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The Shakespeare Paper Trail: The Later Years

By Michael Wood
The monument to William Shakespeare in Holy Trinity Church, Stratford
The monument to William Shakespeare in Holy Trinity Church, Stratford ©

As Shakespeare's fame grew, references to him began to appear in some enlightening documents. They give an intriguing account of high and low living, tax dodges, and the steady acquisition of property.

Who was he?

The scarcity of real knowledge about William Shakespeare, especially his early years, has led to theories that he didn't exist as an individual at all, but was really another writer working under a pseudonym. Most serious historians however, regard these theories as baseless: the later years of Shakespeare's life are in fact relatively well documented, for someone of his standing.

'...his early experience of belonging to a persecuted minority could have played its part in ...a self-effacing stance.'

In addition, the playwright's colleagues, in their commemoration volume of his plays after his death (the First Folio, published in 1623), confirm that William Shakespeare of Stratford upon Avon was the author of those plays. Evidence that a poet of this name, from Stratford, did exist is also backed up by further documents from around the same time, including Shakespeare's will (now in the National Archive, at Kew), and his funeral monument (in the church at Stratford). A look at the main documents relating to his later life, and some recent finds, may offer further clues.

Shakespeare's formative years had been spent at a time poised between two worlds - the old world of Catholicism and the new world of Protestantism. Then, in the aftermath of Spain's failed attempt, in 1588, to impose Catholicism on the English, the new Protestant establishment had triumphed. Thus, by the turn of the century, Catholicism had become a minority religion.

Stained glass in the church at Wroxall.  Shakespeare's grandfather Richard was bailiff here and Shakepeare women were prioresses at the nunnery
Stained glass in the church at Wroxall. Shakespeare's grandfather Richard was bailiff here and Shakepeare women were prioresses at the nunnery ©
It seems likely that in the privacy of the Shakespeare family home the old faith may have been foremost. His grandfather had left a will demonstrating strong Catholic beliefs, and his father appears on a list of Catholic recusants in 1592. Perhaps his early experience of belonging to a persecuted minority could have played its part in what appears to be a self-effacing, even evasive, stance as a writer in his later career in London.

It is intriguing, for example, that he was never picked up on church attendance lists, including during his years of lodging within the London estate known as the Liberty of the Clink, in Southwark, belonging the Bishops of Winchester. He is known to have lived here in 1599, and maybe later.

It is perhaps also significant that his one known house purchase in London (for which the mortgage documents survive), was made in 1613, after he had retired to Stratford - and that this house had once been well known to the government as a Catholic safe house.

Published: 2003-06-01

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