Includes known portraits and portrayals of Oxford, his friends, family and surroundings.
Extensive site with many articles, history, bibliography, conference news and records.
Mark K. Anderson invokes Kuhn and Heisenberg, backed up by Ovid, Bottom, Pyramus and Thisbe in support of the thesis.
A comprehensive guide to British literature of the Renaissance with over 100 original pages, biographies, and works never before published on the web. Also includes several hundred links to additional resources.
Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford, Renaissance English poet and courtier. Life, works, resources. At Luminarium.
Oxfordian author Tom Bethell replies to article by Irvin Matus in October, 1991 issue of Atlantic Magazine.
Tom Bethel's article from Atlantic Monthly, October, 1991.
Professor Alan Nelson's site includes all 76 of Oxford's letters and a great deal of other information, together with his ideas on why Oxford could not have been Shakespeare.
Authorship of Shakespeare's works, including information on the 17th Earl of Oxford's travels, spying, and epic heraldry adventures.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens elaborates on his conclusion that the Earl of Oxford was the true Shakespeare, in this (abridged) version of a 1992 article.
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