11/02/2011

Shakespeare Devere Scam

By Aaron Steffy


"Was Shakespeare a fraud?" asks the poster for the new Hollywood blockbuster Secret, which counsels the most famed lines in literary history come from the quill pen of Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford.

Today, the devere name lives on, attached to the planet's largest independent investment advisers "services Edward, whose debts were legendary and troublesome, may well have benefited from as one of the richest men of his time.

Edward devere was born in April 1550, the successor to one of England's oldest hereditary titles, the office of Lord Great Chamberlain and enormous estates, especially in Essex.

After his father's death, the young de Vere was brought up in the home of Sir William Cecil, one of Queen Elizabeth I's nearest advisers, a giant of the filthy, deadly world of Tudor politics and founding figure behind a political dynasty which produced 2 Brit Prime Ministers.

While he was given the best education in the Cecil household, Edward was not to become a political large player himself, it was rather with the arts that he made his mark in society.

The life of a Tudor noble was one of high status but also high risk. At only 17 Edward finished his first man, an unlucky Cecil servant who got in the way during fencing practice. Before the age of 21, when he took his father's seat in the House of Lords, he'd served in the military in Scotland and was known as a talented jouster.

Edward drifted out and in of favour at court, never really hitting the heights but also staying well away from the executioner's axe. He travelled, nearly losing his life when his ship was taken by pirates, and let a fortune run thru his fingers.

Only some of that money was wasted though, and it's as a patron of writers, actors and composers, that Edward devere is best recalled. 30 3 books were devoted to him as Earl of Oxford and two corporations of actors, one of them boys, bore his name, as well as a troupe of musicians.

He published his own poetry and literary scholar George Puttenham rated his comedies as the best of their kind from the Elizabethan court.

Nonetheless Elizabethan courtier poets "regardless of how learned "don't usually trouble Hollywood directors of the prominence of Autonomy Day's Roland Emmerich. J Thomas Looney (his publishers pleaded in vain for him to utilize a nom de plume) is the reason why Edward devere is on our radars today.

The idea that William Shakespeare "a simple actor from a tiny provincial city "could not be the man behind 37 plays of astonishing range, style and ability had been about since the mid-19th Century. How could so very little be known about this genius, students asked, and even ridiculed the 'illiterate scrawl ' of his known signatures.

More than 70 names have been put up as alternate Shakespeares. The most enduring have been brilliant polymath Francis Bacon, classy playwright and the sixth Earl of Derby, fast living dramatist Christopher Marlowe, and Edward de Vere.

Looney's Shakespeare identified in Edward devere, the 17th Earl of Oxford, was revealed in 1920 and opened a new chapter in Shakespearean conspiracy theories which remains entrancing to this day.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment