Translations:Saint Germain/60/en: Difference between revisions

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Ciphers discovered in the 1890s in the original printings of the Shakespearean plays and in the works of Bacon and other Elizabethan authors reveal that Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and that he was the son of Queen Elizabeth and Lord Leicester. His mother, however, fearful of an untimely loss of power, refused to acknowledge him as her heir.
Ciphers discovered in the 1890s in the original printings of the Shakespearean plays and in the works of Bacon and other Elizabethan authors reveal that Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and that he was the son of Queen Elizabeth and Lord Leicester.<ref>See {{TSC}}.</ref> His mother, however, fearful of an untimely loss of power, refused to acknowledge him as her heir.

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Ciphers discovered in the 1890s in the original printings of the Shakespearean plays and in the works of Bacon and other Elizabethan authors reveal that Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and that he was the son of Queen Elizabeth and Lord Leicester.<ref>See {{TSC}}.</ref> His mother, however, fearful of an untimely loss of power, refused to acknowledge him as her heir.

Ciphers discovered in the 1890s in the original printings of the Shakespearean plays and in the works of Bacon and other Elizabethan authors reveal that Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and that he was the son of Queen Elizabeth and Lord Leicester.[1] His mother, however, fearful of an untimely loss of power, refused to acknowledge him as her heir.

  1. See Virginia Fellows, The Shakespeare Code.