Who Really Wrote Shakespeare? Shakespeare Authorship 101

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2024
  • We know that Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare, because his name is on the works. In his introduction to the Shakespeare Authorship Question, attorney Alex McNeil takes a closer look at this assertion, highlighting the weaknesses and gaps in evidence for Will Shakspere of Stratford-upon-Avon and summarizing the case for Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, as the real author.
    Learn more at shakespeareoxfordfellowship.o....

Комментарии • 160

  • @sorellman
    @sorellman 9 месяцев назад +20

    I have studied extensively the matter and this is one of the best summaries of the evidence showing why William of Stratford could not be the author and that the real author of the Shakespeare canon was Edward de Vere. Highly recommended to the truth seeker among us ordinary people.

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy 9 месяцев назад +10

    I've encountered the authorship question numerous times before and dismissed the Oxfordian theory due to a lack of compelling evidence, but you present it in a much more convincing and systematic way.

  • @janscheffer1
    @janscheffer1 9 месяцев назад +18

    Thank you so much, Alex! Eloquent, concise and complete, a joy to listen to and a flawless explication of the case.

  • @michellek3714
    @michellek3714 9 месяцев назад +37

    Fascinating that De Vere’s life has so many parallels to Shakespeare’s plays. And the author’s knowledge of Italian and French, as well as Latin and Greek is difficult to explain for the Stratford man.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +3

      Since Stratford had a grammar school which was conducted almost entirely in Latin, but also taught French and the fundamentals of Greek (not that there is any reason Shakespeare would have needed Greek), I don't see how it would have been a problem.

    • @richardwaugaman1505
      @richardwaugaman1505 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@Jeffhowardmeade In all probability, Shakspere did not attend the grammar school and was semi-literate.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@richardwaugaman1505 You think it -- probable -- that the son of an alderman and one time mayor and justice of the peace, who was paying extra assessments in order to hold those posts, did not send his sons to the free grammar school? If not him, then who did? Oh, yeah. There was that tanner's boy. HE went, but the mayor's son did not.
      Who do you think it was hired the Oxford-educated schoolmasters who staffed the King Edward School?

    • @random_silicates
      @random_silicates 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jeffhowardmeade according to the Shakespeare BIrthplace Trust ("John Shakespeare: Who Was William Shakespeare's Father?"), John Shaksper ran into money problems from the 1570s to the 1590s. In 1572 he lost a court case on his illegal wool speculation, which had been lucrative, and soon he was no longer attending council meetings. In 1578 he was allowed some tax exemptions for poor relief, and in 1592 he quit going to church due his debts. William Shaksper was born in 1564, so eight years old when the money troubles started. There remains no evidence that William ever attended the school, and his seeming inability to sign his own name makes this seem unlikely. What does seem likely is that William took after his father as a speculative investor. We know that he speculated in grain. It's consistent with his and his father's character that he might have also speculated in play manuscripts written by others.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@random_silicatesAt what point did the school stop being free? Throughout the 1570s, John Shakespeare was still buying and leasing property, including an adjoining house to his home on Henley Street. He was far from destitute, even if having money WERE a requirement to send his sons to the Edward VI School. A poor tanner around the corner managed to send his son to the school. That son, Richard Field, went to London and apprenticed to a polyglot printer. He went on to print everything Shakespeare wrote specifically for publication.
      If attendance records for a school are a minimum requirement to admit that one was a poet, then Ben Jonson was not a poet, either, as none of the records of the Westminster School he supposedly attended survive.
      And your inability to read Elizabethan handwriting is your fault, not Shakespeare's. No paleographer ever said Shakespeare's handwriting showed a lack of education.

  • @billglaser8853
    @billglaser8853 9 месяцев назад +13

    Whenever anyone asks me why I am an Oxfordian, rather than having to listen to me ramble on for hours, or rather than having to read a doorstopper book, now all anyone has to do is to invest only one half hour of his or her life to get the answer. Thank you!

  • @markrist4238
    @markrist4238 9 месяцев назад +12

    Superb! Thank you. Some 10 or 12 years ago I read Mark Anderson's book: Shakespeare by Another Name. I never looked back. It's so nice to see a respected scholar, such as yourself, explain what Anderson had demonstrated to me about the vere, vere true author.

  • @christiantaylor1195
    @christiantaylor1195 9 месяцев назад +12

    Superb. The seething of Stratfraudians is music to my ears. Play on.

    • @richarddenton7724
      @richarddenton7724 2 месяца назад

      I am not a stratfordian particularly. I M just convinced that Oxford definitely did not have the talent to write the works. Whoever did was a great deal more gifted as a writer than Oxford was

    • @vetstadiumastroturf5756
      @vetstadiumastroturf5756 2 месяца назад +1

      @@richarddenton7724 Anyone who wasn't "William Shakespeare" did not have the talent to be Shakespeare. Unless they actually were Shakespeare. If Oxford was Shakespeare then he clearly did have the talent.

  • @SydneyCarton-sf3mq
    @SydneyCarton-sf3mq 5 месяцев назад +4

    I've read many books on the authorship controversy and am very impressed about the presentation of these arguments. This is a great video!

  • @larrygerfen2801
    @larrygerfen2801 9 месяцев назад +5

    Love it that Alex presents his case as a professional lawyer would.

  • @SAVANNAHEVENTS
    @SAVANNAHEVENTS 9 месяцев назад +9

    Always glad to see a new video! Ive watched every authorship video I can find on youtube.

  • @smhollanshead
    @smhollanshead 9 месяцев назад +7

    Shakespeare’s plays are so great and so deep that it’s difficult to believe that one man produced all these works.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 месяцев назад +1

      That is what has been claimed of anthropologist Jared Diamond. His breadth of knowledge has led some to joke that Jared Diamond is the collective pseudonym of the entire faculty of a leading university.
      Such people do exist in every era. Unsurprisingly, they are the ones we remember.

  • @a_lucientes
    @a_lucientes 9 месяцев назад +12

    Excellent video. Thanks you for making it. I remember being so surprised by how compelling C Ogburn's book was/is, right from the start. It's a massive doorstop of a book but very readable and fascinating if youre uncovering this for the first time. Because I had not really any biography on Shakespeare I read Schoenbaum's 'Shakespeare's Lives', 'Will in the World' & Shakespeare Without Doubt' only solidified the Oxfordian position for me. Then back to Oxfordian books. There are not that many, but what there is, are very good. I began w/ Looney's 1920 book that started it all, and then 'Shakespeare By Another Name', 'Shakespeare's Lost Kingdom', 'Shakespeare Suppressed' & Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography'.

