartered in 1553, was about a quarter of a mile from Shakespeare's home. Grammar schools varied in quality during the Elizabethan era, but the curriculum was dictated by law throughout England, and the school would have provided an intensive education in Latin grammar, the classics, and rhetoric. The headmaster, Thomas Jenkins, and the instructors were Oxford graduates. No student rosters of the period survive, so no documentation exists of the attendance of Shakespeare or any other pupil, nor did anyone who taught or attend the school ever record that they were his teacher or classmate. This lack of documentation is taken as evidence by many anti-Stratfordians that Shakespeare had little or no education.

Anti-Stratfordians also find it incredible that William Shakespeare of Stratford, with no record of the education and cultured background displayed in the works bearing his name, could have acquired the extensive vocabulary found in the plays and poems, calculated to be between 17,500 and 29,000 words.

No letters or signed manuscripts written by Shakespeare survive. Shakespeare's six authenticated signatures are written in secretary hand, a style of handwriting that vanished by 1700, and he used breviographs to abbreviate his surname in three of them. The appearance of Shakespeare's surviving signatures, which anti-Stratfordians have characterised as "scratchy" and "an illiterate scrawl", is taken as evidence that he was illiterate or just barely literate.

Shakespeare's name as a pseudonym

Hyphenated "SHAKE-SPEARE" on the cover of the Sonnets (1609)

In his surviving signatures William Shakespeare did not spell his name as it appears on most Shakespeare title pages. His surname was also spelled inconsistently in both literary and non-literary documents, with the most variation observed in those that were written by hand. This is taken as evidence that he was not the same person who wrote the works attributed to William Shakespeare, and that the name was used as a pseudonym for the true author.

Shakespeare's surname was hyphenated as "Shake-speare" or "Shak-spear" on the title pages of 15 of the 48 individual quarto editions of Shakespeare's plays (16 were published with the author unnamed) and in two of the five editions of poetry published before the First Folio. Of those 15 title pages with Shakespeare's name hyphenated, 13 are on the title pages of just three plays, Richard II (Q2 1598, Q3 1598, Q4 1608, and Q5 1615), Richard III (Q2 1598, Q3 1602, Q4 1605, Q5 1612, and Q6 1622), and Henry IV, Part 1 (Q2 1599, Q3 1604, Q4 1608, and Q5 1613). The hyphen is also present in one cast list and in six literary allusions published between 1594 and 1623. Such use of a hyphen is taken by many anti-Stratfordians to indicate a pseudonym, with the reasoning that fictional descriptive names (such as "Master Shoe-tie" and "Sir Luckless Woo-all") were often hyphenated in plays, and pseudonyms such as "Tom Tell-truth" and the satirical variants of "Martin Marprelate" were also sometimes hyphenated.

Reasons for the use of "Shakespeare" as a pseudonym vary, usually depending upon the social status of the candidate. Aristocrats such as Derby and Oxford supposedly used pseudonyms because of a prevailing "stigma of print", a social convention that restricted their literary works to private and courtly audiences—as opposed to commercial endeavours—at the risk of social disgrace if violated. In the case of commoners, the reason was to avoid prosecution by the authorities—Bacon to avoid the consequences of advocating a more republican form of government; Marlowe to avoid imprisonment or worse after faking his death and fleeing the country.

Missing documentary evidence

Ben Jonson's "On Poet-Ape" from his collected works published in 1616 is taken by some anti-Stratfordians to refer to William Shakespeare

Anti-Stratfordians say that if the name on the plays and poems and literary references, "William Shakespeare", is assumed to be a pseudonym, then nothing in the documentary record left behind by William Shakespeare of Stratford explicitly names him as an author. The evidence instead supports a career as a profit-seeking businessman and real estate investor, and any prominence he might have had in the London theatrical world (aside from his role as a front-man for the true author) was as a result of his money-lending activities, trading in theatrical properties such as costumes and old plays, and possibly as an actor of no great talent. All evidence for his literary career was created as part of the plan to shield the true author's identity.

All anti-Stratfordian theories reject the surface meanings of Elizabethan and Jacobean references to Shakespeare as a playwright and instead look for ambiguities and encrypted meanings. They identify him with such literary characters as the laughingstock Sogliardo in Ben Jonson's Every Man Out of His Humour, the literary thief poet-ape in Jonson's poem of the same name, and the foolish poetry-lover Gullio in the university play The Return from Parnassus. Such characters are taken to indicate that the London theatrical world knew Shakespeare was a mere front for an unnamed author whose identity had to be shielded.

Shakespeare's death

Shakespeare died 23 April 1616 in his home town of Stratford, leaving a signed will disposing of his large estate. The language of the will is mundane and unpoetic, and makes no mention of personal papers or books or poems or the 18 plays that remained unpublished at the time of his death, nor to shares in the new Globe Theatre. The only theatrical reference in the will—monetary gifts to fellow actors to buy mourning rings—was interlined after the will had been written, casting suspicion on the authenticity of the bequest.

The effigy of Shakespeare's Stratford monument as it appears today (left) and as it was portrayed in 1656.

No records exist of Shakespeare being publicly mourned after he died, and no eulogies or poems commemorating the event were published until seven years later as part of the prefatory matter in the First Folio collection of his plays. Oxfordians believe that the true playwright had died by 1609, the year Shake-speare's Sonnets appeared with a dedication written by Thomas Thorpe referring to "our ever-living Poet", an epithet that commonly eulogised a deceased warrior or poet as immortal in memory through his deeds.

Shakespeare's funerary monument in Stratford consists of an effigy of him with pen in hand and an attached plaque praising his abilities as a writer. The earliest printed image of the effigy in Sir William Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire (1656), differs greatly from its present appearance, and some anti-Stratfordians say that the figure originally portrayed a man clutching a grain sack or a wool sack that was later altered as part of the plan to conceal the identity of the true author. Oxfordian Richard Kennedy proposes that the monument was originally built to honour John Shakespeare, William's father, said by tradition to have been a "considerable dealer in wool".

Evidence for Shakespeare's authorship

Main article: William Shakespeare
Shakespeare's father was granted a coat of arms in 1596, which in 1602 was contested by Ralph Brooke, who identified Shakespeare as a player in his complaint.

The mainstream view, to which nearly all academic Shakespeareans subscribe, is that the author referred to as "Shakespeare" was the same William Shakespeare who was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1564 and who died there in 1616. He became an actor and sharer (part-owner) of the Lord Chamberlain's Men (later the King's Men), an acting company that owned the Globe Theatre, the Blackfriars Theatre, and exclusive rights to produce Shakespeare's plays from 1594 to 1642, and was allowed the use of the honorific "gentleman" after 1596 when his father, John Shakespeare, was granted a coat of arms.

Shakespeare scholars see no reason to suspect that the name was a pseudonym or that the actor was a front man for some other writer, since contemporary records identify him as the writer, other playwrights such as Ben Jonson and Christopher Marlowe came from similar backgrounds, and no contemporary expressed doubt about Shakespeare's authorship. In contrast to the methods used by anti-Stratfordians, Shakespeare scholars employ the same methodology to attribute works to the poet and playwright William Shakespeare as they use for other writers of the period: the historical record and stylistic studies, and maintain that the methods used by many anti-Stratfordians to identify alternative candidates—such as reading the work as autobiography, finding coded messages and cryptograms embedded in the works, and concocting conspiracy theories to explain the lack of evidence for any writer but Shakespeare—are unreliable, unscholarly, and explain why more than 70 candidates have been nominated as the "true" author. They say that the idea that Shakespeare revealed himself in his work is a Romantic notion of the 18th and 19th centuries applied anachronistically to Elizabethan and Jacobean writers.

Historical evidence for Shakespeare's authorship

The historical record is unequivocal in assigning the authorship of the Shakespeare canon to William Shakespeare. In addition to his name appearing on the title pages of these poems and plays during William Shakespeare of Stratford's lifetime, his name was given as that of a well-known writer at least 23 times. Several contemporaries corroborate the identity of the playwright as the actor, and explicit contemporary documentary evidence attests that the actor was the Stratford citizen.

In 1598 Francis Meres named Shakespeare as a playwright and poet in his Palladis Tamia, referring to him as one of the authors by whom the "English tongue is mightily enriched". He names a dozen plays written by Shakespeare, including four which were never published in quarto: Gentlemen of Verona, Errors, Love Labours Wonne, and King John, as well as ascribing to Shakespeare some of the plays that were published anonymously before 1598 – Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, and Henry IV. Meres mentions Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, as being a writer of comedy in the same paragraph as he does Shakespeare. He refers to Shakespeare's "sugred Sonnets among his private friends" 11 years before the publication of the Sonnets.

In the rigid social structure of Elizabethan England, the Stratford-born actor William Shakespeare was entitled to append the honorific "gentleman" after his name by right of his father being granted a coat of arms in 1596, an honorific conventionally designated by the title "Master" or its abbreviations "Mr." or "M." prefixed to the name. This title was included in many contemporary references to Shakespeare during his lifetime, including official and literary records, and conclusively identifies William Shakespeare of Stratford as the "William Shakespeare" referred to as the author.

Shakespeare's honorific "Master" abbreviated as "M" on King Lear Q1 (1608).

Examples from Shakespeare's lifetime include two official stationers's entries, one dated 23 August 1600: "Andrew Wise William Aspley. Entred for their copies vnder the handes of the wardens Two bookes, the one call Muche a Doo about nothinge Thother the second parte of the history of Kinge Henry the iiijth with the humours of Sir John Falstaff: Wrytten by master Shakespere.xij d"; and the other dated 26 November 1607: "Nathanial Butter John Busby. Entred for their Copie under thandes of Sir George Buck knight and Thwardens A booke called. Master William Shakespeare his historye of Kinge Lear, as yt was played before the Kinges maiestie at Whitehall vppon Sainct Stephens night at Christmas Last, by his maiesties servantes playinge vsually at the Globe on the Banksyde vj d", which appeared on the title page of King Lear Q1 (1608) as "M. William Shak-speare: HIS True Chronicle Historie of the life and death of King Lear and his three Daughters."

