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Edward de Vere

Writer

Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford, was a poet and dramatist who, in recent years, has become a key figure in the debate about the authorship of the works of William Shakespeare. De Vere was a well-educated and well-travelled member of the court of England's Elizabeth I, praised by his contemporaries for his poems and plays. In the 1920s scholars began to consider him as the author of most, if not all, of the sonnets and plays attributed to William of Stratford-on-Avon (traditionally known as William Shakespeare). Since the 1990s the debate has heated up, with loyal Stratfordians defending William against arguments from Oxfordians who think de Vere's background makes him a more likely candidate. De Vere supporters point to a number of clues, including his education at Cambridge and Oxford; his extensive travels in France, Germany and Italy; his knowledge of court customs; his involvement with actors and his lease on the Blackfriars Theater in London; and the fact that his maternal uncle was Arthur Golding, a well-known translator of Ovid, and his paternal uncle was Henry Howard, the "inventor" of the sonnet.

Four Good Links

The Edward de Vere Studies Conference

Presenting papers and their arguments for de Vere as Shakespeare

The Shakespeare Fellowship

Academics addressing the authorship question

The Shakespeare Mystery

Good, all-purpose PBS site on the debate, including the Stratfordian view

Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford

Biography, discussion and selected works

Vital Stats

Birth

April 1550

Birthplace

Hedingham Castle, Essex, England

Death

June 1604
(age 54)

Best Known As

17th Earl of Oxford and maybe the real Shakespeare