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'''Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford''' (12 April 1550{{ndash}}24 June 1604) was an ] ], playwright, ], sportsman and ], who is today most noted as the strongest alternative candidate proposed for the ].<ref>, ''Encyclopaedia Brittanica'', 15th ed. Web site accessed 7 Oct 2010.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|p=15}}</ref> '''Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford''' (12 April 1550{{ndash}}24 June 1604) was an ] ], playwright, ], sportsman and ], who is today most noted as the strongest alternative candidate proposed for the ].<ref>, ''Encyclopaedia Brittanica'', 15th ed. Web site accessed 7 Oct 2010.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|p=15}}</ref>


Oxford was one of the leading patrons of the Elizabethen age.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/oxford/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8380000/8380564.stm</ref> Between 1564 and 1599, some 28 books were dedicated to him, including works by ], ], and ].<ref name="Nelson 2004">{{Harvnb|Nelson|2004}}</ref> Known particularly for his comedies,<ref>http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/flashbks/shakes/beth.htm paragraph 42: Quote from Dictionary of National Biography: Oxford was one of the leading patrons of the Elizabethan age.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/oxford/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8380000/8380564.stm</ref> Between 1564 and 1599, some 28 books were dedicated to him, including works by ], ], and ].<ref name="Nelson 2004">{{Harvnb|Nelson|2004}}</ref> Known particularly for his comedies,<ref>http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/flashbks/shakes/beth.htm paragraph 42: Quote from Dictionary of National Biography:


"Puttenham and Meres reckon him among 'the best for comedy' in his day; but, although he was a patron of players, no specimens of his dramatic productions survive." "Puttenham and Meres reckon him among 'the best for comedy' in his day; but, although he was a patron of players, no specimens of his dramatic productions survive."
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</ref> his theatrical activities included owning the lease on the first Blackfriars Theatre, producing grand entertainments at Hampton Court, and sponsoring at least two acting companies and a company of musicians. </ref> his theatrical activities included owning the lease on the first Blackfriars Theatre, producing grand entertainments at Hampton Court, and sponsoring at least two acting companies and a company of musicians.


He was born to ] and the former Margery Golding, probably at ] in ]. As a royal ward raised by ] ], Oxford enjoyed a broad education, including mastery of several languages. He travelled widely throughout Europe, and participated in military campaigns in the ] (1570) and at ] in the ] (1585), although in what capacity is unknown. He was born to ] and the former Margery Golding, probably at ] in ]. As a royal ward raised by ] ], Oxford enjoyed a broad education, including mastery of several languages. He travelled widely throughout Europe, and participated in military campaigns in the ] (1569) and at ] in the ] (1585), although in what capacity is unknown.


==Shakespearean authorship question== ==Shakespearean authorship question==
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==Early life== ==Early life==
On the death of his father on 3 August 1562, the twelve-year-old Oxford became the 17th ] and ] of England, inheriting an annual income of approximately £2250.<ref>The National Archives C 142/136/12, WARD 8/13; Green, Maria Giannina, "The Fall of the House of Oxford", Brief Chronicles: Volume 1 (2009), pp. 49-122. URL: www.briefchronicles.com; Paul, Christopher, "A Crisis of Scholarship: Misreading the Earl of Oxford", ''The Oxfordian'', Vol. 9 (2006), pp. 91-112.</ref> In his last will and testament, the 16th Earl appointed six executors, including his widow and his only son and heir; however administration of the will was granted on 29 May 1563 to only one of the executors, the 16th Earl's former servant, Robert Christmas.<ref>The National Archives PROB 11/46, ff. 174-6</ref>
Baptised Edward, a name unique in the de Vere family, perhaps as a compliment to the then king ],<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=9}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=20}}</ref> de Vere was styled ] Bulbeck, and raised in the ]. His father, though never of consequence in the Tudor court,<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=33}}</ref> was a sportsman and hunter of note, and among his son's earliest accomplishments were mastery of riding, shooting and ]. His father's circle included many distinguished scholars and poets, such as the statesman and ] ] ], like Oxford's father a staunch ], and the poets ], ] and the ]. He was one of the small number of noblemen who retained a company of actors.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=9-10}}</ref> Edward de Vere, like most children of his class, was raised by surrogate parents.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=34}}:'Oxford had lived with surrogate parents from a young age, including Cambridge dons at eight, and Sir Thomas Smith at nine.'</ref> He matriculated as an ''impubes'' or immature fellow-commoner of ] in November 1558, where he remained one year.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2004}}: His name disappears from the college registers after 5 months, in March 1559, and he did not receive a BA with his classmates in 1562.{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=25}}</ref> He was apparently, tutored for three years by Thomas Fowle, a former ] at ], in the household, and under the supervision of, Sir Thomas Smith.<ref name="Nelson 2004"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=24-25}}</ref> An early taste for literature is evident from in his purchases of books by ], ] (in French), ], perhaps ] (in Italian) and ] (probably in Latin) in 1570.<ref name="Nelson 2004"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=53}}</ref>


Because the 16th Earl held land from the Crown by knight service, Oxford became a royal ] and was placed in the household of ], the ], a leading member of Queen Elizabeth's ], and one of her chief advisors. In view of Oxford's theatrical activities, it is interesting to note that Cecil is regarded by many Elizabethan scholars as the prototype for the character of Polonius in '']''. Shortly after the 16th Earl's death, Oxford's mother, Margery (née Golding), married a ] named Charles Tyrrell, often erroneously stated to have been the sixth son of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of East Horndon and his wife, Constance Blount, although it is clear from his will that he was not a member of that branch of the Tyrrell family. Oxford's mother died five years later, on 2 December 1568.<ref>Morant, Philip, The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex (1748) ii, p. 328</ref> Oxford's stepfather, Charles Tyrrell, died in 1570, leaving bequests to Oxford and to Oxford's sister, Mary de Vere, in his will.<ref>The National Archives PROB 11/52, f. 105</ref>
On the death of his father on 3 August 1562, the twelve-year-old Oxford became the 17th ] and ] of England, and heir to an estate whose annual income, though assessed at approximately £2000, may have run as high as £3,500.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=36}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Paul|2006|pp=91-112}}</ref>


Oxford benefited from the tutelage of some of the great minds of the Elizabethan age. He was first tutored by the Cambridge don and statesman, ]<ref>Dewar, Mary. Sir Thomas Smith: A Tudor Intellectual in Office, p. 77</ref> at his estate of ] in the Upper Thames Valley from some time in 1554 until the death of Queen Mary. Smith likely taught Oxford a great deal about the subjects which were his abiding passions: civil law, the ancient Greek and Latin languages and literature, horticulture, astronomy-astrology, Paracelsian medicine, and hawking <ref>Hughes, Stephanie Hopkins. "Shakespeare's
Because the 16th Earl held land from the Crown by knight service, Oxford became a royal ], and was placed in the household of ], the ], a leading member of Queen Elizabeth's ], and one of her chief advisors. His wardship lasted until 1571, when he maintained his majority.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=35}}</ref> Sometime before October 1563, Oxford's mother, Margery, married a ] named Charles Tyrrell, the sixth son of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=41}}</ref> Oxford's mother died five years later, on 2 December 1568, and was buried beside her first husband at ].<ref name="Nelson 2003 49">{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=49}}</ref> Oxford's stepfather, Charles Tyrrell, died in March 1570, leaving in his will a bequest to Oxford of 'one great horse' which de Vere had formerly given him. Oxford never spoke of his step-father thereafter except contemptuously.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=30}}</ref>
Tutor, Sir Thomas Smith (1513-1577): ''The Oxfordian,'' 3 (2000): 19-44</ref>. When Smith was called to prepare for the accession of Elizabeth <ref>Strype, John. ''The Life of Sir Thomas Smith.'' (1698). New York: Franklin Burt, 1977. p 57</ref>, Oxford enrolled at Smith's alma mater, Queens' College, Cambridge, where he remained for five months <ref>Nelson 24</ref>. Another of Oxford's tutors was Thomas Fowle, a fellow at St. John's, Cambridge.<ref>The National Archives C 142/136/12. For modern spelling transcripts of this and other primary source documents referenced in this article, see http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/documents.html</ref> As a ward, under Sir William Cecil's supervision Oxford studied French, Latin, writing, drawing, cosmography, dancing, riding and shooting.<ref>The National Archives SP 12/26/50</ref> At Cecil House he was tutored by ], one of the founding fathers of ] studies.<ref>Nelson p. 25</ref> Nowell was Oxford's tutor in 1563,<ref>British Library MS Lansdowne 6/54, f. 135</ref> the same year that Nowell signed his name on the only known copy of the '']'' manuscript (also known as the "]"). Oxford may also have assisted his maternal uncle, ], in the first English translation of ]'s '']''.<ref>Charlton Ogburn, The Mystery of William Shakespeare, 1984, pgs. 384-393</ref> In 1564, while both were living at Cecil House in the Strand, Golding wrote of his young nephew in the dedicatory epistle to ''Th’ Abridgement of the Histories of ], collected and written in the Latin tongue by the famous historiographer Justin'':