His social status is also specifically referred to by his contemporaries in Epigram 159 by John Davies of Hereford in his The Scourge of Folly (1610): "To our English Terence, Mr. Will. Shake-speare"; Epigram 92 by Thomas Freeman in his Runne and A Great Caste (1614): "To Master W: Shakespeare"; and in historian John Stow's list of "Our moderne, and present excellent Poets" in Annales edited by Edmund Howes (1615): "M. Willi. Shakespeare gentleman".

After Shakespeare's death, Ben Jonson explicitly identified William Shakespeare, Gentleman, as the author in the title of his eulogy, "To the Memory of My Beloved the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare and What He Hath Left Us", published in the First Folio (1623). Other poets identified Shakespeare the gentleman as the author in the titles of their eulogies, also published in the First Folio: "Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous Scenic Poet, Master William Shakespeare" by Hugh Holland; and "To the Memory of the Deceased Author, Master W. Shakespeare" by Leonard Digges.

Personal testimonies by contemporaries

Ben Jonson comments on Shakespeare in his private notes published in Timber or Discoveries (1641). (Combined images of bottom page 97 and top page 98.)

Both explicit personal testimony by his contemporaries and strong circumstantial evidence of personal relationships with contemporaries who interacted with him as an actor and playwright support Shakespeare's authorship. Playwright and poet Ben Jonson knew Shakespeare from at least 1598, when the Lord Chamberlain's Men performed his play Every Man in his Humour at the Curtain Theatre with Shakespeare as a cast member. During his 1618–1619 walking tour of England and Scotland (four years before the First Folio publication), Jonson spent two weeks as a guest of the Scottish poet William Drummond, who recorded Jonson's often contentious comments about contemporaries, including Shakespeare, whom he criticised as wanting (i.e., lacking) "arte" and for mistakenly giving Bohemia a coast in The Winter's Tale. In 1641, four years after Jonson's death, his private notes written during his later life were published in which he judged Shakespeare in a comment that he specifically states is intended for posterity (Timber or Discoveries). Although in his First Folio eulogy Jonson had lauded Shakespeare's painstaking poetic artistry, in Timber he criticises Shakespeare's more casual approach to play writing. He praises Shakespeare as a person, writing "I loved the man, and do honour his memory (on this side Idolatry) as much as any. He was (indeed) honest, and of an open, and free nature; had an excellent fancy; brave notions, and gentle expressions . . . . he redeemed his vices with his virtues. There was ever more in him to be praised, than to be pardoned."

Shakespeare's surviving fellow actors John Heminges and Henry Condell knew and worked with Shakespeare for more than 20 years. In the 1623 First Folio, they professed that they had published the Folio "onely to keepe the memory of so worthy a Friend, & Fellow aliue, as was our Shakespeare, by humble offer of his playes".

William Camden defended Shakespeare's right to bear arms about the same time he listed him as one of the great poets of his time.

Historian, antiquary, and book collector Sir George Buc served as Deputy Master of the Revels from 1603 and as Master of the Revels from 1610 to 1622. His duties were to supervise and censor plays for the public theatres, arrange court play performances, and after 1606 license plays for publication. Buc noted on the title page of George a Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield (1599), an anonymous play, that he had consulted Shakespeare on its authorship. Buc was meticulous in his efforts to attribute books and plays to the correct author, and in 1607 he personally licensed King Lear for publication as written by "Master William Shakespeare".

In 1602, Ralph Brooke, the York Herald, accused Sir William Dethick, the Garter King of Arms, of elevating 23 unworthy persons to the gentry, number four of whom was Shakespeare's father, who had applied for arms 34 years earlier but had to wait for the success of his son before they were granted sometime before 1599. Brooke included a sketch of the Shakespeare arms, captioned "Shakespear ye Player by Garter." The grants, including John Shakespeare's, were defended by Dethick and Clarenceux King of Arms William Camden, the foremost antiquary of the time and life-long friend of Ben Jonson. In his Remaines Concerning Britaine, published in 1605 but completed two years earlier, Camden names Shakespeare the poet as one of the "most pregnant witts of these ages our times, whom succeeding ages may justly admire."

Recognition by other playwrights and writers

Other playwrights in addition to Ben Jonson wrote about Shakespeare as a person and a playwright, including some who sold plays to Shakespeare's company. Two of the three Parnassus plays produced at St John's College, Cambridge near the turn of the 17th century mention Shakespeare as an actor, poet, and playwright without a university education. In The First Part of the Return from Parnassus, two separate characters refers to Shakespeare as "Sweet Mr. Shakespeare", and in The Second Part of the Return from Parnassus (1606), the anonymous playwright has the actor Kempe say to the actor Burbage, "Few of the university men pen plays well ... Why here's our fellow Shakespeare puts them all down."

The two states of the title page of The Passionate Pilgrim (3rd ed., 1612)

An edition of The Passionate Pilgrim expanded with an additional nine poems written by prominent English actor, playwright, and author Thomas Heywood and with Shakespeare's name on the title page was published by William Jaggard in 1612. Heywood protested this piracy in his Apology for Actors (1612), adding that the author was "much offended with M. Jaggard (that altogether unknown to him) presumed to make so bold with his name." That Heywood stated with certainty that the author was unaware of the deception, and that Jaggard removed Shakespeare's name from unsold copies even though Heywood did not explicitly name him, indicates that Shakespeare was the offended author. Elsewhere, in his poem "Hierarchie of the Blessed Angels" (1634) Heywood affectionately notes the nicknames his fellow playwrights had been known by. Of Shakespeare, he writes:

Our modern poets to that pass are driven,
Those names are curtailed which they first had given;
And, as we wished to have their memories drowned,
We scarcely can afford them half their sound. ...
Mellifluous Shake-speare, whose enchanting quill
Commanded mirth or passion, was but Will.

Playwright John Webster, in his dedication to White Divel (1612), wrote, "And lastly (without wrong last to be named), the right happy and copious industry of M. Shake-Speare, M. Decker, & M. Heywood, wishing what I write might be read in their light," here using the abbreviation "M." to denote the title "Master" that William Shakespeare of Stratford was entitled to use by virtue of being a titled gentleman.

In a verse poem to Ben Jonson that has been dated to about 1608, poet and playwright Francis Beaumont alludes to several playwrights, including Shakespeare, about whom he wrote,

"Here I would let slip
(If I had any in me) scholarship,
And from all learning keep these lines as clear
as Shakespeare's best are, which our heirs shall hear
Preachers apt to their auditors to show
how far sometimes a mortal man may go
by the dim light of Nature".

Death of Shakespeare

The inscription on Shakespeare's monument.

The monument to Shakespeare that was erected in Holy Trinity Church, his local parish church in Stratford, sometime before 1623 bears a plaque with an inscription identifying him as a writer. The first two Latin lines translate to "In judgment a Pylian (Nestor), in genius a Socrates, in art a Maro (Virgil), the earth covers him, the people mourn him, Olympus possesses him." The monument was not only specifically referred to in the First Folio, but other early 17th-century records identify it as being a memorial to Shakespeare and transcribe the inscription. Sir William Dugdale also included the inscription and identified the monument as commemorating the poet William Shakespeare in his Antiquities of Warwickshire (1656), but the engraving was done from a sketch made in 1634 and its inaccuracy is similar to other inaccurate monument portrayals in his work.

The will of Shakespeare's fellow actor, Augustine Phillips, executed 5 May 1605, proved 16 May 1605, bequeaths "to my fellow William Shakespeare a thirty shillings piece in gold, To my fellow Henry Condell one other thirty shilling piece in gold . . ." Shakespeare's will, executed 25 March 1616, bequeaths "to my fellows John Hemynge Richard Burbage and Henry Cundell 26 shilling 8 pence apiece to buy them rings." Numerous public records, including the royal patent of 19 May 1603 that chartered the King's Men, establishes that Phillips, Heminges, Burbage, and Condell were fellow actors in the King's Men with William Shakespeare, two of whom later edited his collected plays. Anti-Stratfordians have cast suspicion on the bequests, which were interlined, saying that they were added later as part of a conspiracy, but the will was proved in the Prerogative Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury in London on 22 June 1616, and the original will was copied into the court register with the bequests intact.

John Taylor was the first poet to mention in print the deaths of Shakespeare and Francis Beaumont in his 1620 poem The Praise of Hemp-seed. Both had died within two months of each other four years earlier. Ben Jonson wrote a short poem "To the Reader" commending the First Folio Droeshout engraving of Shakespeare as a good likeness. Included in the prefatory commendatory verses was Jonson's lengthy eulogy "To the memory of my beloved, the Author Mr. William Shakespeare: and what he hath left us" in which he identifies Shakespeare as a playwright, a poet, and an actor, and writes:

Sweet Swan of Avon! what a sight it were
To see thee in our waters yet appear,
And make those flights upon the banks of Thames,
That so did take Eliza, and our James!

Here Jonson not only links the author to Shakespeare's home territory of Stratford-upon-Avon, but confirms his appearances at the courts of Elizabeth I and James I.

Leonard Digges wrote the elegy "To the Memory of the Deceased Author Master W. Shakespeare" that was published in the Folio, in which he refers to "thy Stratford Moniment." Digges was raised in a village on the outskirts of Stratford-upon-Avon in the 1590s by his stepfather, William Shakespeare's friend Thomas Russell, who was appointed in Shakespeare's will as overseer to the executors. William Basse wrote an elegy entitled "On Mr. Wm. Shakespeare" some time between 1616 and 1623, in which he suggests that Shakespeare should have been buried in Westminster Abbey next to Chaucer, Beaumont, and Spenser. This poem circulated very widely in manuscript and survives today in more than two dozen contemporary copies, several with the full title "On Mr. William Shakespeare, he died in April 1616," unambiguously referring to the Shakespeare of Stratford. Ben Jonson's eulogy responds directly to it, so it certainly was written before the publication of the First Folio in 1623.

