William Shakespeare
Cipher Shakespeare Stories, Part 1
Did Shakespeare write Shakespeare? Many people who doubt, for various reasons, the most obvious being as an actor barely read and write the sleepy village of Stratford-upon-Avon could not have written with such precision and knowledge of many scenes in games that rely on conventional or the splendor of the nobility and the royal courts. In addition, none of the manuscripts of Shakespeare has never been found, and only six signatures Shakespeare are known. The signatures all look different and look like they were written by a man who has not been used to hold a pencil. Some speculate that the hands of others have guided his own as he wrote.
If someone other than William Shakespeare wrote plays and poems published under his name, who it was? And the secret clues as to insert author's true identity in his works? These are two separate issues, and one does not necessarily imply the other. Various bright Elizabethans were defended as the true author simply based on their literary qualities, their educational backgrounds and social, and plausible reasons to want to hide their authors, among them Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, Roger Manners, Earl of Rutland, William Stanley, Earl of Derby, and Sir Francis Bacon.
In last few centuries, many people in the old and the new world began as the search for hidden messages in works of Shakespeare was be such copyright. Anagrams, acrostics, word numbers, line numbers, numbers letter, they have all been found. But are they all for real?
Anyone interested in the figures, which have been found in Shakespeare's work should read Shakespeare figures questioned William and Elizebeth Friedman. This well-documented book of 1957 is exhausted, but copies can be found in libraries or on the Internet. Friedman a professional cryptographer who helped decipher the Enigma cipher tempting occupied by the Nazis during the Second World War has been called a cryptographers foremost American.
The Friedmans reviewed dozens of figures that have been discovered in the works of Shakespeare and analyzed according to professional criteria of what constitutes a valid number. It is fair to say that in the process, few applications for different encryption stood. One of the best known efforts, they have shown are not correct, is that by Ignatius Donnelly. Donnelly, a lawyer and politician, published the cryptogram Great in the late 1880s. It revealed a complex and very impressive mathematical "number of roots", "multiplier" and "modifiers" that produces messages such as "… as below] [Marlowe or spur Shak'st [Shakespeare] never wrote a word of them. "The numerical sequence to identify the word" More "on this particular page given run like this: the number of roots [] 516-16 -22b = 349 & h = 327-254 = 73-15b & h = 58. 448-58 = 390 +1 = 391.
However impressive mathematical sequences Donnelly, some who attempted to replicate his efforts came with surprising results. The Friedmans include a Rev A. Nicholson, who took the same text passages Donnelly started from and, beginning with the number and the same root complex using the same method, came with a message from him: "Master I am [William] Shak'st Spurr [Shakespeare] short game and was committed to the curtain. "Thus, the subjective nature of the rendering system disabled.
The Friedmans devote much of their book to the encryption algorithm bi-literal discovered by Mrs. Elizabeth Wells Gallup, who believes that Francis Bacon was the true author of Shakespeare. This part is particularly fascinating because the Friedmans themselves worked for Ms. Gallup for many years. Once work decoding Ms. Gallup has gained notoriety, it attracted a benefactor, Colonel Fabian, who was then a research team working on large decoding different pieces. Elizebeth Friedman joined the team in 1915, William followed in 1916. They stayed with her, almost without interruption until 1920.
Ms. Gallup has begun on the mainland because it has worked with the bi-literal figure invented by Francis Bacon himself. Bacon This figure was published in October 1623, just one month before the First Folio of Shakespeare's complete works appeared. The figure is based bi-literal mixing two fonts that are different enough to stand out yet not too different to draw attention. The First Folio is installed in a curious mixture of styles italics and normal font, which naturally led to suspicion that it can hide bi-literal cipher Bacon.
Ms. Gallup believed, somewhat arbitrarily, that the figure has been incorporated into the italicized words in the cheek, and decrypted long passages which revealed the author of Bacon and his life story down. Once the Friedmans became involved in this work, they gradually came to realize that Mrs. Gallup was the only research center that could distinguish between the two fonts and produce useful messages. Everyone not always. In addition, Ms. Gallup has been unable to reproduce portions of it had deciphered without significant differences. She also often omitted or added letters to run the encryption. One expert consulted by the FBI Friedmans in 1950 proved that There was much variation between the different letters in italics in the Folio and there were no characteristics that supported the strict classification two fonts.