<blockquote>"It is not unknown to others, and I have had experience thereof myself, how earnest a desire Your Honor hath naturally graffed in you to read, peruse, and communicate with others, as well as the histories of ancient times and things done long ago, as also the present estate of things in our days, and that not without a certain pregnancy of wit and ripeness of understanding." (STC 24290)</blockquote>
As a ward, under Sir William Cecil's supervision Oxford studied French, Latin, writing, drawing, cosmography, dancing, riding and shooting.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=20}}</ref> At ] he was tutored briefly by ], one of the founding fathers of ] studies.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=20-1}}. Nowell wrote to Lord Burghley asked that he be allowed to work on a map of England, implying his services in tutoring Oxford were no longer required. Ward interprets this as evidence of a 'precocity quite out of the ordinary'.</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=39}}:'Some eight months after young Oxford entered Cecil house, Lawrence Nowell wrote to Cecil:'I clearly see that my work for the Earl of Oxford cannot be much longer required.' Perhaps Oxford surpassed Nowell's capacity to instruct him. More likely — since nothing indicates that Oxford was an enthusiastic scholar, and much indicates that he was not — Nowell found the youth intractable.'</ref> While de Vere was in Cambridge, Arthur Golding, who also lived at the time at Cecil House, published his ''Th’ Abridgement of the Histories of ]''. Though originally intending it for the 16th Earl, he dedicated it to his young nephew, attributing to him an interest in ancient history and contemporary events.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=43}}</ref> It reads:


During the Queen's visits to ] and ] universities in 1564 and 1566, Oxford was awarded a BA by the University of Cambridge on 10 August 1564 <ref>{{Venn|id=BLBK558E|name=Bulbeck, Edward}}</ref> and an MA from the University of Oxford on 6 September 1566.<ref>Wood, Anthony, Athenae Oxonienses, ed. Philip Bliss (1813-20), iii, p. 178</ref> On 1 February 1566 he was admitted to ],<ref>Foster, Joseph (1889), Register of Gray's Inn: Admissions 1521-1669, col. 36</ref> where he studied law. Alan Nelson, a ] Oxford biographer, argues that because such degrees were awarded to numerous other persons of rank in the same royal visits they were merely honorary and “unearned," and that “no academic accomplishment or desert is to be imputed to any recipient.”<ref>Nelson, pp. 43, 45</ref> ] biographers of Oxford disagree with that assessment<ref>Ward, p. 14</ref> and point to what John Brooke had to say of Oxford in his dedicatory epistle of ''The Staff of Christian Faith'', published in 1577:
<blockquote>"It is not unknown to others, and I have had experience thereof myself, how earnest a desire Your Honor hath naturally graffed in you to read, peruse, and communicate with others, as well as the histories of ancient times and things done long ago, as also the present estate of things in our days, and that not without a certain pregnancy of wit and ripeness of understanding." <ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=23-24}}</ref></blockquote>


<blockquote>"For if in the opinion of all men, there can be found no one more fitte, for patronage and defence of learning, then the skilfull: for that he is both wyse and able to iudge and discerne truly thereof. I vnderstanding righte well that your honor hathe continually, euen from your tender yeares, bestowed your time and trauayle towards the attayning of the same, as also the vniuersitie of Cambridge hath acknowledged in graunting and giuing vnto you such commendation and prayse thereof, as verily by righte was due vnto your excellent vertue and rare learning. Wherin verily Cambridge the mother of learning, and learned men, hath openly confessed: and in this hir confessing made knowen vnto al men, that your honor being learned and able to iudge as a safe harbor and defence of learning, and therefore one most fitte to whose honorable patronage I might safely commit this my poore and simple labours." (STC 12476) </blockquote>
During the Queen's visits to ] and ] universities in 1564 and 1566, Oxford, who was part of her entourage, was granted, along with a dozen other visitors, an unearned M.A by the University of Cambridge on 10 August 1564 and an M.A from the University of Oxford on 6 September 1566.<ref name="Nelson 2004"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=42-45}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=27}}</ref> On 1 February 1567 he was admitted to ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=46}}</ref>


On 23 July 1567, the seventeen-year-old Oxford accidentally killed an unarmed under-cook, Thomas Brincknell, while practising fencing with Edward Baynham, a merchant tailor, in the backyard of Cecil House in the Strand. The finding of the coroner's inquest was that Brincknell, being intoxicated, had run upon the point of Oxford's sword and was thereby condemned as a suicide.<ref>The National Archives KB 9/619(part 1)/13</ref> (Interestingly, the English chronicler and Shakespeare source ] was one of the jurors at this trial.)
In later years Burghley was to upbraid Oxford frequently for his prodigal extravagance. However he allowed de Vere to spend upwards of £1,000 per annum during the wardship: his tailor's bills alone, from the age of 12 to 16, totalled some £600.<ref name="Ward 1928 31">{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=31}}</ref>


==Patronage==
On 23 July 1567, the seventeen-year-old Oxford killed Thomas Brincknell, an unarmed under-cook evidently in the Cecil household, while practising fencing with Edward Baynham, a ] tailor, in the backyard of Cecil House in the Strand. The ]'s ], with 17 juryman, one of whom was Oxford's servant, and another Cecil's ] the future historian ], made the following finding:
:<blockquote>'Thomas Brynchnell, an under Cook, was hurt by the Erle of Oxford at Cecill-houss, whereof he dyed, and by a Verdict found ''],'' with running upon a Poynt of a Fence Sword of the said Erle.'<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=47}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=28}}</ref></blockquote>
Brincknell was, the finding concluded, drunk at the time and instigated by the devil when he ran and fell upon de Vere's ], and gave himself the fatal wound. Cecil later recalled that he attempted to have the jury find for Oxford as acting in self-defence rather than Brincknell committing suicide.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=48}}</ref>


Oxford was a leading patron of the arts and drama of Elizabethan England, with at least thirty-three works of literature, history, philosophy, theology, music, military theory, and medicine, dedicated to him. Stephen May, commenting on this tradition, calls him “a nobleman with extraordinary intellectual interests and commitments” whose biography exhibits a "lifelong devotion to learning.”<ref>May, Stephen W."The Poems of Edward de Vere, Seventeenth Earl of Oxford and of Robert Devereux, Second Earl of Essex", ''Studies in Philology'' (Early Winter 1980), LXXVII, #5, 8.</ref> Continues May: "The range of Oxford's patronage is as remarkable as its substance. Beginning around 1580 he was the nominal patron of a variety of dramatic troupes, including a band of tumblers as well as companies of adult and boy actors. Among the thirty-three works dedicated to the Earl, six deal with religion and philosophy, two with music, and three with medicine; but the focus of his patronage was literary, for thirteen of the books presented to him were original or translated works of literature."<ref>May, Ibid, 9.</ref> Works patronized by Oxford include ]'s influential historical novel '']'' (1569), the first Latin translation of ]'s '']'' (1571),'']'''s (1573) translation of ]'s ''de Comforte'' (sometimes called "]"), ]'s second Euphues novel, '']'' (1580), ]'s '']'' (1581), and the first epistolary instruction manual to use English letters as models (]'s '']'', 1586).<ref>The dedications are reprinted in Katherine V. Chiljan, ''Book Dedications to the Earl of Oxford'', 1994.</ref>
==Maturity==
After recovering from an illness, Oxford petitioned Cecil in 1569 for a foreign military posting, saying that he had always wanted to "see the wars and services in strange and foreign parts". A Catholic rebellion, the ], had broken out that year, and after a delay (despite an interview with Oxford, ] was hesitant to grant him leave), Cecil obtained a position for de Vere under the ] in the Scottish campaigns the following spring, although in what capacity is unknown.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=39-41,48}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=52-53}}</ref>


==Court years==
Over 1570, Oxford according to several reports, became interested in ], and studied ] and ], having made the acquaintance of ] that winter.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=49-50}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=58-60}}</ref> On his coming of age on 12 April 1571, he was, technically, freed of Burghley's control, and entitled to an income of £666, though properties set aside to pay his father's debts would not come his way for over another decade (1582). One third of a titled ward's estate reverted to ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=70-71}}:'Formal certification of his freedom was deferred until May 1572'.</ref> In July, the Queen demanded a payment of £3,000 for his wardship and a further £4,000 for ']'. Oxford signed an obligation to pay double the sum, if he failed to pay the £7,000 when it fell due, effectively risking a total obligation of £21,000.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=71}}</ref>