Evidence for Shakespeare's authorship from his works

Shakespeare's are the most-studied secular works in history. Contemporary comments and both textual and stylistic studies indicate that the author is compatible with the known biography of William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon.

No contemporary of Shakespeare ever referred to him as a learned writer or scholar. In fact, Ben Jonson and Francis Beaumont both refer to his lack of classical learning. If a deeply erudite, university-trained playwright wrote the plays, it is hard to explain the many simple classical blunders in Shakespeare. Not only does he mistake the scansion of many classical names, in Troilus and Cressida he has Greeks and Trojans citing Plato and Aristotle a thousand years before their births. Later critics such as Samuel Johnson remarked that Shakespeare's genius lay not in his erudition, but from his "vigilance of observation and accuracy of distinction which books and precepts cannot confer; from this almost all original and native excellence proceeds."

The King Edward VI grammar School at Stratford-upon-Avon was in the guildhall about a half-mile from Shakespeare's birthplace in Henley Street.

Shakespeare's plays differ from those of the University Wits—Greene, Nash, Marlowe, Lyly, Lodge, and Peele—in that they are not larded with ostentatious displays of the writer's learning to show mastery of Latin or of classical principles of drama, with the exceptions of co-authored plays such as the Henry VI series and Titus Andronicus. Instead, his classical allusions rely on the Elizabethan grammar school curriculum, which provided a rigorous regimen of Latin instruction from the age of 7 until the age of 14. The Latin curriculum began with William Lily's Latin grammar Rudimenta Grammatices and progressed to Caesar, Livy, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, Plautus, Terence, and Seneca, all of whom are quoted and echoed in the Shakespearean canon. Almost alone among his contemporary peers, Shakespeare's plays are full of phrases from grammar school texts and pedagogy, including caricatures of school masters. Lily's Grammar is referred to in the plays by characters such as Demetrius and Chiron in Titus Andronicus (4.10), Tranio in The Taming of the Shrew, the schoolmaster Holofernes of Love's Labour's Lost (5.1) in a parody of a grammar-school lesson, Sir Toby Belch in Twelfth Night, and Sir Hugh Evans, another schoolmaster who in Merry Wives of Windsor (4.1) gives the boy William a lesson in Latin, parodying Lily. Shakespeare alluded not only to grammar school but also to the petty school that children attended from the age of 5 to 7 to learn to read, a prerequisite for grammar school.

Beginning in 1987, Ward Elliott, who was sympathetic to Oxford as the author, and Robert J. Valenza supervised a continuing stylometric study that used computer programs to compare Shakespeare's stylistic habits to the works of 37 authors who had been proposed as the true author at one time or another. The study, known as the Claremont Shakespeare Clinic, was last held in the spring of 2010. The tests determined that Shakespeare's work shows consistent, countable, profile-fitting patterns, suggesting that he was a single individual, not a committee, and that he used fewer relative clauses and more hyphens, feminine endings, and open lines than most of the writers with whom he was compared. The result determined that none of the other tested claimants' work could have been written by Shakespeare, nor could Shakespeare have been written by them, eliminating all of the claimants—including Oxford, Bacon, and Marlowe—as the true authors of the Shakespeare works.

Title page of the 1634 quarto of The Two Noble Kinsmen by John Fletcher and Shakespeare.

Much like today, literary styles went in and out of fashion, and Shakespeare's style was no exception. His late plays, such as The Winter's Tale, The Tempest, and Henry VIII, are written in a radically different style from the Elizabethan-era plays, in a style used by other Jacobean playwrights. In addition, after the King's Men began using the Blackfriars Theatre for performances in 1609, Shakespeare's late plays were written to accommodate playing on a smaller stage with more music, dancing, and more evenly divided acts to allow for trimming the candles used for stage lighting.

Studies show that an artist's creativity is responsive to the milieu in which the artist works, and especially to conspicuous political events. Dean Keith Simonton, a researcher into the factors of musical and literary creativity, especially Shakespeare's, has conducted several studies and concludes "beyond a shadow of a doubt" that the consensus play chronology is roughly in the correct order, and that Shakespeare's works exhibit stylistic development over the course of his career, consistent with the works of other artistic geniuses. Simonton's study, published in 2004, examined the correlation between the thematic content of Shakespeare's plays and the political context in which they would have been written according to traditional and Oxfordian datings. When lagged two years, the Stratfordian chronologies yielded substantially meaningful associations between thematic and political context, while the Oxfordian chronologies yielded no relationships, no matter how they were lagged. Simonton, who declared his Oxfordian sympathies in the article and had expected the results to support Oxford's authorship, concluded that "that expectation was proven wrong."

Shakespeare co-authored half of his last 10 plays, collaborating closely with other writers for the stage. Some anti-Stratfordian supporters of other candidates, particularly Oxfordians, say that those plays were finished by other playwrights after the death of the true author. But textual evidence from the late plays indicate that Shakespeare's collaborators were not always aware of what Shakespeare had done in a previous scene, and that they were following a rough outline rather than working from an unfinished script left by a long-dead playwright. For example, in Two Noble Kinsmen (1612–1613), written with John Fletcher, Shakespeare has two characters meet and leaves them on stage at the end of one scene, yet Fletcher has them act as if they were meeting for the first time in the following scene.

History of the authorship question

Main article: History of the Shakespeare authorship question

Shakespeare's singularity and bardology

Main article: Shakespeare's reputation

Apart from adulatory tributes attached to his works and common in eulogies to poets, Shakespeare was not deified as the world's greatest writer in the century and a half following his death. His reputation was that of a good playwright and poet among many others of his age. In fact, until the actor David Garrick mounted the Shakespeare Stratford Jubilee in 1769, Beaumont and Fletcher's plays dominated popular taste after the theatres reopened in 1660, with Ben Jonson and Shakespeare's plays vying for second place. Excluding a handful of minor 18th century satirical and allegorical references, there is no suggestion over this period that anyone else had written the works. The Shakespeare authorship question only emerged after he was regarded as the English national poet and depends upon the perception of Shakespeare as a unique genius in a class by himself.

Precursors of doubt

In time Shakespeare came to be singled out as both a transcendent genius and untutored rustic, and by the beginning of the 19th century, adulation in the form of bardolatry was in full swing. Yet uneasiness also began to emerge over the dissonance between Shakespeare's godlike reputation and the humdrum facts of his biography. Although his views were to remain orthodox, Ralph Waldo Emerson around 1845 expressed the underlying question in the air about Shakespeare by admitting he could not reconcile Shakespeare's verse with the image of a jovial actor and theatre manager. The rise of historical criticism, which had begun to challenge the authorial unity of Homer's epics and the historicity of the Bible, also fueled the emerging puzzlement over Shakespeare's authorship, in one critic's view becoming "an accident waiting to happen." In particular, David Strauss's historical investigation of Jesus had shocked public opinion for its scepticism over historical reportage and influenced debate about Shakespeare's image. In 1848, Samuel Mosheim Schmucker endeavoured to rebut Strauss's doubts about the historicity of Christ by applying the same techniques satirically to the records of Shakespeare's life in his Historic Doubts Respecting Shakespeare, Illustrating Infidel Objections Against the Bible. Schmucker, who never doubted that Shakespeare was Shakespeare, unwittingly anticipated and rehearsed many of the later anti-Stratfordian arguments.

Open dissent and the first alternative candidate

Shakespeare's authorship was first openly questioned in the pages of Colonel Joseph C.Hart's The Romance of Yachting (1848). Four years later Dr. Robert W. Jameson published "Who Wrote Shakespeare" anonymously in the Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, followed in 1856 by Delia Bacon's unsigned "William Shakspeare and His Plays; An Enquiry Concerning Them" in Putnam's Monthly.

The cipher wheel Owen used to decode Francis Bacon's hidden ciphers.

Since 1845, Bacon had been mapping out a theory that the plays attributed to Shakespeare were actually written by a coterie of men, including Sir Walter Raleigh as the main writer with Edmund Spenser, under the leadership of Sir Francis Bacon for the purpose of inculcating an advanced political and philosophical system for which they themselves could not publicly assume the responsibility. Francis Bacon was the first alternative author proposed in print by William Henry Smith in a pamphlet published September 1856, Was Lord Bacon the Author of Shakspeare's Plays? A Letter to Lord Ellesmere. The following year Delia Bacon, with the help of Nathaniel Hawthorne, published her book outlining her theory, The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakspere Unfolded. Some ten years later, after the American Civil War, Judge Nathaniel Holmes of Kentucky published the 600-page The Authorship of Shakespeare supporting Smith's theory, and the idea began to spread widely. By 1884 it had produced more than 250 books, and Smith predicted the war against the Shakespeare hegemony had almost been won by the Baconians after a 30-year battle. Two years later the Francis Bacon Society was founded in England to mop up any areas of lingering resistance. The society still survives and publishes a journal, Baconiana, to further its mission.

Ciphers became important to the theory, with thick books such as Ignatius L. Donnelly's The Great Cryptogram (1888), promoting the approach. Dr. Orville Ward Owen constructed a "cipher wheel", a 1,000-foot long strip of canvas on which he had pasted the works of Shakespeare and other writers and mounted on two parallel wheels so he could quickly collate pages with key words as he turned them for decryption. In his multi-volume Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story (1893), he discovered Bacon's autobiography embedded in Shakespeare's plays, which revealed that Bacon was actually the secret son of Queen Elizabeth, yet more reason to conceal his authorship from the public.

None of these assaults on Shakespeare's authorship went unanswered by academe. In 1857 English critic George Henry Townsend published William Shakespeare Not an Impostor, criticising the slovenly scholarship, false premises, specious parallel passages, and erroneous conclusions of the earliest anti-Stratfordians.