  • @michellemelinger6137
    @michellemelinger6137 9 месяцев назад +8

    Excellent presentation! Thank you for the effort put in to creating this very well organized and researched argument for Oxford’s authorship.

  • @ThePultzFamily
    @ThePultzFamily 9 месяцев назад +15

    Thank you Sir for this brilliant overview! This puts the lay person in a position to make his own judgement, based on the circumstantial evidence.
    Greetings from Denmark, from a place only 5 miles from the grave of the real prince Amled

  • @SAVANNAHEVENTS
    @SAVANNAHEVENTS 9 месяцев назад +15

    Great overview for Authorship 101 which prompted me to wonder, based on some of your recent research, if Shakespeare was a cover for multiple authors working with De Vere? If so, could the multiple author theory one day be included in a 101 overview? Keep up the great work!

    • @richardwaugaman1505
      @richardwaugaman1505 4 месяца назад

      One theory is that the plays published for the first time 19 years after Oxford's death may have been edited by others, such as Anthony Munday. They were probably the playscripts written for court performance, and transparent allusions to court politics had to be disguised.

  • @richardwaugaman1505
    @richardwaugaman1505 9 месяцев назад +8

    Thanks for this, Alex!

  • @3000waterman
    @3000waterman 6 месяцев назад +1

    An absolutely excellent overview of the Oxford case. It's a case that offers evidence implying far more than 'reasonable doubt.' For transparency, I am already a convert of forty years standing.
    I note that Americans quite-rightly view themselves as heirs to Shakespeare's works. They also provide some of the finest commentary.
    One gripe, if I may - this excellent presentation is overly larded with long ads. I know RUclips is milking content for as much as it can squeeze out, but if the video author has any say in the matter, I counsel they should make as many ad reductions as are in their gift.

  • @boogiebegs
    @boogiebegs 9 месяцев назад +7

    thank you, Mr McNeil for this wonderful summation....
    as a English Lit major who studied Shakespeare's life (the wrong one's) and canon at a prestigious university, it angers me (yes, I'm that passionate about this) that we can not unequivocally state that the 17th Earl of Oxford as the REAL Shakespeare... at the very least, state that Shaksper is NOT the Bard... it's blatantly obvious - why can't/won't we just accept this as fact already?.... teaching students anything less than this obvious truth smacks of intellectually laziness...

    • @andy-the-gardener
      @andy-the-gardener 9 месяцев назад +3

      money and status.

    • @joecurran2811
      @joecurran2811 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@andy-the-gardenerIt's become a religion sadly. Hard to fight back against its power, but we're getting there, slowly but surely.

    • @wylier
      @wylier 4 месяца назад

      Because there's no universal condensus on who wrote the bards works. A professor I asked dismissed the claim outright, saying that no one else wrote them.

  • @WaM1756
    @WaM1756 9 месяцев назад +5

    Dear Alex - in the early 1980's I taught French in the "working class" high school (there were two) in a relatively small town in Oregon. For three years, I debated the Honors English teacher of the high school on the subject you so eloquently discoursed here. Who wrote the plays of Shakespeare? The candidate I argued (and believed and still believe to this day) to be the true author, was Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford identifying many if not most of the known facts you brought forth. I leaned a little more heavily than you on the fact that Edward was Elizabeth's favorite (lover? perhaps?...we were debating in a high school lol) and could get away with so many leading figures being mocked or caricatured (most especially Lord Burghley) in the plays. I hasten to add that at the end of our debate the students got to vote on who "won the debate;" I always lost. The Honors English teacher was highly regarded by his students (and most assuredly by me too).

    • @soltron1324
      @soltron1324 8 месяцев назад

      I thought the Earl of Essex was her fave. I don't know 🤷‍♂️

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@soltron1324Oxford was a favorite in his youth. He was an impressive dancer and apparently pretty good at jousting. Then he ran away to France without permission, blew his fortune, accused his wife of infidelity, knocked up one of the Queen's ladies, publicly objected to her plan to marry a French prince, refused to dance when commanded by the Queen, and abandoned his post during the Armada. There's a story that he accidentally farted while bowing before the queen and was so embarrassed that he stayed away from court for seven years. It's probably just a fart joke.

  • @tvfun32
    @tvfun32 9 месяцев назад +6

    DeVere did not have "formal legal training." This is an over reach. He received an honorary degree from Grays Inn because of William Cecil's influence. The man who wrote Shakespeare created and produced "The Comedy of Errors" in 1594 while attending Grays Inn where there is a statue of himself in the courtyard of Grays Inn and was profoundly knowledgeable of the law, practiced law as a lawyer, wrote about law that shows up in The Merchant of Venice and other plays, became a Judge, Attorney General and eventually the Lord Chancellor.

    • @patricktilton5377
      @patricktilton5377 9 месяцев назад +5

      The SONNETS were published posthumously in 1609, with the writer of the Dedication Page -- probably John Dee -- 'signing' it "T. T." in contrast to 'Shakespeare' himself writing the dedications to Southampton for "VENVS AND ADONIS" and "LUCRECE." The 6-2-4 cipher decodes both as "THESE SONNETS ALL BY EVER THE FORTH T" and "THESE SONNETS ALL BY EVER-LIVING WELL-WISHING T" i.e. by Edward de Vere and by God -- the 'T' standing for the Tau Cross, i.e. for Christ, i.e. God the Son, and "THE FORTH T" meaning "the 4th 'T" = the Petrine Cross, the upside-down cross : when the text of the Dedication is put into a 19-grid, the rebus of an upside-down cross shows up with the word "VERE reading upwards in a column, and the letters "D" and "E" on either side of the "V" in "VERE" [from the word "ADVENTVRER"] -- proving that "DE VERE" is the 4th T being referred to in the decryption of the 6-2-4 cipher. The name "BACON" doesn't show up in any possible descrambling of the letters making up the Dedication's text -- the letter "C" being wholly absent.
      Oh, and Bacon wasn't ever a Royal Ward, so why would he have written a play -- "ALL'S WELL" -- with a plot that mirrors the circumstances of Oxford's life, especially one that makes him out to be rather a conceited jerk, despite Helena's adoration of him? It makes infinitely more sense that Oxford wrote it as a Mea Culpa, depicting the wife he'd wronged as a virtuous, faithful heroine, and himself "warts & all." Percival Golding wrote that the same 'Bed-Trick" was used on Oxford that is portrayed being used on Bertram in the play (as is also used in "MEASURE FOR MEASURE," and hearkens back to the story of Tamar and Judah in Genesis).
      I have no doubt that Bacon was aware of Oxford's 'secret identity' as 'Shakespeare', and he may have helped prepare the Folio for publication . . . but Bacon wasn't Shakespeare. Yes, he had the legal bona fides which scholars expert in the Law could see in Shakespeare's works, but Oxford's "honorary degree" wasn't awarded to him without merit. He was a child prodigy, as his tutors all go out of their way to attest. In order to fulfill his role as the Earl of Oxford, he HAD to have a working knowledge of the Law : his duties required it of him.

