This category is for sites dealing with the possibility that Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford, was the true author of the works attributed to Shakespeare.
More information
More information
Subcategories 1
Sites 15
A review of the Joseph Sobran book.
Short article about using linguistics to argue for de Vere's authorship.
Promoting the view that Oxford was the true author of Shakespeare's works.
Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford, Renaissance English poet and courtier. Life, works, resources. At Luminarium.
Examines the possible misinformation about Shakespearean authorship presented as fact by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Dissects the errors in an analysis of the authorship debate by the New York Times.
Peter Morton analyzes Andrew Field's The Lost Chronicle of Edward de Vere (1990), and Absent Thee from Felicity (1975), by Rhoda Henry Messner.
Background on the theory.
An analysis of Roger Stritmatter's dissertation.
Further analysis of the dissertation.
News, resources and discussion boards on the Shakespeare Authorship question with special emphasis on Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford.
WGBH's TV program exploring the Shakespeare authorship question. Tapes and transcripts available.
A guide to British literature of the Renaissance with over 100 original pages, biographies, and works never before published on the web. Also includes several hundred links to additional resources.
A computer-aided analysis of the commonalities of style in de Vere and Shakespeare.
James Hammond's argues in favor of Oxford as the author of Shakespeare's works.
Short article about using linguistics to argue for de Vere's authorship.
News, resources and discussion boards on the Shakespeare Authorship question with special emphasis on Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford.
James Hammond's argues in favor of Oxford as the author of Shakespeare's works.
Examines the possible misinformation about Shakespearean authorship presented as fact by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Dissects the errors in an analysis of the authorship debate by the New York Times.
An analysis of Roger Stritmatter's dissertation.
Further analysis of the dissertation.
A review of the Joseph Sobran book.
Promoting the view that Oxford was the true author of Shakespeare's works.
A guide to British literature of the Renaissance with over 100 original pages, biographies, and works never before published on the web. Also includes several hundred links to additional resources.
Peter Morton analyzes Andrew Field's The Lost Chronicle of Edward de Vere (1990), and Absent Thee from Felicity (1975), by Rhoda Henry Messner.
Background on the theory.
WGBH's TV program exploring the Shakespeare authorship question. Tapes and transcripts available.
Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford, Renaissance English poet and courtier. Life, works, resources. At Luminarium.
A computer-aided analysis of the commonalities of style in de Vere and Shakespeare.