Shakespeare on trial, part 1

Perhaps because of Bacon's legal background, the Shakespeare authorship question has often been tested by recourse to the framework of trial by jury in both mock and real trials. The first such occasion was conducted over 15 months in 1892–93, and the results of the debate were published in the Boston monthly The Arena. Ignatius Donnelly was one of the plaintiffs, while F. J. Furnivall formed part of the defence. The 25 member-jury included Henry George, Edmund Gosse, and Henry Irving. The verdict came down heavily in favour of the man from Stratford. In 1916, a Cook Country Circuit Court judge, Richard Tuthill, found against Shakespeare, and positively determined that Francis Bacon was the author of the works. Damages of $5,000 were awarded the Baconian advocate, Colonel George Fabyan. In the ensuing uproar, Tuthill rescinded his decision, and another judge, Judge Frederick A. Smith, dismissed the case.

Unearthing proof

With the help of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Delia Bacon travelled to England in 1853 in search of evidence. Disdaining archival research, she sought instead to unearth buried manuscripts she thought would prove her theories, and she unsuccessfully tried to persuade the caretaker to open Bacon's tomb at St Albans. She deciphered Bacon's letters for instructions to locate papers beneath Shakespeare's Stratford gravestone that would prove the works were Bacon's, but after spending several nights in the chancel trying to summon her courage, she surrendered to her fears and left without prising up the stone slab.

A device from Henry Peacham's Minerva Britanna (1612) has been used by Baconians and Oxfordians alike as coded evidence for concealed authorship of the Shakespeare canon.

In 1907, Orville Ward Owen used his famous cipher wheel to decode detailed instructions revealing where a box containing proof of Bacon's authorship had been buried in the Wye river by Chepstow Castle on the Duke of Beaufort's property. His dredging machinery failed to retrieve the concealed manuscripts. That same year his former assistant, Elizabeth Wells Gallup, now financed by George Fabyen, likewise set sail for England, believing she had decoded a different message by means of a bilateral cipher revealing that Bacon's secret manuscripts were hidden behind some panels in Canonbury Tower, Islington.

In the 1920s, Walter Conrad Arensberg, convinced that Bacon had willed the key to his cipher to the Rosicrucians, who apparently survived under the protection of the Church of England, accused the Dean of Lichfield of being privy to the secret, and of hiding information that Bacon and his mother had been buried in the Lichfield Chapter house. He waged a long campaign to photograph the obscure grave. Mrs Maria Bauer convinced herself that Bacon manuscripts had been imported into Jamestown, Virginia in 1653, and could be found in the Bruton Vault at Williamburg. She gained permission in the late 1930s to excavate, but the alarmed authorities quickly withdrew her permit. In 1938 Roderick Eagle gained permission to open the tomb of Edmund Spenser to search for a poem he believed was thrown in to prove Bacon was Shakespeare, but found only an old skull and some nondescript bones.

Other candidates emerge

Other candidates besides Bacon began to receive attention. In 1895 attorney Wilbur Gleason Zeigler published the novel It Was Marlowe: A Story of the Secret of Three Centuries. In the preface he makes the case that Marlowe survived his 1593 death and wrote Shakespeare's plays. The German literary critic Karl Bleibtreu supported the nomination of the 5th Earl of Rutland, Roger Manners in 1907.

Unaffiliated anti-Stratfordians began to appear. British barrister Sir George Greenwood sought to disqualify William Shakespeare from the authorship in his The Shakespeare Problem Restated (1908), but withheld support for any alternative authors, therefore sanctioning the search for candidates other than Bacon and setting the stage for the rise of other candidates such as Marlowe, Stanley, Manners, and Oxford. The American humorist Mark Twain, influenced by Greenwood, revealed his anti-Stratfordian beliefs in Is Shakespeare Dead? (1909), favouring Bacon as the true author.

In 1913 John M. Robertson published The Baconian Heresy: A Confutation, refuting the contention that Shakespeare had expert legal knowledge by showing that legalisms pervaded Elizabethan and Jacobean literature. After World War II, Professor Abel Lefranc, a renowned authority on French and English literature, revived William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby as the author, based on biographical evidence he gleaned from the plays and poems.

With the appearance of John Thomas Looney's Shakespeare Identified (1920), Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford quickly ascended as the most popular alternative author. Two years later Looney and Greenwood founded The Shakespeare Fellowship, an international organization to promote discussion and debate on the authorship question, which later changed its mission to propagate the Oxfordian theory. In 1923 Archie Webster published "Was Marlowe the Man?" in The National Review, proposing that Marlowe wrote the works of Shakespeare and that the Sonnets were an autobiographical account of his survival and banishment. In 1932 Allardyce Nicoll announced the discovery of a manuscript that appeared to establish that James Wilmot was the earliest proponent of Baconian theory, but recent findings have exposed the paper as a forgery that was probably designed to revive Bacon's flagging popularity in the face of Oxford's ascendancy as the most popular candidate.

Another candidate for the true bard, Sir Edward Dyer, was revealed in 1943 by writer Alden Brooks in his Will Shakspere and the Dyer's hand. Six years earlier Brooks had eliminated Shakespeare as the playwright by inventing the profession of Elizabethan "play broker" and arguing that brokering the plays was his true role in the deception, a view that was later adapted by Oxfordians.

Oxfordism and anti-Stratfordism declined in popularity and visibility during World War II and afterward, as academics attacked their methodology as unscholarly and their conclusions as ridiculous. Copious archival research had failed to turn up the expected confirmation of Oxford or anyone else as the true author, and publishers lost interest in books advancing the same theories based on alleged circumstantial evidence. To bridge this evidentiary gap, Oxfordians joined the Baconians in finding myriad hidden clues and allusions in the Shakespeare canon placed there by Oxford to tip off future researchers.

To try to revive flagging interest in Oxford, in 1952 Dorothy and Charlton Ogburn Sr published a 1,300-page This Star of England, now regarded as a classic Oxfordian text. They uncovered the Elizabethan state secret that the "fair youth" of the sonnets was Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, the result of a passionate affair between Oxford and the Queen, and that the "Shakespeare" plays were written by Oxford to memorialise that love. The Ogburns found many parallels between Oxford's life and the works, particularly in Hamlet, which they characterised as "straight biography." This became known as the "Prince Tudor theory", and revived the movement enough to permit the establishment of the Shakespeare Oxford Society in the U. S. two years later.

Also in the mid-1950s Broadway press agent Calvin Hoffman revived the Marlovian theory with the publication of The Murder of the Man Who Was "Shakespeare" (1955). The next year he took a page out of the Baconian book and went to England to search for documentary evidence about Marlowe that he thought might be buried in his literary patron Sir Thomas Walsingham's tomb.

A series of critical academic books and articles, however, held in check any appreciable growth of anti-Stratfordism. American cryptologists William and Elizebeth Friedman won the Folger Shakespeare Library Literary Prize of $1000 in 1955 for a definitive study that is considered to have disproven the long-standing claims that the works of Shakespeare contain hidden ciphers that disclose Bacon's or any other candidate's secret authorship. The study was condensed and published as The Shakespeare Ciphers Examined (1957). Closely in its wake, four major works were issued surveying the history of the anti-Stratfordian phenomenon from a critical orthodox perspective, The Poacher from Stratford (1958) by Frank Wadsworth, Shakespeare and His Betters (1958), by Reginald Churchill, The Shakespeare Claimants (1962), by N. H. Gibson, and Shakespeare and His Rivals: A Casebook on the Authorship Controversy (1962), by George L. McMichael and Edgar M. Glenn. In 1959 The American Bar Association Journal published a series of articles and letters on the authorship controversy, later anthologised as Shakespeare Cross-Examination (1961).

In 1968 the newsletter of The Shakespeare Oxford Society reported that "the missionary or evangelical spirit of most of our members seems to be at a low ebb, dormant, or non-existent." In 1974, membership stood at 80. Freelance writer Charlton Ogburn, Jr., elected president of the society in 1976, promptly began a campaign to bypass the academic establishment, which he believed to be an "entrenched authority" that aimed to "outlaw and silence dissent in a supposedly free society," a situation that he termed "an intellectual Watergate". He proposed fighting for public recognition in the media by portraying Oxford as a candidate standing on equal footing with Shakespeare. In 1985 he published his 900-page The Mysterious William Shakespeare: the Myth and the Reality, and by framing the issue as one of fairness and equal time in the atmosphere of conspiracy that permeated America after Watergate, he learnt how to use the media to circumnavigate the academy and appeal directly to the public. He secured Oxford as the most popular theory, kick-starting the modern revival of the movement, based on seeking publicity through moot court trials, media debates, television, and later the Internet, including Misplaced Pages.

Shakespeare on trial, part 2

Ogburn, Jr., believed that academics were best challenged by recourse to law, and the Oxfordians had their day in court when three justices of the Supreme Court of the United States convened a one-day moot court to hear the case 25 September 1987. The trial was structured so that literary experts would not be represented, but the burden of proof was put upon the Oxfordians. The justices determined that the case was based on a conspiracy theory, and that the reasons given for this conspiracy were both incoherent and unpersuasive. Although Ogburn took the verdict as a "clear defeat" for his cause, Oxfordian columnist Joseph Sobran recognised that the trial had effectively dismissed any other Shakespeare authorship contender from the public mind and provided legitimacy for Oxford. A retrial was organised the next year in the United Kingdom in the expectancy that this decision could be reversed. Presided over by three Lords, the court was held in London's Inner Temple 26 November 1988. On this occasion Shakespearean scholars argued their case, and the outcome confirmed the American verdict, but publicity was generated and attracted potential Oxfordian converts, among them United States Supreme Court justices John Paul Stevens, who had ruled against Oxford in the 1987 mock trial, and Antonin Scalia.

Television, magazines, and the Internet

In 1989 the PBS Frontline broadcast "The Shakespeare Mystery", paraphrasing the title of Ogburn's book and exposing the romantic view of Oxford-as-Shakespeare to more than 3.5 million viewers in the U. S. alone. This was followed in 1992 by a three-hour Frontline teleconference, "Uncovering Shakespeare: an Update", moderated by William F. Buckley, Jr., which closed with an animation of Shakespeare's Stratford monument crumbling to reveal a portrait of Oxford.