  • @richardwaugaman1505
    @richardwaugaman1505 9 месяцев назад +9

    Over 1,100 views in less than 24 hours is astonishing! Strong evidence that people hunger for basic information on this timely topic. Congratulations, Alex!

  • @mancroft
    @mancroft 9 месяцев назад +5

    Excellent. Very interesting. Thank you.

  • @StarShippCaptain
    @StarShippCaptain 9 месяцев назад +6

    It is important to note that Edward De Vere, as the 17 Earl of Oxford, was in line for the throne. That is why he was immediately made a Ward of the State: to give him the best education England could muster. Placed him in Cecil House with probably the largest Library in the realm, and provided him with multiple private Tutors. He was also a Royal, and a child genius, in contrast to the ill-educated Shakspere from the small town of commoners (who also didn't have his children educated).

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +2

      De Vere was nowhere in the succession. Even if it were based on his standing as an earl, his was the oldest noble creation in England. They would literally have to run out of earls before he would have been tapped.

    • @joecurran2811
      @joecurran2811 7 месяцев назад +1

      He thought he was going to be King. Whether that's true or nor, it's important that he believed that.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@joecurran2811 If it's so important, why didn't he ever say so?

  • @tonykent59
    @tonykent59 9 месяцев назад +6

    An excellent synopsis of the evidence surrounding Shaksper and de Vere, thank you.

  • @nicolehuffman2995
    @nicolehuffman2995 9 месяцев назад +5

    Excellent presentation.

  • @brendanward2991
    @brendanward2991 9 месяцев назад +7

    Brilliant.

  • @bjmcmahon722
    @bjmcmahon722 8 месяцев назад +4

    @AlexanderWaugh opened my eyes & brought me here #Oxfordian #DeVere #Shakespeare #scriptorium #QE1 #Bacon #Dee #Marlowe

  • @GildaLee27
    @GildaLee27 9 месяцев назад +5

    Hard to imagine an Earl who left no will. Especially a lawyer. Now wondering if it wound up among the King's possessions and may still be extant somewhere among the vast holdings of the Windsors.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +2

      He wasn't a lawyer. He was briefly enrolled at Gray Inn, but the Inns of Court were basically a social club for toffs. De Vere never took part in any legal case nor expressed any legal language in any of his surviving letters.

    • @EccentricaGallumbits
      @EccentricaGallumbits 5 месяцев назад

      Dear old Robert Cecil surely took care of many inconvenient records.
      In his official court duties, Oxford took part in many, and all the most important legal cases, not as a lawyer but as one of the judging panel. (Essex Rebellion, Mary Queen of Scots, etc.)

  • @DNBon.an808
    @DNBon.an808 5 месяцев назад

    concise and great tempo. excellent presentation!

  • @smhollanshead
    @smhollanshead 9 месяцев назад +4

    You made a good case.

  • @6deste
    @6deste 7 месяцев назад

    That was wonderfully done, a tour de force. Thank you.

  • @StarShippCaptain
    @StarShippCaptain 9 месяцев назад +3

    For Author: (Note, at the end of Diana Price's List, you say Shakespeare is bringing up the rear." You meant to say: Shakspere.)

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +2

      No, he didn't. Price is wrong, but you misunderstood it if you thought she was referring to Shakespeare of Stratford.

  • @artrickard4494
    @artrickard4494 5 месяцев назад +2

    Why is it so hard for Shakespeare to be the author of his own work. There is no real evidence that the man did not write the plays.

  • @SaralinaLove
    @SaralinaLove 7 месяцев назад +2

    I also LOVE the book SWEET SWAN OF AVON by Robin P. Williams on this. Phenomenal research! ❤🎉❤

  • @VicTor-gi7so
    @VicTor-gi7so 6 месяцев назад +1

    as a layman i whole appreciate your work . thank you

  • @alcazar123456
    @alcazar123456 9 месяцев назад +3

    Nice summary. Oh, and to add one last little touch to the mystery, his supposed grave is empty!

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +2

      How do you know? Been doing a little digging?

    • @wylier
      @wylier 4 месяца назад

      Could it be that will was really... You know... Cue choral music here. 😋

  • @AnnaCatherineB
    @AnnaCatherineB 2 месяца назад

    I was trying to find more about how the "tragedies" are actually comedies that we have severely misunderstood. But this information has been very interesting. I wish it had been brought up in my college shakespeare class. At least one class could have gone into the true author lol.

  • @maggieadams8600
    @maggieadams8600 9 месяцев назад +3

    I just read this, ""One of the most common articles of Oxfordian faith is that there is great significance in the various spellings of Shakespeare's name. The spelling "Shakespeare," according to most Oxfordians, was used to refer to the author of the plays and poems, while the spelling "Shakspere" (or "Shaksper," in the version sometimes promoted by more militant Oxfordians such as Charlton Ogburn) was used to refer to the Stratford man. A milder version of this claim acknowledges that Elizabethan spelling was not absolute, but still says that the usual and preferred spelling of the Stratford man's name was "Shaksper(e)," as opposed to the poet "Shakespeare." These claims about spelling are usually accompanied by an assertion that the two names were pronounced differently: "Shakespeare" with a long 'a' in the first syllable, as we are accustomed to pronouncing it today, but "Shakspere" with a "flat" 'a,' so that the first syllable sounds like "shack." A separate but related claim involves hyphenation: the name was occasionally hyphenated in print as "Shake-speare," a fact which Oxfordians say points to it being a pseudonym. These claims are given more or less prominence in different presentations of the Oxfordian theory, but they are virtually always present in one form or another. Indeed, they are vital for the Oxfordian scenario, since they make it easier for Oxfordians to believe that the "William Shakespeare" praised as a poet was some mysterious figure with no apparent connection to the glover's son and actor "William Shaksper" from Stratford-upon-Avon.
    As it turns out, though, all of the above claims are false. Specifically:
    "Shakespeare" was by far the most common spelling of the name in both literary and non-literary contexts, and there is no significant difference in spelling patterns when we take into account such factors as handwritten vs. printed and Stratford vs. London spellings;
    there is no evidence that the variant spellings reflected a consistent pronunciation difference, but there is considerable evidence that they were seen as more or less interchangeable;
    There is no evidence whatsoever that hyphenation in Elizabethan times was ever thought to indicate a pseudonym, and other proper names of real people were also sometimes hyphenated.
    }As for Shakepeare wearing a mask in the portrait, it's quite obviously the shadow under his jaw, and it's just about the most stupid thing I ever heard!
    These "Oxfordian" (knobish), theories are just that, theories.