Since the work of Mrs. Gallup has not been reproduced independently by other decoders, the Friedmans concluded that although encryption bi-lateral Bacon himself is a cipher of sound work Gallup has been biased and unacceptable. This does not mean that could not be a bi-literal figure hidden in the works of Shakespeare, it only means that if there is one, it has not yet been found.
References
Bacon, Francis De Augmentis Scientiarum (1623)
Donnelly, Ignatius, the cipher Great (1888)
Friedman, William F. and S. Elizebeth, consider the figures of Shakespeare. (Cambridge University Press, 1957)
Wells Gallup, Elizabeth – The figure of Sir Francis Bacon biliterals known in his works and decrypted by Mrs. Elizabeth Wells Gallup (1899)
See William Stevenson, A Man Called Intrepid.
About the Author
Find out more about Frances Bacon and The Shakespeare Code at
http://www.shakespearecode.com/
Sonnet no 18: By William Shakespeare (‘Summer’s day’)
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Famous Author Mini Educational Laminated Poster Series. English Literature Art Prints. Featuring: Toni Morrision, Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, Edgar Allan Poe, J.D. Salinger, William Shakespeare, more $30.00 Eight literary-themed laminated posters. Fun facts about a host of authors are revealed in this series of educational posters including Toni Morrision, Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, Edgar Allan Poe, J.D. Salinger, William Shakespeare, and many more. A must for every English classroom…. |
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William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet Poster Movie C 11×17 Leonardo DiCaprio Claire Danes William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet reproduction Approx. Size: 11 x 17 Inches – 28cm x 44cm Style C mini poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, posters and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture… |
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William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet Poster Movie D 11×17 Leonardo DiCaprio Claire Danes William Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet reproduction Approx. Size: 11 x 17 Inches – 28cm x 44cm Style D mini poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, posters and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture… |
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William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet: Music From The Motion Picture (1996 Version) [Enhanced CD] $2.35 Like the movie itself, the Romeo + Juliet soundtrack is filled with emotional twists; from the hardness of Garbage’s “#1 Crush” and the Butthole Surfers’ “Whatever” to Stina Nordenstam’s endearing, whispery “Little Star” the journey is all over the map. Within the CD-enhanced grooves, however, moments of absolute brilliance flow; Des’ree’s “Kissing You (Love Theme from Romeo + Juliet)” is perhaps … |
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Romeo and Juliet (Royal Ballet)- Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn $16.44 It’s not a stretch to call Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn the most sublime of all dance partners and Sergei Prokofiev the most gifted 20th-century ballet composer. And so it goes without saying that the 1966 film version of the Royal Ballet production of Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet featuring Nureyev and Fonteyn as the star-crossed lovers is an absolute must-have for anyone who cares a whi… |
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William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet: Music From The Motion Picture, Volume 2 (1996 Version) $4.28 Japanese version featuring limited edition packaging for a limited time…. |
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Romeo & Juliet (1968) [VHS] $8.99 Franco Zeffirelli’s 1968 adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet was unique in its day for casting kids in the play’s pivotal roles of, well, kids. Seventeen-year-old Leonard Whiting and 15-year-old Olivia Hussey play the titular pair, the Bard’s star-crossed lovers who defy a running feud between their families in order to be together in love. Typically played on stage and in previous film p… |
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Merchant of Venice: Literary Masterpieces [VHS] $12.50 … |
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10 Things I Hate About You [VHS] $3.05 It’s, like, Shakespeare, man! This good-natured and likeable update of The Taming of the Shrew takes the basics of Shakespeare’s farce about a surly wench and the man who tries to win her and transfers it to modern-day Padua High School. Kat Stratford (Julia Stiles) is a sullen, forbidding riot grrrl who has a blistering word for everyone; her sunny younger sister Bianca (Larisa Oleynik) is poised… |
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Forbidden Planet [Blu-ray] $17.49 This 1956 pop adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Tempest is one of the best, most influential science fiction movies ever made. Its space explorers are the models for the crew of Star Trek’s Enterprise, and the film’s robot is clearly the prototype for Robby in Lost in Space. Walter Pidgeon is the Prospero figure, presiding over a paradisiacal world with his lovely young daughter and their servile dr… |
Tags: books, english, literature, reference, shakespeare, william shakespeare, william shakespeare biography, william shakespeare plays, william shakespeare poems, william shakespeare quotes
July 27th, 2010 at 2:02 am
Macbeth (written by Shakespeare), director : Declan Donnellan…
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