By indenture of 1 July 1562, Oxford's father, the 16th Earl, had arranged a marriage for him with one of the sisters of Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon.<ref>Huntington Library HAP o/s Box 3(19)</ref> However when Oxford became a royal ward, this contract was allowed to lapse, and on 16 December 1571 he married Lord Burghley's fifteen-year-old daughter, ] &mdash; a surprising choice since Oxford was of the oldest nobility in the kingdom whereas Anne was not originally of noble birth, her father having only been raised to the peerage that year by Queen Elizabeth to enable the marriage of social inequals.<ref>Essex Record Office D/DRg 2/24</ref> As master of the queen's Court of Wards, however, Burghley had the power to arrange the marriages of his wards or impose huge fines upon them.<ref>Charlton Ogburn Jr. ''The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality'' Dodd, Mead & Co.,1984, p. 716</ref> Oxford's marriage produced five children, a son and daughter who died young, and three daughters who survived infancy. The Earl's daughters all married into the ]: ] married William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby; ] married Francis Norris, 1st Earl of Berkshire; and ] married Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, one of the “INCOMPARABLE PAIRE OF BRETHREN” to whom ]'s ] would be dedicated. Shortly after his marriage, at the age of twenty-two, Oxford was licensed to enter on his lands by the Queen's letters patent of 30 May 1572.<ref>The National Archives C 66/1090, mm. 29-30</ref>
He now took his seat in the ]. The year saw him participating in the ] before the Queen in May,<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=56-61}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=68-70}}</ref> and attending the French envoy, ], who had come to discuss the queen's projected marriage to the ].<ref name="Nelson 2004"/>


By the 1570s he was a major figure in the Elizabethan court and a leading contender for the affection of ]. In a letter of 11 May 1573, one contemporary, Gilbert Talbot, wrote that Oxford had lately grown in great credit with the Queen, and "were it not for his fickle head he would pass any of them shortly".<ref>Talbot Papers, Vol. F, f. 79</ref> Oxford remained in favour for a time, and won prizes in several ] tournaments at court.<ref>Segar, William, The Book of Honor and Armes (New York: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1975) pp. 94-6, 99-100</ref>
By an ] of 1 July 1562, Oxford's father, the 16th Earl, had disposed that his son would have to choose, on his 18th birthday in April 1568, to marry one of the sisters, either ] or Mary, of ]. The terms of the indenture had been allowed to lapse.<ref name="Nelson 2003 49"/> In 1571, the most eligible bachelor in England, he declared an interest in Cecil's eldest daughter, ], aged 14, and received the queen's consent to a marriage. She had been pledged to ] in August 1569, and others had apparently sought her hand. Cecil, who had risen to Baron Burghley by February, was displeased with the arrangement, apparently having entertained the idea of her marrying the ] instead. But Oxford's rank trumped all else.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=71-72}}</ref> The wedding was deferred until Anne's maturity and celebrated in the presence of the Queen, together with the marriage of Lady Elizabeth Hastings and ], on 19 December 1571, tying two young English nobles into Protestant families, as England's Catholic enemies noted.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|pp=28-29}}</ref> Burghley gave Oxford a ] of £800 worth of land and a cash gift of £3,000, an amount equal to Oxford's livery fees and probably intended for such use, but the money vanished without trace.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|pp=28,38}}</ref>
Oxford's marriage produced five children, a son and daughter who died young, and three daughters who survived infancy. The Earl's daughters all married into the ]. ], to whom the Queen stood godmother at her christening,<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=127-128}}</ref> married ]. ] married ]. ] married ], one of the “incomparable paire of brethren” to whom ]'s ] would be dedicated.


He toured ], ] and ] in 1575-6, and was thought to be of ] sympathies, as were many of the old nobility.
By May 1572 Oxford was described by ] as one of the Queen's foremost favourites,<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|pp=31, n.53:135, 150 n.5. Letter of May 11, 1572:'The Queen's Majesty delighteth more in his personnage and his valiantness than any other'.}}</ref> and she called him her Turk.<ref name="May 1991 269">{{Harvnb|May|1991|p=269}}</ref> Her high regard lasted until revelations of his liaison with one of her maids of honour came to light in March 1581.<ref name="May 1991 269"/>


On his return across the ] in April 1576, Oxford's ship was hijacked by ]s, who stripped him naked, apparently with the intention of murdering him, until they were made aware of his noble status, upon which he was allowed to go free, albeit without most of his possessions.<ref>The National Archives 31/3/27</ref> Further controversy ensued after he found that his wife had given birth to a daughter during his journey. Gossip speculated that the child was not his, and Oxford complained that her father's handling of the birth date had made Ann become "the fable of the world". Thus he refused to live with her from 1576 until 1581.<ref>Ogburn, pp. 571-575</ref>
=== Abroad ===
In December of 1580, Oxford accused two of his Catholic friends, Lord Henry Howard and Charles Arundel, of ], and denounced them to the Queen, asking mercy for his own Catholicism, which he repudiated.<ref>Bibliotheque Nationale 15973, ff. 387v-392v</ref> Both Howard and Arundel later received pensions from Philip II, and furnished Spain with intelligence against England, suggesting that Oxford's allegations against them in 1581 were not without merit.<ref>Archivo General de Simancas, Leg. 835, ff. 121-4; Paris Archives K.1447.130; Paris Archives K.1448.49</ref> After fleeing to the house of the Spanish ambassador, Mendoza, on the night of 25 December 1580, Howard and Arundel gave themselves up to the authorities, were placed under arrest,<ref>Archivo General de Simancas, Leg. 835, ff. 121-4</ref> and in turn denounced Oxford, accusing him of a laundry list of crimes, including plotting to murder a host of courtiers, such as ] and the ]. The charges against Oxford were not taken seriously at the time, although the libels found their way into some historical accounts and Oxford's reputation was thereafter tarnished.<ref>Ogburn,pp.638-641</ref> Charles Arundel later fled England in December 1583 for fear of arrest,<ref>Paris Archives K.1561</ref> was declared guilty of high treason in 1585,<ref name="Paris Archives K.1563.122">Paris Archives K.1563.122</ref> and died in exile in Paris in 1587. Lord Henry Howard was again arrested in 1583 and 1585,<ref>Paris Archives K.1562, K.1563.72</ref> but remained in England throughout Queen Elizabeth's reign, and was created Earl of Northampton by her successor, King James I.


Oxford fathered an illegitimate son by ], ], in 1581, and for this offence was imprisoned in the ] for several months, and later placed under house arrest and banished from court. He was not permitted to return to court until 1 June 1583.<ref>HMC Rutland, i, p. 150</ref> By Christmas of 1581, after a five year separation, Oxford had reconciled with his wife, Anne Cecil.<ref name="ReferenceA">British Library MS Cotton App 47, f. 7</ref> However his affair with Anne Vavasour led to a fray in the streets of London in 1582 with Anne Vavasour's uncle, ], a courtier in favour with the Queen.<ref>Lambeth Palace MS 647, f. 123</ref> On 3 March 1582, Oxford fought with Knyvet, and both men were 'hurt', Oxford 'more dangerously,' and Oxford's man 'Gerret' was slain.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Oxford's injury perhaps resulted in the lameness mentioned in his letter to Lord Burghley of 25 March 1595.<ref>Cecil Papers 31/45</ref>
Both abroad and in England Oxford was suspected of entertaining ] sympathies, of being partial to ], and perhaps intent on a military mission.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=119-120}}</ref> After obtaining royal permission, he left England, probably in early February 1575, to undertake a ] of ], ] and ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=117-121}}</ref>


==Later years==
On his return across the ] in April 1576, Oxford's ship was hijacked by ]s, who stripped him naked, apparently with the intention of murdering him, until they were made aware of his noble status, upon which he was allowed to go free, albeit without most of his possessions.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=135}}</ref>
His wife Anne had, in the meantime, given birth to their daughter Elizabeth, conceived in ] in October 1574, on July 2, 1575.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=117}}</ref> The news reached Oxford in late September 1575, and he responded with a Latin poem to his wife, auguring that henceforth she would bear him a male heir.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=107-108}}</ref> There is no hint of the suspicions about the conception that, after his return, were later to mar his relations with Anne.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=113}}</ref> However, on returning from the Continent in April 1576, he refused to see the Cecil family who were waiting for him in Dover, and repudiated his daughter Elizabeth.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=106}}</ref>


]
Gossip speculated that the child was not his, and Oxford complained that her father's handling of the birth date had made Ann become "the fable of the world". Thus he refused to live with her from 1576 until 1581.
In 1585, Lord Oxford was given a military command in Flanders,<ref name="Paris Archives K.1563.122"/> and served during the Battle of the ] in 1588. His first wife Anne Cecil died in 1588 at the age of 32. In 1591, Oxford married ], one of the Queen's Maids of Honour. This marriage produced his heir, ], later the 18th Earl of Oxford.