    • @vetstadiumastroturf5756
      @vetstadiumastroturf5756 9 месяцев назад +3

      Everything you wrote is exactly wrong.
      The London playwright's name was generally spelled as Shakespeare or Shake-speare. It is sometimes spelled with a short "a" but that usually includes a hyphen as in Shak-speare.
      The Stratford spelling was almost always with a short "a", sometimes as Shagspur and Shaxper. Obviously there was a difference in pronunciation.
      In 1917, Stratfordian Professors agreed to end the confusion regarding Shakespeare by eliminating the spelling of Shaksper and any other variation and changing them all to Shakespeare regardless of how they were actually spelled. As a result, Will's father John had his name changed to Shakespeare even though he never spelled his name that way. Not academically honest.
      There is a difference between a hyphenated name and a hyphenated pseudonym. A hyphenated name is multiple NAMES separated by a hyphen, as in Lady Angela Rose Montagu-Douglas-Scott.. A hyphenated pseudonym is two WORDS separated by a hyphen as in Martin Mar-prelate. When you see two words (like Shake and Spear) that aren't names but do tell a story, then there is a good chance that it is a pseudonym. Martin Mar-prelate wrote pamphlets that were critical of the church, as you would expect from the name. To Shake a Spear meant to take apolitical position. Shakespeare uses the metaphor himself in one of the Henry VI plays. To shake one's spear is also a naughty thing to do in public if you know what I'm saying, and the name would have scandalized puritans of the time.
      I don't know what you are looking at in the Droeshout portrait. There is either a shadow or stubble under his jaw, but beyond that there is a line that extends down from just behind the ear. It does not resemble any shadow, but does appear to be a mask, which would be appropriate for anyone who is the writer of plays because actors wore masks. It may not mean that Shake-speare was a pen name, but it is obviously there.
      The Oxfordian position may be a Theory, but so is the idea that some guy with maybe an elementary school education somehow spent 20 years as a very public actor and as the acknowledged greatest playwright in England's history, but in the process did not leave one scrap of paper with his writing on it, nor does anyone ever mention him as being a real person until years after his death. Perhaps you should explain why that is even more ridiculous than the theory that a member of the high nobility did not want his name attached to his work.

    • @commonberus1
      @commonberus1 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@vetstadiumastroturf5756 Then how come the protestant martyr John Oldcastle was often written Old-Castle was he a front name? When Anthony Munday called the Lord Mayor of London Thomas Campbell 'Thomas Camp-bell' was he calling the name a pseudonym? I could go on.
      As for the the for your contention that shakespeare of Stratford-Upon-Avon was almost always written without the 'e' after the 'k' I agree with you that is the way William Shakespeare and his father signed their names. But it is usually written with E after K. Particuarly in legal documents. Why would busy law clerks keep on adding a useless e if they did not hear an ake sound?

    • @joecurran2811
      @joecurran2811 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@commonberus1Were John Oldcastle and Thomas Campbell writing plays or pamphlets?

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@joecurran2811 Camden wrote that Englishmen derived their names "...from that which they commonly carried, as Palmer, that is, Pilgrime, for that they carried Palme when they returned from Hierusalem, Long-sword, Broad-speare, Fortescu, that is, Strong-shield, and in some such respect, Breake-speare, Shake-Speare, Shotbolt, Wagstaffe."
      Were all of those people writing pamphlets?

  • @nicokleinbeck6971
    @nicokleinbeck6971 7 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent research and presentation. There’s absolutely no evidence that Skaksper wrote the works attributed to Shake-speare.

    • @garbonomics
      @garbonomics 7 месяцев назад

      On the contrary. There’s no evidence Anyone but Shakespear wrote Shakespeare. These are just what anyone would call “circumstantial evidence”. And quite a few of these assertions are wrong or very liberal interpretations of the truth.

  • @maumusa123
    @maumusa123 2 месяца назад

    Well done. Spot on.

  • @countvlad8845
    @countvlad8845 9 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent circumstantial evidence that keeps adding up to make it very conceivable that Oxford was Shakespeare. On the other hand, is there any evidence that suggests Oxford wasn't Shakespeare? It would be interesting to compare evidence from each perspective.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +2

      Yes. His acknowledged poetry. Plus all of Shakespeare's contemporaries said it was him.

    • @soltron1324
      @soltron1324 8 месяцев назад

      There are also other writers who could have been involved.

    • @garbonomics
      @garbonomics 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yes! Stylometry has show that in fact only Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. Stylometric analysis of the known De Vere works show that he was in fact no Shakespeare at all.

    • @disgruntledcashier503
      @disgruntledcashier503 4 месяца назад +1

      the generally accepted chronology of Shakespeare's plays show that 12 of them were written after Oxford died in 1604.

  • @wayneferris9022
    @wayneferris9022 3 месяца назад

    Great Job!

  • @properitum9091
    @properitum9091 Месяц назад

    Tremendous summary, my one concern is the epitaph on the funerary monument - why would Johnson go to such extreme for someone that nobody had a frame of reference for? According to this talk it was erected at the time of the first folio printing.
    Why?
    KP

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade Месяц назад

      John Weever, a poet and antiquarian, visited Stratford in about 1618, and copied down the inscription on the monument. The First Folio went into production in 1621.

  • @JamesBoddie
    @JamesBoddie 6 месяцев назад +1

    These lectures are fascinating and this one is the best summary of the question. I wonder, though, who was responsible for perpetuating the myth of Shak-spear as author immediately after the death of him and Oxford. What was their motive?

