J Leslie Hotson
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John Leslie Hotson known as J Leslie Hotson or Leslie Hotson (1897 - 16th November 1992)
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Prolific Shakespearean scholar and sleuth, born at Delhi, Ontario.[1] Cracked many, especially, Elizabethan literary puzzles - e.g. the murderer of Thomas of Woodstock (decoding Chaucer's Nunne's Priest's Tale); the murderer of Christopher Marlowe[1]; the identity of Mr W H (to whom Shakespeare's sonnets were addressed)[1]; the shape of the original Shakespearean theater[1]; and identified a miniature colour portrait by Hilliard of Shakespeare as a young man. He also unearthed the letters that Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote to his divorced wife Harriet[1]; produced evidence of Shakespeare's father as a wool dealer; illuminated Shakespeare's early years in Stratford-on-Avon; and identified the killer of Henry Porter (a minor Elizabethan dramatist).
As the New York Times stated in his obituary: "But it was chiefly as a Shakespearian detective that Dr Hotson remained in the public eye, sometimes to the annoyance of rival scholars who discounted his theories."[1]
His first major work, The Death of Christopher Marlowe — which made his name — is still in print. He stumbled across the evidence while decoding Chaucer's Nunne's Priest's Tale in the archives of the English Public Records Office in 1923/4 — published in 1923 — Colfox vs Chauntecleer.
[edit] Life Summary
- Pacifist - served with Friends (Quaker) Relief Unit in France, 1918-1919
- Educated at Harvard (BA, MA, PhD) and Yale
- Married 1919, Mary May Peabody
- Fulbright Exchange Scholar at Bedford College, London
- Taught at Harvard, Yale (Research Associate) and New York University
- Guggenheim Fellow 1929 and 1930 in 16th and 17th Century English Literature
- Taught at Haverford College (1931-42)
- Second War - Officer in Signal Corps
- Fellow of King's College, Cambridge (England), 1954-60.
- He is the author of many books of literary biography, criticism and detection, such as:
- Colfox vs Chauntecleer 1924 PMLA XXXIX
- The Death of Christopher Marlowe 1925
- The Commonwealth and Restoration Stage 1929
- Shakespeare versus Shallow 1931
- The Adventure of a Single Rapier 1931
- I, William Shakespeare
- Shakespeare's Sonnets Dated
- Shakespeare's Motley
- The First Night of Twelfth Night, 1954
- Shakespeare's Wooden O, 1959
- Mr WH, 1964
- Shakespeare by Hilliard, 1977
[edit] External Links
- SAXON, WOLFGANG. "Dr. John Hotson, 95, Unraveler Of Elizabethan Literary Puzzles", New York Times, November 20, 1992, pp. 1. Retrieved on 2008-05-07. (English).
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ a b c d e f SAXON, WOLFGANG. "Dr. John Hotson, 95, Unraveler Of Elizabethan Literary Puzzles", New York Times, November 20, 1992, pp. 1. Retrieved on 2008-05-07. (English)