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Use this Google Scholar link to search for papers about Shakespeare's Sonnets, the Shakespeare authorship mystery the lives of Edward de Vere, 17h Earl of Oxford; Elizabeth Tudor, Queen Elizabeth I of England; Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton; Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex; Robert Cecil, Secretary of State under Elizabeth and Earl of Salisbury under King James; and more...
SHAKESPEARE AUTHORSHIP

Visit the website of ADONIS EDITIONS to order SHAKESPEARE'S FINGERPRINTS by Michael Brame & Galina Popova -- and their other ground-breaking books, which are leading the way in changing the traditional Shakespeare paradigm.
NEW: THE SHAKESPEARE ADVENTURE WEBSITE
(With link to The New England Shakespeare-Oxford Library)


VISIT "NAtlantis Presents: THE SHAKESPEARE AUTHORSHIP FORUM under the direction of John L. Southard II
Tune into the brilliant writings and insights of DR.MICHAEL DELAHOYDE of Washington State University, a popular professor emerging as an inspiring leader of a new generation of Shakespeare scholars who are unafraid to explore new ideas and entertain new Shakespearean paradigms...
Don't miss one of the most insightful and original websites devoted to the Shakespeare mystery and, in particular, to the identity crisis suffered by Shakespearean Biography -- hUMILITY pRESS
* JIM HAMMOND'S "HOME of PHILOSOPHY and LITERATURE"
("Nietzsche, Shakespeare and Hammond")

* WEBSITE OF BESTSELLING AUTHOR MICHAEL PRESCOTT:
Enjoy Prescott's insights on wide-ranging subjects

including the Shakespeare-Oxford story!
The Shakespeare Fellowship
The Shakespeare Oxford Society
The Shakespeare Authorship Studies Conference
The De Vere Society
Elizabethan Authors
Shakespeare Authorship Sourcebook
Nina Green's Oxford Authorship Site
Shakespeare Authorship Roundtable
Frontline: The Shakespeare Mystery
Amazing Web of Shakespeare's Sonnets
The Works of the Bard - Matty Search
PUBLISHED.COM


Try this exciting website for book lovers:
MY SHELF.COM
NEWS ABOUT DATING "THE TEMPEST" -- Here are two current papers refuting traditional claims that "The Tempest" could not have been written by 1604. One is by Lynne Kositsky and Dr. Roger Stritmatter of the Shakespeare Fellowship -- located HERE -- and the other is by Nina Green, host of the Oxfordian internet forum Phaeton, and you will find her paper HERE at the bottom of the website page.

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