    • @EccentricaGallumbits
      @EccentricaGallumbits 5 месяцев назад

      1) Writing for an audience of commoners was seen as shockingly unsuitable for nobles. It would be like today's Prince William acknowledging that he spends all his time penning x-rated fan fiction. Elizabeth I approved of the plays, but would never allow such scandal.
      2) Elizabeth, many of her most important courtiers, and most of Oxford's family were portrayed in the plays, often in embarrassing detail or unflattering light. (His brother-in-law Robert Cecil was E's omnipotent "fixer" at the end of her reign - and the inspiration for Richard III. The brother of the king of France was Bottom.) They wanted his luminous plays to be preserved, but wanted at all costs to keep the hoi polloi from catching on.
      3) Southampton was the only leader of the Essex Rebellion who was not executed. The Sonnets suggest that Oxford may have traded long-term anonymity for Southampton's life. "My name be buried where my body is, And live no more to shame nor me nor you."
      4) Without a front man, the popular search for the anonymous author's identity would have been ongoing, uncontainable, and eventually successful.
      5) But the clues and double meanings in the First Folio show that the ruse was intended to be pierced eventually. Who knew it would take so long.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 2 месяца назад

      ​@@EccentricaGallumbitsNot a single one of your explanations is backed by evidence. You're just guessing.

  • @tresjordan982
    @tresjordan982 8 месяцев назад +5

    My understanding is that the question is not who wrote Shakespeare but …whom! It was a group effort of some of Englands greatest minds to elevate the English language as had been being done in France by the Pleidians , a society of writers who expanded and edited all the Frankish dialects.
    The English group decided to do it thru common theatre , an Art below a soviergn , thus the secrecy. The hustler from Stratford upon Avon was a perfect foil…..plus he had funding and knew all the players. He was a producer!!

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 8 месяцев назад

      In his day, Shakespeare was considered low-brow. He used nouns as verbs and vice-versa. Ben Jonson said he "wanted art". Francis Beaumont said his poetry was "without scholarship".
      If you got such a collection of educated poets together to write the works of Shakespeare, what are the odds that none of them understood Aristotelian poetics?
      Shakespeare didn't.

    • @Winsflix
      @Winsflix 5 месяцев назад

      Except that whom is not the plural, but the objective, form of who.

  • @michaelarrowood4315
    @michaelarrowood4315 2 месяца назад

    This is an entirely new conspiracy theory for me! Awesome, and well presented.

  • @romanclay1913
    @romanclay1913 9 месяцев назад +15

    Sonnet 76: “That EVERy word doth almost tell my name.”
    -------Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

    • @stevenyafet
      @stevenyafet 9 месяцев назад +3

      While you have the book open, read 81 also and try to forget that dueling poets thing for once. I am forgotten and "your monument shall be my gentle verse... you stiill shall live (such virtue hath my pen) Where breath most breathes, even in the mouths of men."
      De Vere knew how good he was.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 8 месяцев назад

      Go back and check what is actually written in the 1609 edition of The Sonnets.

  • @stevenyafet
    @stevenyafet 9 месяцев назад +3

    Superb. What honest reader can turn away? @James Shapiro come out from the shadows, face to face and settle properly. To why it matters please add Elizabethan History is greatly clarified. Why have historians not corrected the record?? Correcting does not have to condone murder etc

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 месяцев назад

      Why have historians not corrected the record? Because it's just a bunch of speculation based on no evidence and goes against all the evidence that does exist.

  • @judgeaileencannon9607
    @judgeaileencannon9607 Месяц назад

    Gabriel Harvey wrote a heralded Latin work on Cicero in 1577. Cicero was heavily involved in Iulius Gaius story. Iulius Gaius history is all over the New Testament (for example the Passion narrative) and Shakespeare author believed Cicero writings stroking Iulius Gaius are part of the basis of the novels Marcus and Matthias. The author SAW similarities between pieces of hellenistic book Marcus and Cicero’s caesar adoration. By making fun of monarch’s, the author found satisfaction by equating that with making fun of and being above god. HighIQ people, right? Think they so clever.

  • @evukelectricvehicles
    @evukelectricvehicles 5 месяцев назад

    It's long been pretty obvious that various playwrights including women - often aristocratic, highly-educated and well-travelled - submitted their plays to London's theatre-owners. Many if not most of them sought anonymity(not money) and aimed to (politically) influence London's mixed-class theatre audiences for reasons that have been thoroughly researched and elucidated elsewhere - even in the Shakespeare authorship movie "Anonymous" starring Rhys Ifans and Vanessa Redgrave.
    However that movie/film and its director and actors conspicuously avoid even suggesting that a woman may have written some or all of William Shak'pear's(spelling!?) works.
    In fact the 2010 hit movie revival "St.Trinians - Fritton's Gold" starring Rupert Everett, Colin Firth and David Tennant is infinitely bolder in that respect. In the following two film clips the St.Trinians' girls discover the truth( "Shakespeare was a woman!") in the hidden vaults of London's Globe Theatre during a performance of Romeo and Juliet:
    1)ruclips.net/video/HToCKaVtoLg/видео.html
    2)ruclips.net/video/j47TpZIotCE/видео.htmlsi=vpEHdgMBmbQCYygQ
    Paul G

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 2 месяца назад

      "Obvious" implies that there is evidence which anyone can see. Yet there is no such evidence.

  • @edp3202
    @edp3202 6 месяцев назад

    I didnt know many if the plays were reworked works of previous plays from medieval times and before even. Oral history.

  • @peterdowney1492
    @peterdowney1492 8 месяцев назад +1

    Shakespeare as a moneylender? I've never ever heard that before. But I decided I might just be wrong, so I did a Google search. Apparently, it is a common cryptic clue. And the other reference of course was to the play The Merchant of Venice.
    I believe there is reason to doubt his authorship. Nevertheless, whilst I have listened to people like Mark Ryalance, Elizabeth Winker and Alexander Wagh, I have never come across this from them. I may have missed it and I'm open to being wrong.

    • @peterdowney1492
      @peterdowney1492 8 месяцев назад

      Well, more reading directs me to a number of people claiming this. So, maybe I'm wrong. But I suspect someone has said it (erroneously?) and gone with it. There is certainly a letter from 1698 (the only one recorded to be addressed to him) asking for help in raising money. "Shakespeare Documented" states:
      "This request indicates that Shakespeare was seen either as a potential moneylender, or, more likely, as a Stratford man sufficiently creditworthy in London to secure Quiney a loan."
      So, here it's indicated he MIGHT be seen as a potential moneylender; though with the likelyhood it was something else.
      Now, I don't know but if this letter, and this letter alone, is what is being used by those claiming he was a moneylender then it's poor evidence.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@peterdowney1492There's also a lawsuit from 1604 in which Shakespeare is the plaintiff in a suit to recover payment for malt sold on credit to a local tavern keeper. Technically a loan, though not of money.
      Anti-Stratfordians often conflate Shakespeare with his father, John, who did lend money at usurious interest and traded illegally in wool.