File:Contester Will dj.JPG
James Shapiro explores the social origins of the controversy in Contested Will (2010).

In 1991 The Atlantic Monthly published a print debate between Tom Bethell, "The Case for Oxford", and Irvin Matus "The Case for Shakespeare"], which was followed in 1999 by a similar print debate in Harper's Magazine between anti-Stratfordians and Stratfordians, "The Ghost of Shakespeare".

Beginning in the decade of the 1990s Oxfordians and other anti-Stratfordians increasingly turned to the Internet to promulgate their theories, including creating and composing various Misplaced Pages articles about the candidates and the arguments.

On 14 April 2007 the Shakespeare Authorship Coalition issued an online petition, the "Declaration of Reasonable Doubt about the Identity of William Shakespeare", coinciding with Brunel University's announcement of a one-year Master of Arts programme in Shakespeare authorship studies. The coalition intends to enlist broad public support so that by 2016, the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, the academic Shakespeare establishment will be forced to acknowledge that legitimate grounds for doubting Shakespeare's authorship exist. More than 1,200 sceptics signed the petition by the end of 2007. By January 2011, 1,911 had signed the petition, 330 of them current or former academics. On 22 April 2007 the New York Times published a survey of 265 American Shakespeare professors on the Shakespeare authorship question in the "Education" section. To the question whether there is good reason to question Shakespeare's authorship, 6% answered "yes", and 11% "possibly". When asked their opinion of the topic, 61% chose "A theory without convincing evidence" and 32% "A waste of time and classroom distraction".

Filmmaker Roland Emmerich announced in 2009 that his next film will be about Oxford-as-Shakespeare based on a script he bought eight years earlier. The film, Anonymous, starring Rhys Ifans and Vanessa Redgrave, will be released in the United States 23 September 2011. It portrays Oxford as the illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth who became the queen's lover as an adult, with whom he sires his own half-brother/son, Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, to whom he dedicates the Sonnets.

Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro surveyed the authorship question in Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?, in which he criticises academe for ignoring the topic and effectively surrendering the field to anti-Stratfordians.

Alternative candidates

Main article: List of Shakespeare authorship candidates

Although they overlap, the types of evidence marshalled to support the various alternative candidates fall into four broad categories: historical conjectures, parallel passages, biographical allusions extracted from the works, and hidden messages found by means of ciphers, cryptograms, or codes.

Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626)

Sir Francis Bacon

Main article: Baconian theory

The leading candidate of the 19th century was one of the great intellectual figures of Jacobean England, Sir Francis Bacon, lawyer, philosopher, essayist and scientist. The case for Bacon relies upon historical and literary conjectures and cryptographical revelations found in the works that disclose his authorship.

William Henry Smith was the first to propose Bacon as the author in September 1856 in Was Lord Bacon the Author of Shakspeare's Plays? A Letter to Lord Ellesmere, using such parallel passages as Bacon's Poetry is nothing else but feigned history to Shakespeare's The truest poetry is the most feigning (AYLI 3.3.19-20), and Bacon's He wished him not to shut the gate of your Majesty's merry to Shakespeare's The gates of mercy shall be all shut up (H5 3.3.10). After discovering hidden political meanings in the plays and parallels between those ideas and Bacon's known works, Delia Bacon proposed him as the leader of a group of disaffected philosopher-politicians who tried to promote republican ideas to counter the despotism of the Tudor-Stuart monarchies through the medium of the public stage. Later supporters of Bacon found similarities between a great number of specific phrases and aphorisms from the plays and those written down by Bacon in his wastebook, the Promus. In 1883 Mrs Henry Pott edited Bacon's Promus, finding 4,400 parallels of thought or expression between Shakespeare and Bacon, such as Rome / Romeo; Good morrow / Good morrow; Sweet for speech in the morning / What early tongue so sweet saluteth me?; Lodged next / Where care lodges; and Uprouse / Thou art uproused by some distemperature. This method was used to expand Bacon's canon to include the works of Spenser, Watson, Greene, Lodge, Peele, Marlowe, Lyly and Nashe.

In a letter addressed to John Davies, Bacon closes "so desireing you to bee good to concealed poets", which his supporters take as Bacon referring to himself. Sir Toby Matthew, in a letter to Bacon (after 1621) wrote that: "The most prodigious wit that ever I knew of my nation and of this side of the sea is of your Lordship's name, though he be known by another." Baconians take this to be a reference to Bacon's pseudonymous authorship of Shakespeare's works. They also point to Bacon's comment that play-acting was used by the ancients "as a means of educating men's minds to virtue," and argue that while he outlined both a scientific and moral philosophy in The Advancement of Learning (1605), only the first part was published under his name during his lifetime. His moral philosophy, including a revolutionary politico-philosophic system of government, was concealed in the Shakespeare plays because of the danger to the monarchical government, but was not discovered until the mid-19th century by Delia Bacon.

The great number of legal allusions used by Shakespeare demonstrate his expertise in the law, Baconians say, and Bacon not only became Queen's Counsel in 1596, but was appointed Attorney General in 1613. Bacon also paid for and helped write speeches for a number of entertainments, including masques and dumb shows, although he is not known to have authored a play. His only attributed verse consists of seven metrical psalters, following Sternhold and Hopkins.

Since Bacon was knowledgeable about ciphers, early Baconians suspected that he left his signature encrypted in the Shakespeare canon. In the late-19th and early-20th centuries Baconians discovered that the works were riddled with ciphers supporting Bacon as the true author. In 1881, Mrs. C. F. Ashwood Windle, inspired by Delia Bacon's reference to a cipher, discovered carefully worked-out jingles in each play that revealed Bacon as the author. She in turn inspired other cryptologists, most notably Ignatius Donnelly, who also discovered probative cryptograms in the plays. He in turn inspired Orville Ward Owen, who deciphered Bacon's complete biography from the works as well as revealing that Francis Bacon was the secret son of Queen Elizabeth and the Earl of Leicester. Baconian cryptogram-hunting flourished well into the 20th century, and in 1905 Walt Whitman biographer Dr. Isaac Hull Platt discovered that the Latin word honorificabilitudinitatibus, found in Love's Labour's Lost, is an anagram of Hi ludi F. Baconis nati tuiti orbi ("These plays, the offspring of F. Bacon, are preserved for the world.").

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1550–1604)

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

Main article: Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, Lord Great Chamberlain of England, followed his grandfather and father in patronising companies of players and musicians. De Vere was an important courtier poet, and he was recognised by Puttenham and Meres as a playwright, one of the "best for comedy amongst us", although none of his theatrical works survive. The case for Oxford relies upon historical and literary facts and conjectures, biographical coincidences, and cryptographical revelations found in the works that disclose his authorship.

Although Oxford had been nominated previously and was even a part of Bacon's authorship coterie, an English school-teacher, J. Thomas Looney was the first to lay out a comprehensive case for his authorship. Instead of finding coded tutorials for republicanism in the plays à la Delia Bacon, Looney found allegories based on barely-disguised autobiography to promote the return to medieval values of social class and authoritarian monarchical rule. He identified personality characteristics in Shakespeare's works—especially Hamlet—that painted the author as an eccentric, profligate, aristocratic poet, a drama and sporting enthusiast with a classical education who had travelled to Italy. Oxford alone among the aristocratic candidates had been praised by his contemporaries as an accomplished poet, and Looney discovered stylistic and thematic parallels between his extant works and Shakespeare's, which enabled him to identify Oxford as the true author. But Looney believed the most critical part of the case to be the close affinity he found between the poetry of Oxford and that of Shakespeare in the use of motifs and subjects, phrasing, and rhetorical devices. After Looney's Shakespeare Identified was published in 1920, Oxford rapidly overtook Bacon to become the most popular alternative candidate, and remains so to this day.

Although Oxford died in 1604 with 10 Shakespeare plays yet to be written according to the most widely accepted chronology, Oxfordians date the plays earlier and say that unfinished works were revised by other playwrights and released after his death In addition, the publisher's dedication in Shakespeare's Sonnets (1609) wishes "all happiness and that eternity promised by our ever-living poet" to an unknown "Mr. W. H.", which is taken by some scholars to refer to the author of the sonnets. Oxfordians say that the phrase "ever-living" implies that the author is dead.

Shakespeare's works as written by Oxford are thought to contain correspondences to Oxford's life and are read as coded autobiography, and literal readings of certain sonnets are taken to refer to incidents in Oxford's life. For example, the speaker in Sonnet 37 says he is "made lame by fortune's spite" in 37 and in 89 tells the addressee to "Speak of my lameness, and I straight will halt". In a 25 March 1595 letter to Burghley, Oxford wrote "I will attend Your Lordship as well as a lame man may at your house."

No documentary evidence connecting Oxford to the authorship of the works has been found, but codes and ciphers have been discovered in the works to support the theory, such as more than 1,700 instances of the anagram "E. Vere" embedded in the Shakespeare canon in the words "ever", "every", and "never". These same veiled signatures have been found by Oxfordian George Frisbee in the works of Marlowe, George Gascoigne, Sir John Harrington, Edmund Spenser, and others, identifying all those names as pseudonyms used by Oxford. A device from Henry Peacham's Minerva Britanna (1612) depicts a hand behind a curtain that has written the Latin motto MENTE VIDEBOR ("By the mind I shall be seen"). This was first used to support Bacon's candidacy, but is seen by Oxfordians as a clue to Oxford's hidden authorship. By interpreting the final full stop as the beginning of an "I", from the resulting letters an anagram is constructed that when rearranged reveals TIBI NOM. DE VERE ("Thy Name is De Vere").