Extensive patronage, as well as possible mismanagement of his finances reduced Oxford to straitened financial circumstances, and in 1586 he was granted an annual pension of £1,000 by the Queen.<ref>The National Archives E 403/2597, ff. 104v-105</ref> It has been suggested that the annuity may also have been granted for his services in maintaining a group of writers and a company of actors, and that the obscurity of his later life is to be explained by his immersion in literary and dramatic pursuits.<ref>Ward</ref> As noted above, he was indeed a notable patron of writers including ], ], ], and ]. In addition to patronizing the creative work of ] and ], both considered important sources for and influences on Shakespeare, he employed them as secretaries, although for how long is not clearly known.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.authorshipstudies.org/articles/oxford_shakespeare.cfm |title=Oxford and Shakespeare |publisher=Authorshipstudies.org |date= |accessdate=2009-07-30}}</ref> According to at least one 17th century source (Anthony A. Wood), he also employed for some time the Democritean philosopher ] as a secretary.
That year Oxford fathered an illegitimate son by ], Sir Edward Vere.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=214-216}}</ref> and for this offence was imprisoned in the ] for several months, and later placed under house arrest and banished from court. Around this time, after a five year separation, Oxford had reconciled with his wife, Anne Cecil.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=226-227,232-233}}</ref> However his affair with Anne Vavasour led to a fray in the streets of London in March 1582 with her uncle, ], a courtier in favour with the Queen. Both men were 'hurt', Oxford 'more dangerously,' and Oxford's man 'Gerret' was slain.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=227-230}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=280-286}}. Oxford in a late letter to Lord Burghley(25 March 1595) mentions his lameness. Whether this is related to a wound suffered on this occasion, or from a knee injury on a Venetian galley during his Italian tour,{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=128}}, is not known</ref> His pardon was engineered by Sir Walter Raleigh, and he returned to court after two years of disgrace in June of 1583,<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=233}}</ref> though he never regained his position as a courtier of the first magnitude.<ref name="May 1991 269"/>

=== Rivalry among nobles ===
According to ], in late August 1579 Oxford appeared on a tennis court where Sir Philip Sidney was playing and ordered him to leave. Oxford, when challenged, called Sidney a "puppy" before the French marriage-commissioners negotiating the Duke of Anjou's suit to marry the Queen. Sidney strode off and issued what became perhaps the most famous challenge to a duel in Elizabethan England.<ref>{{Harvnb|Peltonen|2003|p=80}}</ref>

Oxford had many friends among a close circle of Catholic courtiers<ref>{{Harvnb|Peck|1978|p=427}}</ref> and, in December 1580, Oxford accused three of them, Lord ], Charles Arundel, and Francis Southwell, of engaging in a treasonous pro-Catholic conspiracy, and denounced them to the Queen, asking mercy for his own Catholicism, which he repudiated.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=249}}</ref> Though these charged were initially dismissed, both Howard and Arundel, who had sought asylum with the Spanish ambassador, gave themselves up to the authorities, and in turn accused Oxford of many crimes, among them of plots to murder Sir Philip Sidney and the Earl of Leicester.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|pp=207-214}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=250-255}}</ref>

==Later years==
]
By the early 1580s Oxford had sold of most of his inherited lands, alienating his major source of income. Castle Hedingham itself, the seat of his earldom, was sold in 1592.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=211}}</ref>
In 1586 he petitioned the Queen for an annuity to restore his damaged finances,<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=300}}</ref> and was granted a crown pension, payable in four installments over each year, of £1,000.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=52}}</ref>
In 1585, Oxford was posted to serve at Flanders with ], Sidney and Leicester, his erstwhile rivals, but appears to have quit his post and returned to England.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=297}}</ref> He volunteered to serve against the ] in 1588, but refused his post as commander of the port town of ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=317-319}}</ref>
His first wife Anne Cecil died in 1588 at the age of 32. By 1592 Oxford had sold off virtually every estate in his possession, and on December 27, 1591, married ], one of the Queen's ],<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=336-337}}</ref> trading, in the eyes of one biographer, his title for the money of an heiress.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=88}}</ref> On the 24th, of February 1593 the marriage produced his heir, ], later the 18th Earl of Oxford.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=343}}</ref>


According to the ], Oxford suggested, as Elizabeth lay dying, that moves should be made to support ] as heir to the throne.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=409-417}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|pp=148-149}}</ref> If true, nothing came of the proposal. After his accession to the throne, ] granted, on on 18 July 1603, Oxford's decades-long suit to be restored to the offices of steward of ] and keeper of the King's house and park at ], augmenting his annual income by £20.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pearson|2005|p=98 n.170}}</ref> On 2 August 1603 the King reconfirmed Oxford's annuity of £1000.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=423}}</ref> Less than a year later, Oxford died on 24 June 1604 of unknown causes at Brooke House in ], and was buried on 6 July at the ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=425,431}}. Two parish registers confirm his burial at Hackney, though his cousin Percival Golding much later misplaced the site as ].</ref> Oxford seemed destined to enjoy greater favour under King James, whose accession he supported,<ref>Folger Library MX X.d.30(42)</ref> than he had during the latter years of Queen Elizabeth's reign. On 18 July 1603, the King granted Oxford's decades-long suit to be restored to the offices of steward of Waltham Forest and keeper of the King's house and park at Havering,<ref>The National Archives SP 14/2/63, f. 160; The National Archives C 66/1612, mbs. 27-28</ref> and on 2 August 1603 the King confirmed Oxford's annuity of £1000.<ref>The National Archives E 403/2598, part I, f. 27v</ref> Less than a year later, Oxford died on 24 June 1604<ref>The National Archives C 142/286/165</ref> of unknown causes at Brooke House in Hackney. He was buried on 6 July at St John-at-Hackney,<ref>London Metropolitan Archive P79/JN1/21, f. 197v</ref> although his cousin, Percival Golding (son of ]), reported a few years later that he was buried at ]. Contrary to much which has been written on the topic, Oxford died a relatively wealthy man, having acquired property in 1580 which by the time of his death had been extensively developed, and was considered to be worth £20,000. <ref>English Reports, Vol. 77 (Edinburgh: William Green & Sons, 1907), pp. 1235-52; English Reports, Vol. 21, pp. 485-9</ref>


==Writing==
== Cultural life. Patronage, Literature and the Theatre ==
Oxford was described as both a poet and a playwright in his own lifetime, but only a small corpus of his poems and songs are extant under his own name, the dates of which (and in some cases the authorship) are uncertain; most of these are signed "Earle of Oxenforde" or "E.O.".<ref>{{Dead link|date=July 2009}}</ref> During his lifetime, Oxford was lauded by other English poets, both for his patronage and for his literary, scholarly, and musical avocations (for example, see one of the epistolary sonnets to ]'s '']''). In 1589 the author of the anonymously published '']'' (1589), usually identified as ], wrote:
=== Patronage ===
<blockquote>"And in her Majesties time that now is are sprong up an other crew of Courtly makers Noble men and Gentlemen of her Majesties owne servauntes, who have written excellently well as it would appeare if their doings could be found out and made publicke with the rest, of which number is first that noble Gentleman Edward Earle of Oxford” (STC 20519).</blockquote>
In 1569 the scholar ], in the dedication of his translation of the '']'' of ], praised the young de Vere, then 19, for his 'haughty courage' and 'sufficiency of learning'.<ref name="Ward 1928 31"/> Within two years, Oxford himself was to write a Latin preface to Bartholomew Clerke's translation of ]'s '']'' (1571) into that language (''De Curiali sive Aulico'':1571)


]'s '']'' (1598) listed Oxford as a playwright, describing him as among "the best for comedy".
Stephen May calls him “a nobleman with extraordinary intellectual interests and commitments” whose biography exhibits a "lifelong devotion to learning.”<ref>{{Harvnb|May|1980|pp=5,8}}</ref> The focus of his patronage was mainly literary, though it also extended to the astrologer and alchemist ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=62}}</ref> 13 of the books presented to him were either original or translated works of world literature. In addition to Spenser and Golding, writers dedicating works to him include ], ], ], ], and ], the latter having been employed by de Vere for various periods of time. Among works patronized by Oxford are ]'s second Euphues novel, ''Euphues and His England'' (1580); ]'s ''Hekatompathia'' (1582);
John Soowthern's ''Pandora''(1584), and Robert Greene's ''Gwydonius. The Carde of Fancie'' (1584). ] dedicated his '']'', (1586), the first epistolary manual for writing model letters in English,<ref>{{Harvnb|Beebee|1999|p=32}}</ref> to Oxford, as did Munday with both his ''Palmerin. The Mirrour of Nobilitie'' (1588) and ''Primaleon, The First Booke'' (1595). The composers ] and ], dedicated books to him: the latter, in his ''The First Set of English ]s'' (1599) noted both Oxford's love of music and his musical expertise.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=381-382}}</ref> Oxford employed both Lyly and Munday as secretaries.