  • @mkj1887
    @mkj1887 8 месяцев назад

    Maybe the boxer was on to something after all.
    There is an old joke that goes like this:
    A boxer is being interviewed, and a reporter asks him, "What do you think of Shakespeare?", and the boxer replies, "I'll moider da bum.". Given that De Vere is the actually the author of the works commonly attributed to William Shakespeare, it seems that the boxer actually landed a solid punch.

  • @regmunday8354
    @regmunday8354 4 месяца назад

    Never understood the 'two right eyes' comment about one of the WS portraits. He's looking slightly to his left. So what?

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 2 месяца назад

      The engraver who made the image, Martin Droushout, wasn't a great artist. All of his engravings have that slightly weird trait.

  • @saatmohd9482
    @saatmohd9482 5 месяцев назад

    it is I who wrote Shakespeare plays

  • @EVUK-bd2vn
    @EVUK-bd2vn 2 месяца назад

    Two top female authorship candidates - watch these two excellent RUclips'd presentations re: Mary Sidney and Amelia Bassano by Dr. Robin Williams and John Hudson.
    Both Mary Sidney and Amelia Bassano are obviously infinitely more likely to have written some or all of the plays than the semi-literate boorish wheeler-dealer and fortune-seeking chancer from Stratford !!
    And please remember that - unlike men - any women who did write plays had no choice but to hide behind a pseudonym if they wanted them to be performed in public theatres!
    1) Video: Mary Sidney - Countess of Pembroke:
    ruclips.net/video/AU5LZFhdLp8/видео.html
    2) Video: Amelia Bassano - "The Dark Lady":
    ruclips.net/video/tyn-3GNOd7w/видео.html
    Paul G

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 2 месяца назад

      They're both infinitely more likely to have written the works despite nobody ever saying they did and their extant writing being nothing like Shakespeare's at all?

  • @alfonsoantonromero932
    @alfonsoantonromero932 3 месяца назад

    También podría ser Cristofer Marlowe que no era aristócrata pero estaba relacionado con la nobleza y fingió su propia muerte.

    • @richardwaugaman1505
      @richardwaugaman1505 3 месяца назад

      But it's Oxford's 1570 Geneva Bible that contains the many annotations that match the biblical allusions in Shakespeare. There's nothing like that in Marlowe's case.

  • @roximol9829
    @roximol9829 8 месяцев назад +1

    Someone else!

  • @frankathl1
    @frankathl1 6 месяцев назад

    I’ve always liked to claim that the plays were written by a different author of the same name.

  • @ameriloe
    @ameriloe 3 месяца назад

    Acquisition or possession of a coat of arms wasn’t exclusive to the higher social classes. All social ranks could bear arms. There were many armigerous labourers.

  • @EVUK-bd2vn
    @EVUK-bd2vn Месяц назад

    Surely(so to speak!) the most open-minded and logical conclusion - until proven otherwise - is that a male and female group or 'Shakespeare Salon' of playwrights wrote but NOT co-wrote the plays, then submitted them to the group for read-throughs, finessing, minor or not-so-minor changes and suggestions - just as movie screen-writers do. And as always noone points out that (would-be) female playwrights had one other major reason to hide behind a male pseudonym in Elizabethan England because women were not permitted to write plays and have them publicly performed under their own names or using any female name for that matter!
    So I'll continue to broad-mindedly believe - until proven otherwise - that the likes of Mary Sidney, Amelia Bassano, Marlowe and Edward de Vere all contributed their own individual but "willfully"(!!) very 'Shakespearean' plays to a Shakespeare Salon or collective - and a Mr. Will 'Spellcheck' Shak'spear from Stratford, real actors, closet actresses and others in the theatre business would also frequently attend the Shakespeare Salon's meet-ups. And much (very productive) fun would have been had by all.
    I can't wait for a now long-overdue movie sequel to "Anonymous" that reflects and both entertainingly and intelligently dramatises all of the above and much much more besides..
    Paul G

    • @vetstadiumastroturf5756
      @vetstadiumastroturf5756 Месяц назад

      A claim such as this is interesting, but requires evidence of communication between the principles. There is none. The theory has been considered and must be rejected for lack of evidence. A better explanation is that Edward De Vere had a dedicated staff of secretaries to take dictation, acquire materials, and bring his work to the publisher, and that De Vere a particular fascination for writing under pseudonyms, of which the number is over 100, including Mary Sidney, Robert Greene, Thomas Nashe, Arthur Golding, William Adlington and William Shakespeare.

  • @patrickmyers9169
    @patrickmyers9169 8 месяцев назад

    20:38 vultus tela vibrat = your face shakes spears, although vultus is very close to vultis "you all will" from volo, velle volui (volo/vis/vult // volumus VULTIS volunt). So close!

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 8 месяцев назад

      No, it does not = your face shakes spears. Oxfordians used to spill buckets of ink trying to justify why Harvey that choice when there was a specific Latin word for spear. These days they just ignore that it's bad Latin and run with it.
      Recently, after years of relying on Oxfordian BM Ward's translation, somebody went back to the original and discovered that Harvey wasn't ever referring to De Vere's face.

  • @waggishsagacity7947
    @waggishsagacity7947 4 месяца назад

    I'd like to get a new license plate for my car with the following (more or less): ED17DV4T. If you can't decipher this, you're still NOT an Oxfordian. Cheers.

  • @manciano2009
    @manciano2009 4 месяца назад

    It is curious to note the resistance to the idea that Shakespeare was John Florio. In First fruits there are over 25 phrases that reappear in Shakespeare's plays, another 15 come directly from Michel de Montaigne's Essays (which Florio translated to English), various views of the world that echo the philosophy of Giordano Bruno (Florio's friend). Florio was well acquainted with the plays that underlie many of Shakespeare's works (Italian and French plays) and-great coincidence-all the cities in which some of Shakespeare's plays are set, and in particular Messina, of which he gives us a couple of details from someone who knows the city not from reading its name on a map. Florio was a scholar, knowing Latin and a little Greek, having been in contact with some Greekists. Certainly he knew the Parallel Lives of Plutarch, Suetonius and Ovid. He was hated in London by many people for being an Italian and being culturally very active. Florio's grandmother was a Crollalanza (Shake Speare in Italian) and could have been a perfect pseudonym. Florio or no Florio, it will never come to a real investigation, until the academic power and authority, find the humility to say: let's really put everyone together to study, all the possibilities. I know that for a Brit the idea that Shakespeare was Italian is an almost unbearable shock (like telling a Catholic that Jesus was Chinese), but as the ancients used to say: Plato amicus sed... magis amica veritas. Let's see in the future the evolution of research.

