Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question

There is at present no consensus concerning the true authorship of the monumental literature that we ascribe to “Shakespeare”. Orthodox scholarship attributes this corpus to a man who was born and who died in Stratford-Upon-Avon, who spelled his name William Shakspere (or variants thereof, almost a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peter Sturrock, Kathleen E Erickson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SSE 2020-06-01
Series:Journal of Scientific Exploration
Online Access:https://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/1671
id doaj-9f16bb3e404342deab86eb559c9c903e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9f16bb3e404342deab86eb559c9c903e2020-11-25T03:14:20ZengSSEJournal of Scientific Exploration0892-33102020-06-01342Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship QuestionPeter SturrockKathleen E Erickson0San Jose State University There is at present no consensus concerning the true authorship of the monumental literature that we ascribe to “Shakespeare”. Orthodox scholarship attributes this corpus to a man who was born and who died in Stratford-Upon-Avon, who spelled his name William Shakspere (or variants thereof, almost all with a short “a”), who could not write his own name consistently, and who may have been illiterate – as were his parents and as were, essentially, his children. For these and other reasons, many alternative candidates have been proposed. At this date, the leading such candidate is Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. We approach the Authorship issue from a scientific perspective. We frame the key question as that of Secrecy or No Secrecy. According to orthodox scholarship, the Authorship Issue does not involve considerations of secrecy. According to independent scholarship, considerations of secrecy are fundamental to the Authorship Issue. We follow the initiatives of Jonathan Bond, John Rollett, and David Roper, who all brought their considerable mathematical expertise to the challenge of identifying and deciphering cryptograms embodied in the Dedication of the Sonnets and in the Inscription on the “Shakespeare” Monument. We show that the combined statistical significance of the cryptograms is overwhelming: The probability that the evidence contained in the cryptograms has occurred by chance rather than by intent is less than one part in one million-billion. Hence the messages must be accepted as the intentional creations of the authors – Oxford (not Thomas Thorpe, as usually assumed) for the Dedication, and Ben Jonson for the Inscription. The cryptograms confirm the orthodox suspicion that the intended recipient of the Sonnets was Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton (so also confirming the orthodox belief that Southampton was the “Fair Youth” of the Sonnets). These discoveries resolve some of the well-known outstanding puzzles concerning the Authorship Issue such as the Author’s familiarity with Europe and its languages (especially Italy), his intricate knowledge of the lives of monarchs and nobility, his detailed and highly accurate knowledge of the law, etc. (see Table 1). However, this change in perspective necessarily raises new questions that will call for new research. Keywords: Shakespeare, Edward de Vere, William Shakspere, cryptograms, Cardano Grille https://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/1671
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter Sturrock
Kathleen E Erickson
spellingShingle Peter Sturrock
Kathleen E Erickson
Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
Journal of Scientific Exploration
author_facet Peter Sturrock
Kathleen E Erickson
author_sort Peter Sturrock
title Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
title_short Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
title_full Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
title_fullStr Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
title_full_unstemmed Behind the Mask – An Inquiry into the Shakespeare Authorship Question
title_sort behind the mask – an inquiry into the shakespeare authorship question
publisher SSE
series Journal of Scientific Exploration
issn 0892-3310
publishDate 2020-06-01
description There is at present no consensus concerning the true authorship of the monumental literature that we ascribe to “Shakespeare”. Orthodox scholarship attributes this corpus to a man who was born and who died in Stratford-Upon-Avon, who spelled his name William Shakspere (or variants thereof, almost all with a short “a”), who could not write his own name consistently, and who may have been illiterate – as were his parents and as were, essentially, his children. For these and other reasons, many alternative candidates have been proposed. At this date, the leading such candidate is Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. We approach the Authorship issue from a scientific perspective. We frame the key question as that of Secrecy or No Secrecy. According to orthodox scholarship, the Authorship Issue does not involve considerations of secrecy. According to independent scholarship, considerations of secrecy are fundamental to the Authorship Issue. We follow the initiatives of Jonathan Bond, John Rollett, and David Roper, who all brought their considerable mathematical expertise to the challenge of identifying and deciphering cryptograms embodied in the Dedication of the Sonnets and in the Inscription on the “Shakespeare” Monument. We show that the combined statistical significance of the cryptograms is overwhelming: The probability that the evidence contained in the cryptograms has occurred by chance rather than by intent is less than one part in one million-billion. Hence the messages must be accepted as the intentional creations of the authors – Oxford (not Thomas Thorpe, as usually assumed) for the Dedication, and Ben Jonson for the Inscription. The cryptograms confirm the orthodox suspicion that the intended recipient of the Sonnets was Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton (so also confirming the orthodox belief that Southampton was the “Fair Youth” of the Sonnets). These discoveries resolve some of the well-known outstanding puzzles concerning the Authorship Issue such as the Author’s familiarity with Europe and its languages (especially Italy), his intricate knowledge of the lives of monarchs and nobility, his detailed and highly accurate knowledge of the law, etc. (see Table 1). However, this change in perspective necessarily raises new questions that will call for new research. Keywords: Shakespeare, Edward de Vere, William Shakspere, cryptograms, Cardano Grille
url https://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/1671
work_keys_str_mv AT petersturrock behindthemaskaninquiryintotheshakespeareauthorshipquestion
AT kathleeneerickson behindthemaskaninquiryintotheshakespeareauthorshipquestion
_version_ 1724643180603768832