B.M. Ward attributed 24 poems to Oxford in in his 1928 edition of ''Hundredth Sundrie Flowres'', the 1573 collection of poetry attributed to soldier of fortune and poet ]. His attribution has not gained academic acceptance.
=== Poetry and comedy writing ===
Oxford was praised as a poet, playwright and patron of the arts in his own lifetime. ], for example, lauded him in an epistolary sonnet to his ''].'' ] in his '']'' (1598) listed Oxford as a playwright, describing him as among "the best for comedy". In 1589 the author of the anonymously published ''Arte of English Poesie'' (1589), usually identified as ], wrote:
<blockquote>"And in her Maiesties time that now is are sprong vp an other crew of Courtly makers Noble men and Gentlemen of her Maiesties owne seruauntes, who haue written excellently well as it would appeare if their doings could be found out and made publicke with the rest, of which number is first that noble Gentleman Edward Earle of Oxford(,) ], when he was young, Henry Lord Paget, ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and a great many other learned Gentlemen . But of them all particularly this is myne opinion, that ], with ], ] and Harding for their antiquitie ought to have the first place. .”<ref name="Nelson 2003 386">{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|p=386}}</ref></blockquote>
Though Bernard M. Ward attributed 24 poems to Oxford in his 1928 edition of '''', modern criticism now ascribes sixteen canonical poems to him.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2004|pp=157,387}}</ref> Another four that have mixed attribution may possibly be his. These mostly date to his heyday as a young courtier in the 1570s, and there is small reason to suppose he composed poetry later than the 1580s.<ref>{{Harvnb|May|1991|p=270}}</ref>
Oxford uses 10 different stanza forms in these 16 poems, but he favoured the long-line couplets, ] ]s or "fourteeners" that dominated verse in mid-sixteenth century, rather than the ]s of Shakespeare's age.<ref>{{Harvnb|May|2004|p=301}}</ref>
Among the courtier poets of the 1570s who drew inspiration from post-classical continental authors from ] to the ], who cultivated a new vernacular representation of the poet's immediate experiences, Oxford has replaced ] for the distinction of being the premier Elizabethan courtier poet for love lyrics. In the commendatory verses prefacing his friend Thomas Bedingfield's translation of ]'s ''De consolatione libri tres'', (''Cardanus' Comfort''),<ref>{{Harvnb|Ward|1928|p=}} In 1934 Craig Hardin argued that this was 'Hamlet's Book' {{Harvnb|Hardin|1934}}</ref> a self-consciously poetic temper is visible. But his greatest innovation occurs in the 8 poems published under his name three years later in ''The Paradise of Dainty Devices'', which 'created a dramatic break with everything known to have been written at the Elizabethan court up to that time.'<ref>{{Harvnb|May|1991|pp=52-53}}</ref> Several stand out in the anthology as the only genuine love songs, and were intended to be sung. In the range of his themes, and diversity of his analyses of the lover's state of mind, Oxford stands out, as an innovator, from his contemporary English poets of this period.<ref>{{Harvnb|May|1991|pp=53-54}}</ref>


Oxford’s surviving correspondence focuses mainly on business affairs such as the Cornish tin monopoly and his ongoing desire for several royal monopolies and stewardships.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~ahnelson/oxlets.html |title=Oxford Letters(oxlets) |publisher=Socrates.berkeley.edu |date= |accessdate=2009-07-30}}</ref> Oxford maintained both adult and children's theatre companies, and a letter from the Privy Council in March 1602 shows his active involvement on behalf of a "third" acting company who liked to play at "the Bores head":<ref>Chambers, ''Elizabethan Stage'', Vol. 4, p. 334, cxxx.</ref>
=== Oxford as a Patron of Players ===
Oxford was a theatrical patron, like many of his fellow nobles. The practice of keeping companies developed when a statute was passed in 1572 aimed against potential uprisings involving the many bands of liveried servants and retainers kept by nobles, and which once formed the core of their private armies. Actors in the service of a peer fell victim to the law, and appealed to ] for protection, and a ] was secured allowing them to conduct their profession under aristocratic patronage. To retain a troupe of players was a mark of status.<ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|pp=221-223}}</ref> Oxford, like the ], was also described as a playwright,<ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|p=221}}:'the earl of Derby was "busy penning comedies for the common players".' (June 30, 1599)</ref> and ] judged him one of 'the best for Comedy among vs'.<ref name="Nelson 2003 386"/> In 1580, the players of Leicester's brother ] shifted their allegiance to Oxford. These toured the provinces, and records refer to 'the Earl of Oxenford's lads', and a company consisting of 9 boys and a man. In 1583, in a poaching operation that also pillaged actors from ] and ], Oxford lost one of his adult players, Lawrence Dutton, to the newly created ] company.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nelson|2003|pp=239,245}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|p=223}}</ref>


<blockquote>"beinge joyned by agreement togeather in on Companie (to whom, upon noteice of her Maiesties pleasure at the suit of the '''Earl of Oxford''', tolleracion hath ben thought meete to be graunted, notwithstandinge the restraint of our said former Orders), doe no tye them selfs to one certaine place and howse, but do chainge their place at there owne disposition, which is as disorderly and offensive as the former offence of many howses, and as the other Companies that are allowed . . . be appointed there certine howses and one and no more to each Company. Soe we do straighly require that this third Companie be likewise to one place and because we are informed the house called the Bores head is the place they have especially used and doe best like of, we doe pray and require yow that the said howse . . . may be assigned to them, and that they be very straightlie Charged to use and exercise there plays in no other but that howse, as they looke to have that tolleracion continued and avoid farther displeasure." </blockquote>
Oxford took over the lease of ], the only indoor playhouse used by a boy's company, and transferred it to his secretary Lyly, and over the next 4 years, under Oxford's sponsorship, choristers from two troupes, the Queen's ] and the ] played there,<ref>{{Harvnb|Shapiro|2009|p=132}}</ref> only the latter are certain to have been under Oxford's patronage. They performed Lyly's comedy ''Sapho and Phao'' at Court over the 1583-1584 holiday season, after which Lyly sold the lease to ].<ref>{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|pp=223-224}}</ref> This is the last we hear of Oxford's boy company, and the episode was the high watermark of Oxford's theatrical patronage.<ref name="Matus 1994 225">{{Harvnb|Matus|1994|p=225}}</ref> He did form an apparently new adult company in 1585, active until 1590. Three notices exist of a troupe of Oxford's players exist for the years 1600-1602, the last regarding a notice that his company had joined with the Earl of Worcester's to play at the Boar's Head Inn.<ref name="Matus 1994 225"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Chambers|2009|p=225}}</ref>


Two of Oxford’s "literary" letters were published in 1571 (1572 <small>(])</small>) and 1573. The first of these was written in Latin as a dedicatory epistle to ]'s Latin translation of ]’s ''Il Cortegiano'' (''The Courtier''), while the second, written in English with accompanying verses, was an epistle to ]'s English translation of ''Cardanus' Comfort'' (from the Latin of ''De consolatione libri tres'' by the Italian mathematician and physician ]). The latter book, published at Oxford’s command, has sometimes been called “Hamlet’s book” because of several close verbal and philosophical parallels between it and Shakespeare’s play, particularly a passage on the unsavoriness of old men’s company, to which Hamlet seems to refer in his satirical banter with Polonius (re: plum-tree gum, plentiful lack of wit, most weak hams, etc.), as well a passage with remarkable similarities to Hamlet’s “To be, or not to be” soliloquy.{fact}
===Sample poems attributed to Oxford=== ===Sample poems attributed to Oxford===
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Revision as of 15:24, 25 October 2010

Edward de Vere
Earl of Oxford
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, unknown artist after lost original, 1575, National Portrait Gallery, London
Tenure1550—1562
Born12 April 1550
Castle Hedingham in Essex
Died24 June 1604 (aged 54)
Brooke House in Hackney
NationalityEnglish

Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (12 April 1550–24 June 1604) was an Elizabethan courtier, playwright, lyric poet, sportsman and patron of the arts, who is today most noted as the strongest alternative candidate proposed for the authorship of Shakespeare's works.

