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The Code that Failed: Testing a Bacon-Shakespeare Cipher

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Description: An introduction to a cipher system found in the works of William Shakespeare by Terry Ross.
Testing a Bacon-Shakespeare Cipher The Code that Failed: Testing a Bacon-Shakespeare Cipher Although the most popular current strain of antistratfordianism is Oxfordian, for many decades Francis Bacon was the favorite candidate of those who doubted that William Shakespeare wrote the works attributed to him. Many of the objections Oxfordians raise against Shakespeare were developed originally by Baconians (something Oxfordians are not always eager to admit), and Baconians had the advantage over Oxfordians that their candidate had lived long enough not only to write the works but indeed, they claim, to have overseen the publishing of the First Folio in 1623: Oxford died in 1604, Shakespeare in 1616, but Bacon lived until 1626.
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