Oxford's use of the "Shakespeare" pen-name has been attributed to the stigma of print, a convention that aristocratic authors could not take credit for writing plays for the public stage. Another motivation given is the politically explosive "Prince Tudor" theory that the youthful Oxford was Queen Elizabeth's lover and dedicated "Venus and Adonis", "Lucrece", and the Sonnets to their son, England's rightful Tudor Prince Henry Wriothesley, who was raised as the 3rd Earl of Southampton. This theory has deeply divided Oxfordians, and even more so its variation, "Prince Tudor Part II", which states that not only was Southampton Oxford's and Elizabeth's bastard, he was also Oxford's brother because Oxford himself was the Queen's son. According to this theory at age fourteen Elizabeth was raped by her guardian Thomas Seymour, and their child was placed with the House of Oxford.

Christopher Marlowe (1564–1593)

Christopher Marlowe

Main article: Marlovian theory

The case for Marlowe relies upon historical conjectures predicated on the speculation that the government records of his assassination on 20 May 1593 are part of a hoax, and that he lived on to write the Shakespeare canon from exile. The purpose of this deception was to allow Marlowe to escape arrest and almost certain execution on charges of subversive atheism, and flee the country to live in France and Italy. Thomas Walsingham, Marlowe's secret lover, arranged the imposture, and also acted as the go-between to deliver the manuscripts to the actor Shakespeare. Literary conjectures, historical and biographical coincidences, and cryptographic revelations are found in the works to support this scenario.

A brilliant poet and dramatist, Marlowe was born in the same social class as Shakespeare two months earlier than he, attended Cambridge University, and pioneered the use of blank verse in Elizabethan drama. He was first nominated as a candidate in 1884 as a member of a group, but was proposed as an independent candidate in 1895. His candidacy was revived in 1955 and has gained popularity so that he is believed to be the nearest rival to Oxford.

That the very first work linked to the name William Shakespeare—Venus and Adonis—was registered with the Stationers' Company on 18 April 1593 with no named author, and was then printed with William Shakespeare's name signed to the dedication and on sale just 13 days after Marlowe's reported death is one such coincidence. Lists of verbal correspondences also have been compiled to support the theory.

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby (1561–1642)

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby

William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby, was first proposed in 1891 by James Greenstreet. The case for Derby relies upon historical and literary conjectures and biographical coincidences. He is often mentioned as a leader or participant in the "group theory" of Shakespearean authorship. Derby was born three years before Shakespeare and died in 1642, so his lifespan fits the consensus dating of the works. His initials were W. S., and he was known to sign himself "Will", which qualified him to write the punning "Will" sonnets.

Derby's older brother, Ferdinando Stanley, 5th Earl of Derby, formed a group of players, the Lord Strange's Men, some of whose members eventually joined the King's Men, one of the companies most associated with Shakespeare. In 1582 Derby supposedly made a grand continental tour, travelling through France, Navarre, Italy, Turkey, and other countries. Love's Labour's Lost is set in King Ferdinand's Court of Navarre and the play may be based on events that happened there between 1578 and 1584.

In 1599 the Jesuit spy George Fenner reported in two letters that Derby "is busye in penning commodyes for the common players." That same year Derby was reported as financing one of London's two children's drama companies, Paul's Boys and his own, Derby's Men, known for playing at the Boar's Head Inn, which played multiple times at court in 1600 and 1601.

Derby married Elizabeth de Vere, whose maternal grandfather was William Cecil, thought by some critics to be the basis of the character of Polonius in Hamlet. E. A. J. Honigmann argued that the first production of A Midsummer Night's Dream was performed at Derby's wedding banquet. Derby was associated with William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke and his brother Philip Herbert, Earl of Montgomery and later 4th Earl of Pembroke, the "Incomparable Pair" to whom William Shakespeare's First Folio is dedicated. When Derby released his estates to his son James around 1628–29, he named Pembroke and Montgomery as trustees.