Oxford was one of the leading patrons of the Elizabethan age. Between 1564 and 1599, some 28 books were dedicated to him, including works by Edmund Spenser, Arthur Golding, and John Lyly. Known particularly for his comedies, his theatrical activities included owning the lease on the first Blackfriars Theatre, producing grand entertainments at Hampton Court, and sponsoring at least two acting companies and a company of musicians.

He was born to John de Vere, the 16th Earl of Oxford and the former Margery Golding, probably at Castle Hedingham in Essex. As a royal ward raised by Secretary of State Sir William Cecil, Oxford enjoyed a broad education, including mastery of several languages. He travelled widely throughout Europe, and participated in military campaigns in the Northern Rebellion (1569) and at Flanders in the Anglo-Spanish War (1585), although in what capacity is unknown.

Shakespearean authorship question

Main article: Oxfordian theory of Shakespeare authorship

In 1920 J. Thomas Looney, an English schoolteacher, proposed de Vere as a candidate for the authorship of Shakespeare's works. The Oxfordian theory gradually replaced the ascendency of Francis Bacon in the field and, since the 1920s, Oxford has been the most widely accepted anti-Stratfordian candidate.

Oxfordians point to the acclaim of Oxford's contemporaries regarding his talent as a poet and a playwright, his reputation as a concealed poet, and his personal connections to London theatre and the contemporary playwrights of Shakespeare's day. They also note his long term relationships with Queen Elizabeth I and the Earl of Southampton, his knowledge of Court life, his extensive and multilingual education, his academic and cultural achievements, and his wide-ranging travels through France and Italy to what would later become the locations of many of Shakespeare's plays.

The claim is rejected by all but a few historians and literary scholars, but is supported by a number of independent scholars, authors, Supreme Court justices, and prominent Shakespearean actors and directors

Early life

On the death of his father on 3 August 1562, the twelve-year-old Oxford became the 17th Earl of Oxford and Lord Great Chamberlain of England, inheriting an annual income of approximately £2250. In his last will and testament, the 16th Earl appointed six executors, including his widow and his only son and heir; however administration of the will was granted on 29 May 1563 to only one of the executors, the 16th Earl's former servant, Robert Christmas.

Because the 16th Earl held land from the Crown by knight service, Oxford became a royal ward and was placed in the household of Sir William Cecil, the Secretary of State, a leading member of Queen Elizabeth's Privy Council, and one of her chief advisors. In view of Oxford's theatrical activities, it is interesting to note that Cecil is regarded by many Elizabethan scholars as the prototype for the character of Polonius in Hamlet. Shortly after the 16th Earl's death, Oxford's mother, Margery (née Golding), married a Gentleman Pensioner named Charles Tyrrell, often erroneously stated to have been the sixth son of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of East Horndon and his wife, Constance Blount, although it is clear from his will that he was not a member of that branch of the Tyrrell family. Oxford's mother died five years later, on 2 December 1568. Oxford's stepfather, Charles Tyrrell, died in 1570, leaving bequests to Oxford and to Oxford's sister, Mary de Vere, in his will.

Oxford benefited from the tutelage of some of the great minds of the Elizabethan age. He was first tutored by the Cambridge don and statesman, Sir Thomas Smith at his estate of Ankerwycke in the Upper Thames Valley from some time in 1554 until the death of Queen Mary. Smith likely taught Oxford a great deal about the subjects which were his abiding passions: civil law, the ancient Greek and Latin languages and literature, horticulture, astronomy-astrology, Paracelsian medicine, and hawking . When Smith was called to prepare for the accession of Elizabeth , Oxford enrolled at Smith's alma mater, Queens' College, Cambridge, where he remained for five months . Another of Oxford's tutors was Thomas Fowle, a fellow at St. John's, Cambridge. As a ward, under Sir William Cecil's supervision Oxford studied French, Latin, writing, drawing, cosmography, dancing, riding and shooting. At Cecil House he was tutored by Laurence Nowell, one of the founding fathers of Anglo-Saxon studies. Nowell was Oxford's tutor in 1563, the same year that Nowell signed his name on the only known copy of the Beowulf manuscript (also known as the "Nowell Codex"). Oxford may also have assisted his maternal uncle, Arthur Golding, in the first English translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses. In 1564, while both were living at Cecil House in the Strand, Golding wrote of his young nephew in the dedicatory epistle to Th’ Abridgement of the Histories of Trogus Pompeius, collected and written in the Latin tongue by the famous historiographer Justin:

"It is not unknown to others, and I have had experience thereof myself, how earnest a desire Your Honor hath naturally graffed in you to read, peruse, and communicate with others, as well as the histories of ancient times and things done long ago, as also the present estate of things in our days, and that not without a certain pregnancy of wit and ripeness of understanding." (STC 24290)

During the Queen's visits to Cambridge and Oxford universities in 1564 and 1566, Oxford was awarded a BA by the University of Cambridge on 10 August 1564 and an MA from the University of Oxford on 6 September 1566. On 1 February 1566 he was admitted to Gray's Inn, where he studied law. Alan Nelson, a Stratfordian Oxford biographer, argues that because such degrees were awarded to numerous other persons of rank in the same royal visits they were merely honorary and “unearned," and that “no academic accomplishment or desert is to be imputed to any recipient.” Oxfordian biographers of Oxford disagree with that assessment and point to what John Brooke had to say of Oxford in his dedicatory epistle of The Staff of Christian Faith, published in 1577:

"For if in the opinion of all men, there can be found no one more fitte, for patronage and defence of learning, then the skilfull: for that he is both wyse and able to iudge and discerne truly thereof. I vnderstanding righte well that your honor hathe continually, euen from your tender yeares, bestowed your time and trauayle towards the attayning of the same, as also the vniuersitie of Cambridge hath acknowledged in graunting and giuing vnto you such commendation and prayse thereof, as verily by righte was due vnto your excellent vertue and rare learning. Wherin verily Cambridge the mother of learning, and learned men, hath openly confessed: and in this hir confessing made knowen vnto al men, that your honor being learned and able to iudge as a safe harbor and defence of learning, and therefore one most fitte to whose honorable patronage I might safely commit this my poore and simple labours." (STC 12476)

On 23 July 1567, the seventeen-year-old Oxford accidentally killed an unarmed under-cook, Thomas Brincknell, while practising fencing with Edward Baynham, a merchant tailor, in the backyard of Cecil House in the Strand. The finding of the coroner's inquest was that Brincknell, being intoxicated, had run upon the point of Oxford's sword and was thereby condemned as a suicide. (Interestingly, the English chronicler and Shakespeare source Raphael Holinshed was one of the jurors at this trial.)

Patronage

Oxford was a leading patron of the arts and drama of Elizabethan England, with at least thirty-three works of literature, history, philosophy, theology, music, military theory, and medicine, dedicated to him. Stephen May, commenting on this tradition, calls him “a nobleman with extraordinary intellectual interests and commitments” whose biography exhibits a "lifelong devotion to learning.” Continues May: "The range of Oxford's patronage is as remarkable as its substance. Beginning around 1580 he was the nominal patron of a variety of dramatic troupes, including a band of tumblers as well as companies of adult and boy actors. Among the thirty-three works dedicated to the Earl, six deal with religion and philosophy, two with music, and three with medicine; but the focus of his patronage was literary, for thirteen of the books presented to him were original or translated works of literature." Works patronized by Oxford include Thomas Underdown's influential historical novel Aethiopica (1569), the first Latin translation of Baldassare Castiglione's Courtier (1571),Thomas Bedingfield's (1573) translation of Jerome Cardan's de Comforte (sometimes called "Hamlet's Book"), John Lyly's second Euphues novel, Euphues and His England (1580), Thomas Watson's Hekatompathia (1581), and the first epistolary instruction manual to use English letters as models (Angel Day's English Secretary, 1586).

Court years

By indenture of 1 July 1562, Oxford's father, the 16th Earl, had arranged a marriage for him with one of the sisters of Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon. However when Oxford became a royal ward, this contract was allowed to lapse, and on 16 December 1571 he married Lord Burghley's fifteen-year-old daughter, Anne Cecil — a surprising choice since Oxford was of the oldest nobility in the kingdom whereas Anne was not originally of noble birth, her father having only been raised to the peerage that year by Queen Elizabeth to enable the marriage of social inequals. As master of the queen's Court of Wards, however, Burghley had the power to arrange the marriages of his wards or impose huge fines upon them. Oxford's marriage produced five children, a son and daughter who died young, and three daughters who survived infancy. The Earl's daughters all married into the peerage: Elizabeth married William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby; Bridget married Francis Norris, 1st Earl of Berkshire; and Susan married Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, one of the “INCOMPARABLE PAIRE OF BRETHREN” to whom William Shakespeare's First Folio would be dedicated. Shortly after his marriage, at the age of twenty-two, Oxford was licensed to enter on his lands by the Queen's letters patent of 30 May 1572.

