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Christopher Marlowe Named Co-Author of Shakespeare for ‘Henry VI’

The issue of whether Shakespeare wrote all the plays attributed to him has been the subject of endless conjecture.

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A new edition of William Shakespeare's complete works will name Christopher Marlowe as co-author of three plays, shedding new light on the links between the two great playwrights after centuries of speculation and conspiracy theories.

Marlowe will be listed as co-author of the three ‘Henry VI’ plays in the New Oxford Shakespeare, due to be published in several instalments over the coming weeks by the Oxford University Press.

Shakespeare has entered the world of Big Data and there are certain questions that we are now able to answer more confidently that people have been asking for a very long time.
Gary Taylor, a senior editor on the project
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Years of Conspiracies and Conjecture

The issue of whether Shakespeare wrote all the plays attributed to him has been the subject of endless conjecture, with one persistent theory being that they were actually written by Marlowe – a notion rejected by Shakespeare scholars.

Taylor, a Florida State University professor, said academics had known for a long time that Shakespeare worked with other writers on some plays. The idea that he collaborated with Marlowe on the ‘Henry VI’ plays had been debated for centuries, but had not been possible to demonstrate before.

Taylor said scholars had used databases of plays and other writings from the Elizabethan period, not just by Shakespeare or Marlowe but by many others working at the time, to search for distinctive words or combinations of words.

The academics who worked on the New Oxford Shakespeare, and others who had provided peer reviews of their findings, were extremely confident about Marlowe's authorship of some parts of the ‘Henry VI’ plays, Taylor said.

‘Rivals Can Collaborate’

The author of The Jew of Malta, Doctor Faustus and Edward II, Marlowe passed into British popular culture as Shakespeare's great rival, but Taylor said that was speculation.

It’s possible they loved each other, it’s possible they hated each other. We have no way of knowing. Rivals can collaborate.

Taylor said that there are parts that are clearly by Shakespeare and parts that are very clearly by Marlowe. But he also added that most of the best-loved passages were by Shakespeare.

Taylor said that collaboration between playwrights was entirely normal in the Elizabethan period, and there was no suggestion of any great secret or conspiracy regarding Shakespeare's work with Marlowe.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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