Footnotes

  1. McMichael & Glenn 1962, p. 56.
  2. Shapiro 2010, pp. 2–3 (3–4).
  3. Kathman 2003, p. 621: "...in fact, antiStratfordism has remained a fringe belief system for its entire existence. Professional Shakespeare scholars mostly pay little attention to it"; Schoenbaum 1991, p. 450: "A great many of the schismatics are (as we have seen) distinguished in fields other than literary scholarship, and their ignorance of fact and method is as dismaying as their non-specialist love of Shakespeare's plays is touching."; Nicholl 2010, p. 4 quotes Gail Kern Paster, director of the Folger Shakespeare Library: "To ask me about the authorship question ... is like asking a palaeontologist to debate a creationist's account of the fossil record."; Nelson 2004, p. 149–51: "... virtually all anti-Stratfordians are outsiders to the profession of English Literature. I do not know of a single professor of the 1,300-member Shakespeare Association of America who questions the identity of Shakespeare nor more than a handful of non-member professors of English in North America, nor a single professor of English in all of Great Britain or the European Continent. Among editors of Shakespeare in the major publishing houses, none that I know questions the authorship of the Shakespeare canon ... antagonism to the authorship debate from within the profession is so great that it would be as difficult for a professed Oxfordian to be hired in the first place, much less gain tenure, as for a professed creationist to be hired or gain tenure in a graduate-level department of biology ... I attribute the paucity of doubters among professional literary historians to a culture in which mistakes of fact or argument bring shame on the perpetrator. Literary historians, like scientists, tend to share a common understanding of what kind of evidence counts, and what does not."; Carroll 2004, pp. 278–9: "I am an academic, a member of what is called the 'Shakespeare Establishment,' one of perhaps 20,000 in our land, professors mostly, who make their living, more or less, by teaching, reading, and writing about Shakespeare—and, some say, who participate in a dark conspiracy to suppress the truth about Shakespeare.... I have never met anyone in an academic position like mine, in the Establishment, who entertained the slightest doubt as to Shakespeare's authorship of the general body of plays attributed to him. Like others in my position, I know there is an anti-Stratfordian point of view and understand roughly the case it makes. Like St. Louis, it is out there, I know, somewhere, but it receives little of my attention."; Pendleton 1994, p. 21: "Shakespeareans sometimes take the position that to even engage the Oxfordian hypothesis is to give it a countenance it does not warrant. And, of course, any Shakespearean who reads a hundred pages on the authorship question inevitably realizes that nothing he can say will prevail with those persuaded to be persuaded otherwise."; Gibson 2005, p. 30.
  4. Bate 2002, p. 106: "The Shakespeare authorship controversy is an epiphenomenon, a secondary symptom, a consequence of the extraordinary elevation of the dramatist's status that occurred in the eighteenth century."; Shapiro 2010, pp. 29-34 (28–32).
  5. Law 1965, p. 184; Kroeber 1993, p. 369; Shapiro 2010, pp. 56-64 (51–58).
  6. Bate 2002, p. 106
  7. Shapiro 2010, p. 317 (281)
  8. Shapiro 2010, pp. 2–3 (4); McCrea 2005, p. 13.
  9. Dobson 2001, p. 31: "These two notions—that the Shakespeare canon represented the highest achievement of human culture, while William Shakespeare was a completely uneducated rustic—combined to persuade Delia Bacon and her successors that the Folio's title page and preliminaries could only be part of a fabulously elaborate charade orchestrated by some more elevated personage, and they accordingly misread the distinctive literary traces of Shakespeare's solid Elizabethan grammar-school education visible throughout the volume as evidence that the 'real' author had attended Oxford or Cambridge."
  10. Bate 1998, p. 90: "Their favorite code is the hidden personal allusion ... But this method is in essence no different from the cryptogram, since Shakespeare's range of characters and plots, both familial and political, is so vast that it would be possible to find in the plays 'self-portraits' of, once more, anybody one cares to think of. There is no evidence whatsoever that Elizabethan plays were vehicles for self-portraiture. The idea that they might have been is another back-projection of the Romantic idea of authorship ... "; Love 2002, pp. 87, 200): "The method naturally works best with the most personal kinds of writing: one would have to proceed with great caution in attempting to profile a dramatist through his or her characters (which has not stopped many attempts) ... It has more than once been claimed that the combination of 'biographical-fit' and cryptographical arguments could be used to establish a case for almost any individual or Shakespeare's (or our own) time selected at random. The very fact that their application has produced so many rival claimants demonstrates their unreliability." Shapiro 2010, pp. 304–13 (268–77); Schoone-Jongen 2008, p. 5: "in voicing dissatisfaction over the apparent lack of continuity between the certain facts of Shakespeare's life and the spirit of his literary output, anti-Stratfordians adopt the very Modernist assumption that an author's work must reflect his or her life. Neither Shakespeare nor his fellow Elizabethan writers operated under this assumption."; Smith 2008, p. 629: "Perhaps the point is that deriving an idea of an author from his or her works is always problematic, particularly in a multi-vocal genre like drama, since it crucially underestimates the heterogeneous influences and imaginative reaches of creative writing. Often the authorship debate is premised on the syllogistic and fallacious interchangeability of literature and autobiography."; Alter 2010 quotes James Shapiro: "Once you take away the argument that the life can be found in the works, those who don't believe Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare don't have any argument left."
  11. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 163–4: "The reasons we have for believing that William Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon wrote the plays and poems are the same as the reasons we have for believing any other historical event ... the historical evidence says that William Shakespeare wrote the plays and poems."; McCrea 2005, pp. xii–xiii, 10; Nelson 2004, p. 162: "Apart from the First Folio, the documentary evidence for William Shakespeare is the same as we get for other writers of the period..."
  12. Love 2002, pp. 198–202, 303–7: "The problem that confronts all such attempts is that they have to dispose of the many testimonies from Will the player's own time that he was regarded as the author of the plays and the absence of any clear contravening public claims of the same nature for any of the other favoured candidates."; Bate 1998, pp. 68–73.
  13. Bate 1998, p. 73: "No one in Shakespeare's lifetime or the first two hundred years after his death expressed the slightest doubt about his authorship."; Hastings 1959, pp. 486–8: "... no suspicions regarding Shakespeare's authorship (except for a few mainly humorous comments) were expressed until the middle of the nineteenth century (in Hart's The Romance of Yachting, 1848)."
  14. Dobson 2001, p. 31: "Most observers, however, have been more impressed by the anti-Stratfordians' dogged immunity to documentary evidence, not only that which confirms that Shakespeare wrote his own plays, but that which establishes that several of the alternative candidates were long dead before he had finished doing so."; Greenblatt 2005: "The idea that William Shakespeare's authorship of his plays and poems is a matter of conjecture and the idea that the 'authorship controversy' be taught in the classroom are the exact equivalent of current arguments that 'intelligent design' be taught alongside evolution. In both cases an overwhelming scholarly consensus, based on a serious assessment of hard evidence, is challenged by passionately held fantasies whose adherents demand equal time."
  15. Nicholl 2010, p. 3.
  16. Nicholl 2010, p. 3; Shapiro 2010, p. 2 (4).
  17. Shapiro 2010, p. 246-9 (216-9); Niederkorn 2005.
  18. Bate 2002, pp. 104–5; Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 390, 392.
  19. Shipley 1943, pp. 37–8; Bethell 1991, p. 36; Schoone-Jongen 2008, p. 5; Smith 2008, p. 622: "Fuelled by scepticism that the plays could have been written by a working man from a provincial town with no record of university education, foreign travel, legal studies or court preferment, the controversialists proposed instead a sequence of mainly aristocratic alternative authors whose philosophically or politically occult meanings, along with their own true identity, had to be hidden in codes, cryptograms and runic obscurity."
  20. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 2, 6-7.
  21. Matus 1994, p. 15 note.
  22. Love 2002, p. 198; Wadsworth 1958, p. 6: "Paradoxically, the sceptics invariably substitute for the easily explained lack of evidence concerning William Shakespeare, the more troublesome picture of a vast conspiracy of silence about the 'real author', with a total lack of historical evidence for the existence of this 'real author' explained on the grounds of a secret pact, kept inviolate by a numerous and varied group of collaborators."; Shapiro 2010, p. 255 (225): "Some suppose that only Shakespeare and the real author were in the know. At the other extreme are those who believe that it was an open secret, so widely shared that it wasn't worth mentioning."
  23. Nelson 2004, p. 149: "The Shakespeare authorship debate is a classic instance of a controversy that draws its very breath from a fundamental disagreement over the nature of admissible evidence."; McCrea 2005, pp. 165, 217–8; Shapiro 2010, pp. 8, 48, 112–3, 235, 298 (8, 44, 100, 207, 264).
  24. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 405, 411, 437; Love 2002, pp. 203–7.
  25. Shapiro 2010, pp. 253–95 (223–59); Love 2002, p. 198.
  26. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 163–4; McCrea 2005, pp. xii–xiii, 10; Nelson 2004, p. 149
  27. Matus 1994, pp. 265–6: Quoting Philip Edwards about Massinger: "Like most Tudor and Stuart dramatists, he lives almost exclusively in his plays."; Lang 2008, pp. 29–30.
  28. Crinkley 1985, p. 517.
  29. Shipley 1943, pp. 37–8.
  30. Matus 1994, p. 47: "... on the mysterious disappearance of the accounts of the highest immediate authority over theatre in Shakespeare's age, the Lord Chamberlains of the Household. Ogburn imagines that these records, like those of the Stratford grammar school, might have been deliberately eradicated 'because they would have showed how little consequential a figure Shakspere cut in the company.'"
  31. Matus 1994, p. 32: "Ogburn gives voice to his suspicion that the school records disappeared because they would have revealed William's name did not appear among those who attended it.
  32. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 6; Wells 2003, p. 28; Kathman 2003, p. 625; Shapiro 2010, pp. 116–7 (103); Bevington 2005, p. 9.
  33. Wells 2001, p. 122.
  34. Schoenbaum 1987, p. 295.
  35. Price 2001, pp. 213–7, 262; Crinkley 1985, p. 517: "It is characteristic of anti-Stratfordian books that they make a list of what Shakespeare must have been—a courtier, a lawyer, a traveler in Italy, a classicist, a falconer, whatever. Then a candidate is selected who fits the list. Not surprisingly, different lists find different candidates."
  36. Bethell 1991, p. 56.
  37. Baldwin 1944, p. 464.
  38. Baldwin 1944, pp. 164–84; Cressy 1975, pp. 28–9.
  39. Baldwin 1944; Quennell 1969, p. 18: "Tuition at Stratford was free."
  40. Honan 2000, pp. 49–51; Halliday 1962, pp. 41–9; Rowse 1976, pp. 36–44.
  41. Bethell 1991, p. 48.
  42. Nevalainen 1999, p. 336. The low figure is that of Manfred Scheler. The upper figure, from Marvin Spevack, is true only if all word forms (cat and cats counted as two different words, for example), compound words, emendations, variants, proper names, foreign words, onomatopoeic words, and deliberate malapropisms are included.
  43. Dawson & Kennedy-Skipton 1966, p. 9.
  44. Nelson 2004, p. 164: "... most anti-Stratfordians claim that he was not even literate. They present his six surviving signatures as proof."
  45. Kathman (1)
  46. Barrell 1940, p. 6: "The main contention of these anti-Stratfordians is that 'William Shakespeare' was a pen-name, like 'Molière,' 'George Eliot,' and 'Mark Twain,' which in this case cloaked the creative activities of a master scholar in high circles who did not wish to have his own name—or title—emblazoned to the world as that of a public dramatist."