By the 1570s he was a major figure in the Elizabethan court and a leading contender for the affection of Elizabeth I. In a letter of 11 May 1573, one contemporary, Gilbert Talbot, wrote that Oxford had lately grown in great credit with the Queen, and "were it not for his fickle head he would pass any of them shortly". Oxford remained in favour for a time, and won prizes in several tilting tournaments at court.

He toured France, Germany and Italy in 1575-6, and was thought to be of Roman Catholic sympathies, as were many of the old nobility.

On his return across the English Channel in April 1576, Oxford's ship was hijacked by pirates, who stripped him naked, apparently with the intention of murdering him, until they were made aware of his noble status, upon which he was allowed to go free, albeit without most of his possessions. Further controversy ensued after he found that his wife had given birth to a daughter during his journey. Gossip speculated that the child was not his, and Oxford complained that her father's handling of the birth date had made Ann become "the fable of the world". Thus he refused to live with her from 1576 until 1581. In December of 1580, Oxford accused two of his Catholic friends, Lord Henry Howard and Charles Arundel, of treason, and denounced them to the Queen, asking mercy for his own Catholicism, which he repudiated. Both Howard and Arundel later received pensions from Philip II, and furnished Spain with intelligence against England, suggesting that Oxford's allegations against them in 1581 were not without merit. After fleeing to the house of the Spanish ambassador, Mendoza, on the night of 25 December 1580, Howard and Arundel gave themselves up to the authorities, were placed under arrest, and in turn denounced Oxford, accusing him of a laundry list of crimes, including plotting to murder a host of courtiers, such as Sir Philip Sidney and the Earl of Leicester. The charges against Oxford were not taken seriously at the time, although the libels found their way into some historical accounts and Oxford's reputation was thereafter tarnished. Charles Arundel later fled England in December 1583 for fear of arrest, was declared guilty of high treason in 1585, and died in exile in Paris in 1587. Lord Henry Howard was again arrested in 1583 and 1585, but remained in England throughout Queen Elizabeth's reign, and was created Earl of Northampton by her successor, King James I.

Oxford fathered an illegitimate son by Anne Vavasour, Sir Edward Vere, in 1581, and for this offence was imprisoned in the Tower of London for several months, and later placed under house arrest and banished from court. He was not permitted to return to court until 1 June 1583. By Christmas of 1581, after a five year separation, Oxford had reconciled with his wife, Anne Cecil. However his affair with Anne Vavasour led to a fray in the streets of London in 1582 with Anne Vavasour's uncle, Sir Thomas Knyvet, a courtier in favour with the Queen. On 3 March 1582, Oxford fought with Knyvet, and both men were 'hurt', Oxford 'more dangerously,' and Oxford's man 'Gerret' was slain. Oxford's injury perhaps resulted in the lameness mentioned in his letter to Lord Burghley of 25 March 1595.

Later years

Portrait of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, by Marcus Gheeraedts

In 1585, Lord Oxford was given a military command in Flanders, and served during the Battle of the Spanish Armada in 1588. His first wife Anne Cecil died in 1588 at the age of 32. In 1591, Oxford married Elizabeth Trentham, one of the Queen's Maids of Honour. This marriage produced his heir, Henry, Lord Vere, later the 18th Earl of Oxford.

Extensive patronage, as well as possible mismanagement of his finances reduced Oxford to straitened financial circumstances, and in 1586 he was granted an annual pension of £1,000 by the Queen. It has been suggested that the annuity may also have been granted for his services in maintaining a group of writers and a company of actors, and that the obscurity of his later life is to be explained by his immersion in literary and dramatic pursuits. As noted above, he was indeed a notable patron of writers including Edmund Spenser, Arthur Golding, Robert Greene, and Thomas Churchyard. In addition to patronizing the creative work of John Lyly and Anthony Munday, both considered important sources for and influences on Shakespeare, he employed them as secretaries, although for how long is not clearly known. According to at least one 17th century source (Anthony A. Wood), he also employed for some time the Democritean philosopher Nicholas Hill as a secretary.

Oxford seemed destined to enjoy greater favour under King James, whose accession he supported, than he had during the latter years of Queen Elizabeth's reign. On 18 July 1603, the King granted Oxford's decades-long suit to be restored to the offices of steward of Waltham Forest and keeper of the King's house and park at Havering, and on 2 August 1603 the King confirmed Oxford's annuity of £1000. Less than a year later, Oxford died on 24 June 1604 of unknown causes at Brooke House in Hackney. He was buried on 6 July at St John-at-Hackney, although his cousin, Percival Golding (son of Arthur Golding), reported a few years later that he was buried at Westminster Abbey. Contrary to much which has been written on the topic, Oxford died a relatively wealthy man, having acquired property in 1580 which by the time of his death had been extensively developed, and was considered to be worth £20,000.

Writing

Oxford was described as both a poet and a playwright in his own lifetime, but only a small corpus of his poems and songs are extant under his own name, the dates of which (and in some cases the authorship) are uncertain; most of these are signed "Earle of Oxenforde" or "E.O.". During his lifetime, Oxford was lauded by other English poets, both for his patronage and for his literary, scholarly, and musical avocations (for example, see one of the epistolary sonnets to Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene). In 1589 the author of the anonymously published Arte of English Poesie (1589), usually identified as George Puttenham, wrote:

"And in her Majesties time that now is are sprong up an other crew of Courtly makers Noble men and Gentlemen of her Majesties owne servauntes, who have written excellently well as it would appeare if their doings could be found out and made publicke with the rest, of which number is first that noble Gentleman Edward Earle of Oxford” (STC 20519).

Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia (1598) listed Oxford as a playwright, describing him as among "the best for comedy".

B.M. Ward attributed 24 poems to Oxford in in his 1928 edition of Hundredth Sundrie Flowres, the 1573 collection of poetry attributed to soldier of fortune and poet George Gascoigne. His attribution has not gained academic acceptance.

Oxford’s surviving correspondence focuses mainly on business affairs such as the Cornish tin monopoly and his ongoing desire for several royal monopolies and stewardships. Oxford maintained both adult and children's theatre companies, and a letter from the Privy Council in March 1602 shows his active involvement on behalf of a "third" acting company who liked to play at "the Bores head":

"beinge joyned by agreement togeather in on Companie (to whom, upon noteice of her Maiesties pleasure at the suit of the Earl of Oxford, tolleracion hath ben thought meete to be graunted, notwithstandinge the restraint of our said former Orders), doe no tye them selfs to one certaine place and howse, but do chainge their place at there owne disposition, which is as disorderly and offensive as the former offence of many howses, and as the other Companies that are allowed . . . be appointed there certine howses and one and no more to each Company. Soe we do straighly require that this third Companie be likewise to one place and because we are informed the house called the Bores head is the place they have especially used and doe best like of, we doe pray and require yow that the said howse . . . may be assigned to them, and that they be very straightlie Charged to use and exercise there plays in no other but that howse, as they looke to have that tolleracion continued and avoid farther displeasure."

Two of Oxford’s "literary" letters were published in 1571 (1572 (New style)) and 1573. The first of these was written in Latin as a dedicatory epistle to Bartholomew Clerke's Latin translation of Baldassare Castiglione’s Il Cortegiano (The Courtier), while the second, written in English with accompanying verses, was an epistle to Thomas Bedingfield's English translation of Cardanus' Comfort (from the Latin of De consolatione libri tres by the Italian mathematician and physician Girolamo Cardano). The latter book, published at Oxford’s command, has sometimes been called “Hamlet’s book” because of several close verbal and philosophical parallels between it and Shakespeare’s play, particularly a passage on the unsavoriness of old men’s company, to which Hamlet seems to refer in his satirical banter with Polonius (re: plum-tree gum, plentiful lack of wit, most weak hams, etc.), as well a passage with remarkable similarities to Hamlet’s “To be, or not to be” soliloquy.{fact}

Sample poems attributed to Oxford

(Untitled)

Were I a king I might command content;
Were I obscure unknown should be my cares,
And were I dead no thoughts should me torment,
Nor words, nor wrongs, nor love, nor hate, nor fears
A doubtful choice for me of three things one to crave,

A kingdom or a cottage or a grave.

Love Thy Choice

Who taught thee first to sigh, alas, my heart ?
Who taught thy tongue the woeful words of plaint ?
Who filled your eyes with tears of bitter smart ?
Who gave thee grief and made thy joys to faint ?
Who first did paint with colours pale thy face ?
Who first did break thy sleeps of quiet rest ?
Above the rest in court who gave thee grace ?
Who made thee strive in honour to be best ?
In constant truth to bide so firm and sure,
To scorn the world regarding but thy friends ?
With patient mind each passion to endure,
In one desire to settle to the end ?
Love then thy choice wherein such choice thou bind,

As nought but death may ever change thy mind.