  • @AnnaCatherineB
    @AnnaCatherineB 2 месяца назад +2

    It makes a lot more sense to me that the author of the plays was wealthy due to the comedic cruelty directed at lower classes in his plays.

  • @simonsmith3030
    @simonsmith3030 16 дней назад

    The real question is why people still believe that the guy from Stratford Upon Avon wrote the plays. The reason IMO is authority. People LOVE to be told what they should know. There are vested interests like the Stratford Upon Avon tourist board. There are also insufferable arrogant bar stewards who claim they are this or that in the academic world. And as for criticising Oxfordians as mostly Americans, so what? I'm English and I listen to people who are truth followers not people who might share the same flag as myself.
    As a working class boy who went to a grammar school I would love to believe the greatest writer in the history of the world was one of us. The truth is, De Vere had talent and importantly, the best education for a future wordsmith there was possible. Partisanship towards William of Stratford owes a lot to a dislike of privilege. I understand that. Indeed, if anything, the notion that a nobleman was the greatest writer in the English language raises important questions of how education can make such a big difference. It illustrates how much talent there potentially is, if only the right environment was provided for.
    I mention that Lorenzo Medici, of wealthy heritage is regarded as one of Italy’s finest poets. Given the opportunity and slim demographic De Vere represents, a thousand "Shakespeares" could be turned out every year, but who would do all the donkey work supporting those capable of such Maslowvian self-actualisation? And let’s appreciate De Vere’s teachers as well. As a chess player, I know that a world champion is not only himself and talent but his environment inclusive of teachers and sufficient wealth to travel and play.
    Oh, to have the foresight to be born to wealthy parents!
    ***
    A great presentation and a real pity a content provider has to put up so much arrogance and fallacious argument in the comments. The realisation of De Vere as Shakespeare will grow with every funeral of the current generation of teachers of English Literature…

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 6 дней назад

      Maybe it's because of all the evidence that says Shakespeare the poet and Shakespeare the gentleman and actor from Stratford were the same man. I don't need a PhD to tell me what I can see with my own eyes.

  • @mkj1887
    @mkj1887 8 месяцев назад +1

    A more important issue of true authorship is that of the New Testament. The New Testament is a complete fabrication, from start to finish. It was written by Josephus Flavius, a Jew who went over to the Roman side, in order to undermine Judaism, which was a thorn in the side of the Roman Empire. He wanted to create an alternative religion for people to flock to, in order to prevent people from converting to Judaism, and he succeeded hugely. The alternative religion that he devised (birth in a manger, a last supper, etc.) was based almost entirely on something known as Mithraism.

  • @thomridgeway1438
    @thomridgeway1438 7 месяцев назад

    One small note of mild interest that I would like to ask someone who is deeply into this rabbit hole. Why did King James continue the £1000 grant as he did to Walsinghome? It was a huge sum of money for someone so frivolous, especially as Oxford was a notorious spendthrift. Any one new to the Crown would have stopped it at once. A dour Scot, James the Sixth was just as tight fisted as Elizabeth. I can only conclude that he consented to this as he was in on the secret. The secret being that Devere controlled and ran a closet team of writers and poets, including Marlowe and Bacon, who's intent was to socially engineer and provide political propaganda. Just as a Government would fund a media channel and a intelligence network today - the two always work hand-in-hand.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 7 месяцев назад

      James was actually a huge spender, just like De Vere. The answer lies in his Secretary of State and Lord Privy Seal, Robert Cecil. As head of the Privy Council, Robert was instrumental in getting De Vere's welfare check continued. While his motives for this can't be known for certain, he sent a letter to the guardian caring for his nieces to be on the look out for De Vere, who he worried might try to take custody of them in order to get at the money William Cecil had left them. Basically, I think he worried what De Vere might do if deprived of his sole source of income.
      De Vere also had ceremonial duties as the Lord Great Chamberlain. It would have looked bad were the guy handing the King his insignia of office on coronation day dressed as a pauper. Both James and Robert Cecil were invested in maintaining the status quo.
      I don't see how any of this would have happened had De Vere murdered Robert's father in effigy on stage and mocked Robert, who was a hunchback, with the character Richard III.

    • @EVUK-bd2vn
      @EVUK-bd2vn 2 месяца назад

      But like most authorship free-thinkers you don't even think to refer to any FEMALE candidates!
      So why not open your clearly only half-open eyes much wider:
      Two top female authorship candidates - watch these two excellent RUclips'd presentations re: Mary Sidney and Amelia Bassano by Dr. Robin Williams and John Hudson.
      Both Mary Sidney and Amelia Bassano are obviously infinitely more likely to have written some or all of the plays than the semi-literate boorish wheeler-dealer and fortune-seeking chancer from Stratford !!
      1) Video: Mary Sidney - Countess of Pembroke:
      ruclips.net/video/AU5LZFhdLp8/видео.html
      2) Video: Amelia Bassano - "The Dark Lady":
      ruclips.net/video/tyn-3GNOd7w/видео.html
      Paul G

  • @gamestation2690
    @gamestation2690 3 месяца назад +2

    Obviously, Shakespeare did. Duh.

  • @HighWealder
    @HighWealder 5 месяцев назад

    Seems to be an unlimited number of non British experts lecturing us on Shakespear.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 2 месяца назад

      As well as an unlimited number of non-Shakespeare experts.

  • @Jalcolm1
    @Jalcolm1 2 месяца назад +2

    Silly. There is much in Shakspere’s life that is in the plays. But it is true that God didn’t write the Bible. Oh… and by the way… nobody died for my sins. Yet. W. Shakespeare was a forgiving man.
    On his behalf, I forgive youse.

  • @vgovger4373
    @vgovger4373 6 месяцев назад

    All this can be explained if he had autism, or was dyslexic.

