Shakespearean authorship: Difference between revisions

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The '''Shakespearian authorship''' controversy centers around the theory that someone other than [[William Shakespeare]] of [[Stratford-upon-Avon]] wrote the plays and poems that go under his name. The mainstream of scholarly thought on this point is unequivocal in saying that he was exactly as claimed: the talented son of a prominent official from a prosperous provincial town, educated at [[grammar school]] who learned the techniques of theatre and received the background he needed in the vibrant cultural scene of Elizabethan London.
The '''Shakespearian authorship''' controversy centers around the theory that someone other than [[William Shakespeare]] of [[Stratford-upon-Avon]] wrote the plays and poems that go under his name. The mainstream of scholarly thought on this point is unequivocal in saying that he was exactly as claimed: the talented son of a prominent official from a prosperous provincial town, educated at [[grammar school]] who learned the techniques of theatre and received the background he needed in the vibrant cultural scene of Elizabethan London.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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The Shakespearian authorship controversy centers around the theory that someone other than William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon wrote the plays and poems that go under his name. The mainstream of scholarly thought on this point is unequivocal in saying that he was exactly as claimed: the talented son of a prominent official from a prosperous provincial town, educated at grammar school who learned the techniques of theatre and received the background he needed in the vibrant cultural scene of Elizabethan London.