Woman's Changeableness

If women could be fair and yet not fond,
Or that their love were firm not fickle, still,
I would not marvel that they make men bond,
By service long to purchase their good will;
But when I see how frail those creatures are,
I muse that men forget themselves so far.
To mark the choice they make, and how they change,
How oft from Phoebus do they flee to Pan,
Unsettled still like haggards wild they range,
These gentle birds that fly from man to man;
Who would not scorn and shake them from the fist
And let them fly fair fools which way they list.
Yet for disport we fawn and flatter both,
To pass the time when nothing else can please,
And train them to our lure with subtle oath,
Till, weary of their wiles, ourselves we ease;
And then we say when we their fancy try,

To play with fools, O what a fool was I.

Popular culture

  • 1943 Leslie Howard's classic anti-Nazi film, Pimpernel Smith, features several speeches by the protagonist "Horatio" Smith, a professor of archaeology at Cambridge, concerning Oxford as the true writer of Shakespeare's plays. The movie plays on the well-documented Nazi-interest in Shakespeare; in the movie, the claim made by Smith counterparts the principal Nazi character's assertion that Shakespeare was in fact German.
  • 2001 Oxford is one of the primary characters in Amy Freed's play The Beard of Avon.
  • 2003 Oxford and the Shakespeare authorship question are central to the plot of Sarah Smith's novel Chasing Shakespeares, which she also adapted into a play.
  • 2005 The YA novel Shakespeare's Secret by Elise Broach is centered on Oxford and the authorship question.
  • 2007 The Oxfordian theory is present in Jennifer Lee Carrell's thriller Interred With Their Bones.
  • 2010 In March, Roland Emmerich began filming Anonymous, starring Rhys Ifans and Vanessa Redgrave, which posits in cinematic terms how Edward de Vere's writings came to be attributed to William Shakespere of Stratford.

Footnotes

  1. “Edward de Vere, 17th earl of Oxford”, Encyclopaedia Brittanica, 15th ed. Web site accessed 7 Oct 2010.
  2. Matus 1994, p. 15
  3. http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/oxford/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8380000/8380564.stm
  4. Nelson 2004 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFNelson2004 (help)
  5. http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/flashbks/shakes/beth.htm paragraph 42: Quote from Dictionary of National Biography: "Puttenham and Meres reckon him among 'the best for comedy' in his day; but, although he was a patron of players, no specimens of his dramatic productions survive."
  6. "Edward de Vere, 17th earl of Oxford". Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. 2007. Retrieved 31 August 2007.
  7. Satchell, Michael (24 July 2000). "Hunting for good Will: Will the real Shakespeare please stand up?". U.S. News. Retrieved 31 August 2007. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  8. McMichael, George and Edgar M. Glenn.Shakespeare and his Rivals: A Casebook on the Authorship Controversy. Odyssey Press, 1962. p. 159.
  9. Nelson 2004, p. 151 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFNelson2004 (help)
  10. Niederkorn, William S.William S.Niederkorn, The Shakespeare Code, and Other Fanciful Ideas From the Traditional Camp,,New York Times, 30 August 2005.;He or Didn’t He? That Is the Question,New York Timeshttp://doubtaboutwill.org/signatories/notable
  11. The National Archives C 142/136/12, WARD 8/13; Green, Maria Giannina, "The Fall of the House of Oxford", Brief Chronicles: Volume 1 (2009), pp. 49-122. URL: www.briefchronicles.com; Paul, Christopher, "A Crisis of Scholarship: Misreading the Earl of Oxford", The Oxfordian, Vol. 9 (2006), pp. 91-112.
  12. The National Archives PROB 11/46, ff. 174-6
  13. Morant, Philip, The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex (1748) ii, p. 328
  14. The National Archives PROB 11/52, f. 105
  15. Dewar, Mary. Sir Thomas Smith: A Tudor Intellectual in Office, p. 77
  16. Hughes, Stephanie Hopkins. "Shakespeare's Tutor, Sir Thomas Smith (1513-1577): The Oxfordian, 3 (2000): 19-44
  17. Strype, John. The Life of Sir Thomas Smith. (1698). New York: Franklin Burt, 1977. p 57
  18. Nelson 24
  19. The National Archives C 142/136/12. For modern spelling transcripts of this and other primary source documents referenced in this article, see http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/documents.html
  20. The National Archives SP 12/26/50
  21. Nelson p. 25
  22. British Library MS Lansdowne 6/54, f. 135
  23. Charlton Ogburn, The Mystery of William Shakespeare, 1984, pgs. 384-393
  24. "Bulbeck, Edward (BLBK558E)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  25. Wood, Anthony, Athenae Oxonienses, ed. Philip Bliss (1813-20), iii, p. 178
  26. Foster, Joseph (1889), Register of Gray's Inn: Admissions 1521-1669, col. 36
  27. Nelson, pp. 43, 45
  28. Ward, p. 14
  29. The National Archives KB 9/619(part 1)/13
  30. May, Stephen W."The Poems of Edward de Vere, Seventeenth Earl of Oxford and of Robert Devereux, Second Earl of Essex", Studies in Philology (Early Winter 1980), LXXVII, #5, 8.
  31. May, Ibid, 9.
  32. The dedications are reprinted in Katherine V. Chiljan, Book Dedications to the Earl of Oxford, 1994.
  33. Huntington Library HAP o/s Box 3(19)
  34. Essex Record Office D/DRg 2/24
  35. Charlton Ogburn Jr. The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality Dodd, Mead & Co.,1984, p. 716
  36. The National Archives C 66/1090, mm. 29-30
  37. Talbot Papers, Vol. F, f. 79
  38. Segar, William, The Book of Honor and Armes (New York: Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1975) pp. 94-6, 99-100
  39. The National Archives 31/3/27
  40. Ogburn, pp. 571-575
  41. Bibliotheque Nationale 15973, ff. 387v-392v
  42. Archivo General de Simancas, Leg. 835, ff. 121-4; Paris Archives K.1447.130; Paris Archives K.1448.49
  43. Archivo General de Simancas, Leg. 835, ff. 121-4
  44. Ogburn,pp.638-641
  45. Paris Archives K.1561
  46. ^ Paris Archives K.1563.122
  47. Paris Archives K.1562, K.1563.72
  48. HMC Rutland, i, p. 150
  49. ^ British Library MS Cotton App 47, f. 7
  50. Lambeth Palace MS 647, f. 123
  51. Cecil Papers 31/45
  52. The National Archives E 403/2597, ff. 104v-105
  53. Ward
  54. "Oxford and Shakespeare". Authorshipstudies.org. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  55. Folger Library MX X.d.30(42)
  56. The National Archives SP 14/2/63, f. 160; The National Archives C 66/1612, mbs. 27-28
  57. The National Archives E 403/2598, part I, f. 27v
  58. The National Archives C 142/286/165
  59. London Metropolitan Archive P79/JN1/21, f. 197v
  60. English Reports, Vol. 77 (Edinburgh: William Green & Sons, 1907), pp. 1235-52; English Reports, Vol. 21, pp. 485-9
  61. The Poems of Edward de Vere
  62. "Oxford Letters(oxlets)". Socrates.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  63. Chambers, Elizabethan Stage, Vol. 4, p. 334, cxxx.
  64. Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies' Library, Vol. IV, #19 (1872)
  65. Steven W. May wrote in 2004: 'this whimsical love lyric may not be Oxford's at all. It is attributed to the Earl only in a Bodleian Library manuscript anthology that dates from the mid 1580s.' Neither Looney nor Grosart were aware, however, that another text of the poem is ascribed to an unidentified "R.W" in a British Library Manuscript that is contemporary with the Bodleian anthology but somewhat more dependable in oth texts and attributions to De Vere's poems. Oxford may have written, "If women could be fair", but the evidence is inconclusive' (May, 2004:223/299)
  66. Hope & Holston 2009, p. 166
  67. Burt 2005, pp. 442–445
  68. Chasing Shakespeares. SarahSmith.com.
  69. Shapiro & 2010 (2) harvnb error: no target: CITEREFShapiro2010_(2) (help)
  70. Anonymous at the Internet Movie Database

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded byThe Earl of Oxford Lord Great Chamberlain
1562–1604
Succeeded byThe Earl of Oxford
Peerage of England
Preceded byJohn de Vere Earl of Oxford
1562–1604
Succeeded byHenry de Vere
Shakespeare authorship question
A series on alternative authorship theories for the works of William Shakespeare
Overview
Theories
Candidates
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