  • @JimiHendrix-es4lv
    @JimiHendrix-es4lv 5 месяцев назад +1

    We don't know a lot about Shakespeare's life, but non Stratfordians need to do more than just give reasons why they think Shakespeare wasn't the author. They need to provide positive evidence for a different author. I've never seen any.

  • @StarShippCaptain
    @StarShippCaptain 9 месяцев назад +6

    Who uses a HYPHEN in their Surname? Use of a hyphen in Shake-speare, and sometimes a double hyphen (Shake=Speare) for emphasis, clearly indicates not a real name, but a pseudonym. This is one of the strongest evidences of a HIDDEN IDENTITY.

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade 9 месяцев назад +1

      Feel free to quote anyone before the late 19th Century who thought that was true. Certainly nobody in Shakespeare's time thought so.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 9 месяцев назад

      "Who uses a HYPHEN in their Surname?"
      Edward and Elizabeth Allde and Robert Waldegrave for starters. They were all printers from the early modern period who hyphenated their own names on the title pages of works they printed. See, for example, _The Second Part of the Honest Whore_ by Thomas Dekker that was "Printed by Elizabeth All-de for Nathaniel Butter".
      Also, regarding Shakespeare as a pseudonym because of a hyphen, in Ben Jonson's 1616 _Works_ Shakespeare's name appears in two cast lists. In _Every Man in his Humour_ he appears as "Will Shakespeare", but in the cast list for _Sejanus His Fall_ he appears as "Will. Shake-Speare". So are you telling us that for this performance specifically that a pseudonym somehow became embodied and pranced about a stage for two hours?

  • @thoutube9522
    @thoutube9522 9 месяцев назад +5

    A boy from Stratford turned out to be talented.
    That's kind of all you need to know.
    Now let's get to 102

    • @StarShippCaptain
      @StarShippCaptain 9 месяцев назад

      Literary "talent" and "imagination" does not provide the facts necessary to write the Shake-Speare Cannon. Edward De Vere, as the 17 Earl of Oxford, was in line for the throne. That is why he was immediately made a Ward of the State (at age 12) upon the death of his father: to give him the best education England could muster. Placed him in Cecil House with probably the largest Library in the realm, and provided him with multiple private Tutors. He was also a Royal, and a child genius, in contrast to the ill-educated Shakspere from the small town of commoners (who also didn't have his children educated).
      One Comment (above) provides this PROOF and EVIDENCE for Oxford as the true identity of "Shake-Speare":
      I remember being so surprised by how compelling Charles Ogburn's book was/is, right from the start. It's a massive doorstop of a book but very readable and fascinating if youre uncovering this for the first time. Because I had not really any biography on Shakespeare I read Schoenbaum's 'Shakespeare's Lives', 'Will in the World' & Shakespeare Without Doubt' only solidified the Oxfordian position for me. Then back to Oxfordian books. There are not that many, but what there is, are very good. I began w/ Looney's 1920 book that started it all, and then 'Shakespeare By Another Name', 'Shakespeare's Lost Kingdom', 'Shakespeare Suppressed' & Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography'.

    • @smaycock2
      @smaycock2 9 месяцев назад +6

      Dismissing something you haven't studied is soooo easy. Ignorance is bliss. We do not say he couldn't--just that there is a lot of evidence that he didn't.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 9 месяцев назад

      @@smaycock2 And that evidence would be...?

    • @HarryWolf
      @HarryWolf 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@Nullifidian Did you actually watch this video?

  • @Stebbo8292
    @Stebbo8292 23 дня назад

    So you are a retired lawyer...I'm one of the most prolific directors of Shakespeare's works worldwide and studied under the founder of UK University drama, Prof Wickham. Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. Little green men from Mars did not build the pyramids either. When Prof Wickham was confronted with a rebellious graduate student who wanted to write his dissertation on this absurd theory he refused to mark it. All the evidence is there in the brilliant CONTESTED WILL by Prof Shapiro. Oxford was a terrible writer, by the by.

    • @simonsmith3030
      @simonsmith3030 16 дней назад

      So...Your dad is bigger than his dad...You make an excellent case...

  • @terenzo50
    @terenzo50 9 месяцев назад +2

    This again? Had a teacher in high school back in the 1960s who was into Baconiana. Sometimes "scholarship" goes nowhere for generations.

  • @lyndabarron8548
    @lyndabarron8548 16 дней назад

    Given another thousand years of pontificating, it will always remain a mystery. So, spend some time doing something useful.

  • @DavidMacDowellBlue
    @DavidMacDowellBlue 9 месяцев назад +2

    You are ignoring/denying the genuine evidence, while creating entire mountains out of suggestions of mole hills on behalf of your candidate.

  • @jimnewcombe7584
    @jimnewcombe7584 9 месяцев назад +3

    I'm 30 seconds into this (and won't listen further at the moment) - it surprises me not in the least that people who suppose that Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare live in America, where they don't believe in moon landings yet believe in yetis - and believe that their one and only true god would bother to write a book for human beings (which would be like a human dedicating a masterpiece to an infinitesimally invisible microbe). If you cannot recite several poems of Shakespeare by heart then you have no interest in the man at all - you're merely a monger of conspiracy theory. If you knew the work at all, you'd know the man from Stratford wrote it. The most unassailable account is surely Ben Jonson's , who knew his work and the man personally. Nobody doubts that Jonson wrote the work of Jonson (who was more classically educated, and was the son of a brick layer). In any case, the work is what counts, not the person who wrote it. Are we going to "cancel" the paintings of Caravaggio because he was a murderer?

    • @vetstadiumastroturf5756
      @vetstadiumastroturf5756 9 месяцев назад +3

      It doesn't surprise me in the least that the British people can't deal with being duped yet again by the foreigners who have ruled their country since William the Conqueror. Ben Jonson was a murderer too. The "account" he makes of Shakespeare is in a poem. Poems shouldn't be taken as literal, because they are poems.

    • @anthonythorne8708
      @anthonythorne8708 9 месяцев назад +9

      Derek Jacobi and John Gielgud also felt that Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare. They're not American, they don't believe in yetis, and I recall they studied Shakespeare a bit more than you and I. Try again.

    • @HarryWolf
      @HarryWolf 9 месяцев назад +5

      I'm British and I believe that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, wrote the plays under the pseudonym William Shakespeare.

    • @Stebbo8292
      @Stebbo8292 23 дня назад

      Excellent. I strayed into this but in infuriates me that anyone should doubt that a great artist is a great artist because he was not a noble who went to Oxbridge. MOST great artists have relatively humble origins, very few are Earls.