  47. Matus 1994, p. 28.
  48. Shapiro 2010, pp. 255 (225).
  49. Price 2001, pp. 59–62.
  50. Saunders 1951, pp. 139–164; May 1980, p. 11.
  51. Smith 2008, pp. 621: "The plays have to be pseudonymous because they are too dangerous, in a climate of censorship and monarchical control, to be published openly."
  52. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 393, 446.
  53. Matus 1994, p. 26.
  54. Shapiro 2010, pp. 116–7 (103–4).
  55. McCrea 2005, pp. 21, 170–1, 217.
  56. Price 2001, pp. 146–8.
  57. Matus 1994, pp. 166, 266–7 cites James Lardner, "Onward and Upward with the Arts: the Authorship Question," The New Yorker, 11 April 1988, p. 103: "No obituaries marked his death in 1616, no public mourning. No note whatsoever was taken of the passing of the man who, if the attribution is correct, would have been the greatest playwright and poet in the history of the English language."
  58. Bate 1998, p. 63; Price 2001, p. 145.
  59. Price 2001, p. 157; Matus 1991, p. 201.
  60. Vickers 2006, pp. 16–7.
  61. Bate 1998, p. 20.
  62. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 163–4; Murphy 1964, p. 4: "For the evidence that William Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon (1564–1616) wrote the works attributed to him is not only abundant but conclusive. It is of the kind, as Sir Edmund Chambers puts it, 'which is ordinarily accepted as determining the authorship of early literature. It is better than anything we have for many of Shakespeare's dramatic contemporaries.'"; Nelson 2004, p. 149: "Even the most partisan anti-Stratfordian or Oxfordian agrees that documentary evidence taken on its face value supports the case for William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon ... as author of the poems and plays of Shakespeare."; McCrea 2005, pp. xii–xiii, 10.
  63. Gross 2010, p. 39.
  64. Dawson 1953, p. 165: "... in my opinion it is the basic unsoundness of method in this and other works of similar subject matter that explains how sincere and intelligent men arrive at such wild conclusions as those contained in This Star of England."; Love 2002, p. 200; McCrea 2005, p. 14; Gibson 2005, p. 10.
  65. Shapiro 2010, p. 305 (270); Bate 1998, pp. 36–7; Wadsworth 1958, pp. 2–3; Schoone-Jongen 2008, p. 5
  66. Martin 1965, p. 131.
  67. Murphy 1964, p. 5.
  68. Martin 1965, p. 135.
  69. Montague 1963, pp. 93–4.
  70. Montague 1963, pp. 123–4.
  71. Montague 1963, pp. 71, 75
  72. Nelson 2004, p. 155: "Throughout the First Folio, the author is called 'Mr.' or 'Maister,' a title exactly appropriate to the social rank of William Shakespeare."
  73. McCrea 2005, pp. 17–9.
  74. Hammond 2004, p. 161.
  75. Shapiro 2010, pp. 272-3 (239-40).
  76. Shapiro 2010, pp. 254–5 (224–5); Nelson 1998, pp. 79–82.
  77. Pendleton 1994, p. 29: "... since he had, as Clarenceux King, responded less than three years earlier to Brooke's attack on the grant of arms to the father of 'Shakespeare ye Player'—it may well have been more recent, the preface of Remaines claims it was completed two years before publication—Camden thus was aware that the last name on his list was that of William Shakespeare of Stratford. The Camden reference, therefore, is exactly what the Oxfordians insist does not exist: an identification by a knowledgeable and universally respected contemporary that 'the Stratford man' was a writer of sufficient distinction to be ranked with (if after) Sidney, Spenser, Daniel, Holland, Jonson, Campion, Drayton, Chapman, and Marston. And the identification even fulfils the eccentric Oxfordian ground-rule that it be earlier than 1616."
  78. McCrea 2005, pp. 7, 8, 11, 32; Shapiro 2010, pp. 268–9 (236–7).
  79. McCrea 2005, p. 191; Montague 1963, p. 97.
  80. Shapiro 2010, p. 271 (238); Chambers 1930, pp. II: 218–9.
  81. Shapiro 2010, p. 270 (238).
  82. Shapiro 2010, pp. 271 (238–9).; Chambers 1930, p. 224.
  83. Kathman (3); McMichael & Glenn 1962, p. 41.
  84. Price 1997, pp. 168, 173: "While Hollar conveyed the general impressions suggested by Dugdale's sketch, few of the details were transmitted with accuracy. Indeed, Dugdale's sketch gave Hollar few details to work with ... As with other sketches in his collection, Dugdale made no attempt to draw a facial likeness, but appears to have sketched one of his standard faces to depict a man with facial hair. Consequently, Hollar invented the facial features for Shakespeare. The conclusion is obvious: in the absence of an accurate and detailed model, Hollar freely improvised his image of Shakespeare's monument. That improvisation is what disqualifies the engraving's value as authoritative evidence. The image, printed from the same block in the revised 1730 edition of Antiquities of Warwickshire, similarly carries no authority."
  85. Kathman (2)
  86. Taylor 2002, p. 72, part 3.
  87. Matus 1994, pp. 121, 220.
  88. Bate 1998, pp. 72.
  89. McCrea 2005, pp. 64, 171; Bate 1998, p. 70.
  90. Lang 2008, pp. 36–7.
  91. Johnson 1969, p. 78. harvnb error: no target: CITEREFJohnson1969 (help)
  92. McCrea 2005, pp. 62–72.
  93. Claremont McKenna College 2010
  94. Elliott & Valenza 2004, p. 331.
  95. Shapiro 2010, p. 288 (253).
  96. Shapiro 2010, pp. 283–6 (249–251).
  97. Simonton 2004, p. 204.
  98. Simonton 2004, p. 203.
  99. Simonton 2004, p. 210: "If the Earl of Oxford wrote these plays, then he not only displayed minimal stylistic development over the course of his career (Elliot & Valenza, 2000), but he also wrote in monastic isolation from the key events of his day. These events would include such dramatic occasions the external threat of the 1588 Spanish Armada invasion and the internal threat of the 1586 plot against Queen Elizabeth that eventually resulted in the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots."
  100. Simonton 2004, p. 210, note 4: "For the record, I find the traditional attribution to William Shakespeare of Stratford highly improbable, even if not totally impossible. Instead, it seems more likely that the works were written by an aristocrat with close connections with Elizabeth's court. I really would like Edward de Vere to be the author of the plays and poems, reading them with that attribution in mind yields more literary insights than can be drawn from the sparse biography of Shakspere. Thus, I had hoped that the current study might strengthen the case on behalf of the Oxfordian attribution. I think that expectation was proven wrong."
  101. Shapiro 2010, pp. 293–4 (258–9).
  102. Shapiro 2010, p. 30 (29).
  103. Shapiro 2010, pp. 30–3 (29–32).
  104. Finkelpearl 1990, pp. 4–5.
  105. Friedman & Friedman 1957, pp. 1–4 quoted in McMichael & Glenn 1962, p. 56; Wadsworth 1958, p. 10.
  106. Bate 1998, p. 73; Hastings 1959, p. 486; Wadsworth 1958, pp. 8–16; McCrea 2005, p. 13; Kathman 2003, p. 622.
  107. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 99–110.
  108. Dobson 2001, p. 38. harvnb error: no target: CITEREFDobson_2001 (help)
  109. Sawyer 2003, p. 113.
  110. Shapiro 2010, pp. 87–8 (77–8).
  111. Wadsworth 1958, p. 19:"The Egyptian verdict of the Shakspeare Societies comes to mind; that he was a jovial actor and manager. I can not marry this fact to his verse."
  112. Dobson 2001, p. 31.
  113. Shapiro 2010, pp. 83–9 (73–9):"The shock waves of Strauss's work soon threatened the lesser deity, Shakespeare, for his biography too rested precariously on the unstable foundations of posthumous reports and more than a fair share of myths."(84)
  114. Gross 2010, p. 40.
  115. Schmucker 1853
  116. Shapiro 2010, p. 86 (76).
  117. Hart 1848; Wadsworth 1958, pp. 21–2.
  118. Jameson 1852.
  119. Bacon 1856
  120. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 412.
  121. Shapiro 2010, pp. 106–9 (95–7).
  122. Smith 1856; Shapiro 2010, pp. 119–20 (105–6).
  123. Bacon 1857
  124. Holmes 1867; Halliday 1957, p. 176.
  125. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 404.
  126. Donnelly 1888
  127. Wadsworth 1958, p. 57; Schoenbaum 1991, p. 412; Hackett 2009, pp. 154–5.
  128. Owen 1893; Wadsworth 1958, p. 57; Schoenbaum 1991, p. 412; Hackett 2009, pp. 154–5.
  129. Townsend 1857; Schoenbaum 1991, p. 403.
  130. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 55–6.
  131. McMichael & Glenn 1962, p. 199; Wadsworth 1958, pp. 74–5; Niederkorn 2004, pp. 82–5.
  132. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 34–5.
  133. Shapiro 2010, pp. 113–4 (100–1); Wadsworth 1958, pp. 34–5.
  134. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 391–2.
  135. Ross
  136. Shapiro 2010, pp. 144–5 (127); Wadsworth 1958, pp. 63–4.
  137. Shapiro 2010, p. 144 (127); Wadsworth 1958, p. 64.
  138. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 80–4.
  139. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 88–9; Garber 1997, p. 8.
  140. Wadsworth 1958, p. 86
  141. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 446; Zeigler 1895, pp. v-xi.
  142. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 106–10.
  143. Greenwood 1908; Wadsworth 1958, pp. 99–100.
  144. Niederkorn 2004, pp. 77–9.
  145. Shapiro 2010, pp. 149–58 (130–9).
  146. Robertson 1913; Vickers 2005.
  147. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 101–2.
  148. Looney 1920.
  149. May 2004, p. 222.
  150. Shapiro 2010, p. 218 (192).
  151. Webster 1923, pp. 81–6; Wadsworth 1958, p. 155.
  152. Nicoll 1932, p. 128.
  153. Shapiro 2010, pp. 11–4, 319–20 (11–3, 284).
  154. Brooks 1943.
  155. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 135, 139–42.
  156. Shapiro 2010, pp. 228–30 (200–2).
  157. Shapiro 2010, pp. 220–1 (194).
  158. Ogburn & Ogburn 1952.
  159. Wadsworth 1958, p. 127.
  160. Hackett 2009, p. 167.
  161. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 445.
  162. Wadsworth 1958, p. 153.
  163. Quoted in Shapiro 2010, pp. 228–9 (201).
  164. Shapiro 2010, pp. 230–3 (202–5).
  165. Shapiro 2010, pp. 232–3 (204–5).
  166. Bethell 1991, p. 47; Gibson 2005, pp. 48, 72, 124; Kathman 2003, p. 620; Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 430–40; Shapiro 2010, pp. 229–49 (202–19).
  167. Shapiro 2010, pp. 234–6 (206–8).
  168. Shapiro 2010, pp. 237 (208–9).
  169. Shapiro 2010, pp. 242–3 (212–3).
  170. Shapiro 2010, pp. 238 (209).
  171. Shapiro 2010, pp. 238 (209–10).
  172. Bethell 1991
  173. Matus 1991
  174. Shapiro 2010, pp. 246–8 (216–8).
  175. Shapiro 2010, pp. 248–9 (218–9); Hackett 2009, pp. 171–2.
  176. Niederkorn 2007
  177. Shapiro 2010, p. 4 (5).
  178. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 23–4.
  179. Smith 1856; Shapiro 2010, pp. 119–120 (105–6.)
  180. Halliday 1957, p. 175.
  181. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 387, 389.
  182. Wadsworth 1958, p. 41; Gibson 2005, pp. 151–71.
  183. Halliday 1957, p. 177.
  184. Gibson 2005, pp. 57–63; Wadsworth 1958, p. 36.
  185. Lee 2010, p. 371.
  186. Halliday 1957, p. 174.
  187. Halliday 1957, p. 176 note.
  188. Bacon 2002, pp. 318, 693.
  189. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 42–50.
  190. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 53–7.
  191. Wadsworth 1958, pp. 62–4.
  192. Blackstone 2002, p. 199; Nelson 2003, pp. 13, 444
  193. Nelson 2003, p. 248.
  194. May 1991, pp. 53–4.
  195. Nelson 2003, pp. 386–7.
  196. Shapiro 2010, p. 107 (95).
  197. May 2004, p. 298.
  198. Shapiro 2010, pp. 198–200 (174–6).
  199. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 431–2.
  200. Shapiro 2010, p. 215 (190).
  201. Shapiro 2010, p. 216 (190).
  202. May 2004, p. 222.
  203. Wadsworth 1958, p. 121; James & Rubinstein 2005, p. 37; McMichael & Glenn 1962, p. 159; Shapiro 2010, p. 239 (210).
  204. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 433–4; Shapiro 2010, p. 294 (258).
  205. McCrea 2005, pp. 181–5.
  206. Churchill 1958, pp. 47, 106–8.
  207. McCrea 2005, pp. 109–10.
  208. Shapiro 2010, pp. 220–2 (193–5).
  209. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 438; Shapiro 2010, pp. 221–2 (194–6).
  210. Ross
  211. Bethell 1991, p. 47.
  212. Wadsworth 1958, p. 127.
  213. Shapiro 2010, p. 223 (196).
  214. Gibson 2005, p. 27.
  215. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 445–6.
  216. Schoenbaum 1991, p. 446.
  217. Shapiro 2010, p. 247 (217).
  218. Schoenbaum 1987, p. 131.
  219. Schoenbaum 1991, pp. 446–7.
  220. Wadsworth 1958, p. 101.
  221. Wadsworth 1958, p. 105.
  222. Shapiro 2010, p. 215 (190).
  223. Shapiro 2010, p. 215 (190).
  224. Lefranc 1919, pp. 2: 87–199; Wilson 1969, p. 128; Londré 1997, p. 327.
  225. Gibson 2005, pp. 91–2; Shapiro 2010, p. 215 (189).
  226. Schoone-Jongen 2008, pp. 106, 164.
  227. Honigmann 1998, pp. 150ff.

References

External links

Stratfordian

General Non-Stratfordian

Baconian

Oxfordian

Marlovian

Other candidates


Shakespeare authorship question
A series on alternative authorship theories for the works of William Shakespeare
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