Shakespeare und die Bacon-Mythen by Kuno Fischer
Let's set the scene. It's the 1800s, and a strange idea is catching fire in literary circles: What if the man from Stratford-upon-Avon, William Shakespeare, was just a front? What if the timeless plays and poems were secretly penned by Sir Francis Bacon, a towering intellectual and political figure of the Elizabethan era? Proponents of this 'Baconian theory' pointed to codes hidden in the texts, argued that a common actor couldn't have possessed such vast knowledge, and built an elaborate alternative history.
The Story
Kuno Fischer doesn't just summarize this theory. He takes it on directly. Think of him as the ultimate fact-checker for a viral 19th-century rumor. The book systematically examines every major pillar of the Baconian argument. Fischer looks at the claims about secret ciphers and shows their flaws. He compares the known life and education of Shakespeare with the imagined requirements of the plays' author. He questions the logic that says a genius must come from nobility. Page by page, he dismantles the myth, not with anger, but with clear, persistent reasoning, always bringing the focus back to the evidence we actually have about Shakespeare and his world.
Why You Should Read It
This isn't just about proving Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. It's a brilliant case study in how people read history. Fischer shows us how desire can shape belief—the desire for a more 'suitable,' aristocratic author instead of a talented man of the theater. Reading his takedown feels incredibly modern. It's the same satisfaction you get from seeing a flawed internet theory get logically dismantled. You watch a sharp mind at work, protecting a cultural icon from what he saw as a baseless, if imaginative, attack. It makes you think about why we create alternative narratives and what they say about us.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for anyone who loves literary history, a good intellectual debate, or true crime-style mysteries—but where the crime is against historical fact. It's for the reader who enjoys seeing myths unraveled with intelligence and wit. While it's a translation of a 19th-century German text, Fischer's arguments are so clear and his passion so evident that it remains engaging. If you've ever wondered about the Shakespeare authorship question, this is one of the most compelling and satisfying answers you'll find.
This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. Preserving history for future generations.
Ethan Lee
6 months agoGood quality content.
Sandra Lee
1 year agoPerfect.