17th Earl of Oxford Is Real Shakespeare

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Uploaded by on May 7, 2011

Timothy Spearman has made some astonishing discoveries about history. The true identity of Shakespeare is just one of his amazing discoveries. This short film by Robert Badali is based on Timothy Spearman's portrait painting comparison of the Earl of Oxford and William Shakepeare. The featured paintings include one of Lord Oxford at the age of 36 and another under his pen name William Shakespeare, which he sat for just before his official death at age 54, when his death was faked and he was sent into exile on the Isle of Mersey near Colchester. He was exiled following the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth I in 1603 as he was considered a threat to the throne by King James I. In Romeo and Juliet, he reveals his identity as the Tudor prince in the balcony scene speech given by Juliet, "What's in a name? That which is called a rose by any other name would smell as sweet..." The rose refers to the Tudor rose. Though he could not bear the name of the rose, he still smells as sweet because he retains the bloodline of the Tudor family. Timothy Speaman is a revisionist historian. Check out his website www.shakesaspear.com and his new radio show Writing on the Wall at Orion Radio at www.micro1650am.com. Visit Timothy Spearman's publisher www.xoxopublishing.com to see his new book releases "Must I Remember" and "The History of the Peace Train".

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Uploader Comments (SpearmanNews)

  • Ignorance is not a good background from which to debate. None of thee present any substantiation for thy dismissals, therefore thou art dismissed. I bid thee adieu.

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  • Little bit of a fun fact here: he's actually not! :D

  • ^ ( up above, in info) Lord Oxford was exiled, on the death of his Mother, Queen Elizabeth the 1st??? Eh?

  • I don't see the resemblance. Timothy Spearman, perhaps, has "discovered" something that is not there.

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