Christopher Marlowe
(Canterbury, England, 1564-Deptford, id., 1593) English playwright and poet.The mystery that surrounds his life has given rise to numerous legends about him and his work.The most surprising is the one that attributes to him the authorship of Shakespeare's dramas: Shakespeare's appearance on the scene just after Marlowe's death, and the similarity of some verses and formal procedures, has led some to venture the hypothesis of that the death of Marlowe, supposed secret agent of the English Crown, was only a ruse to rid him of his many enemies.
Christopher Marlowe
Declared officially dead, Christopher Marlowe would have continued his work as a writer through the figure of a second-rate actor, who would be none other than Shakespeare.Without discussing the possible foundation of such theories, the truth is that Marlowe was the first great English playwright, although his literary career only spanned six years.
Son of a shoemaker, details about his early childhood and youth are unknown.At the age of fifteen he was studying at the Royal School of Canterbury, and two years later at the University of Cambridge, where in 1584 he obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree.His prolonged absences from the classroom were motivated by his activities as a secret agent for the English Crown.Graduated in 1587, that same year he moved to London, where he released his first dramatic work: the two parts of Tamerlane the Great .
Of a violent nature, in 1589 he was accused of murder and a little later of atheism, blasphemy and sodomy.Marlowe was killed in a dark brawl, shortly after his arrest warrant was issued for conspiracy.
Along with the aforementioned work, his production includes the dramas Dido, Queen of Carthage (1594), Edward II (1594), The Paris Massacre (1594), Doctor Faust (1601) and The Jew from Malta (1633), and the poems The Passionate Shepherd (1599) and Hero and Leandro (1598), the latter unfinished.
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