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Restored scribble may be Shakespeare's

Printed From: History Community ~ All Empires
Category: Regional History or Period History
Forum Name: Early Modern & the Imperial Age
Forum Discription: World History from 1500 to the end of WW1
URL: http://www.allempires.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=31512
Printed Date: 15-May-2024 at 09:16
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Topic: Restored scribble may be Shakespeare's
Posted By: tjadams
Subject: Restored scribble may be Shakespeare's
Date Posted: 03-Apr-2012 at 19:43

Restored Scribble May Be Shakespeare's Signature

Written By Stephanie Pappas -Published April 03, 2012-LiveScience

Researchers using high-tech photography have reconstructed a signature that may belong to William Shakespeare — or perhaps a clever forger.

It's not yet known who scrawled "Wm Shakespeare" across the title page of the legal treatise "Archaionomia," a collection of Saxon laws published during the reign of http://www.livescience.com/18407-mysterious-cursed-gems-diamonds.html - Elizabeth I of England . It may never be clear, said Gregory Heyworth, a professor of English at the University of Mississippi.

But now, Heyworth and his students have used new technology to reveal the nearly lost scribbles on the old book. The work is part of The Lazarus Project, an effort to revive damaged texts using a technique called multispectral imaging. The researchers take very high-resolution photographs of old text, art or objects using 12 different wavelengths of light, ranging from ultraviolet to infrared, beyond the boundaries of the human eye. Next, they use software to combine these images into the clearest possible picture of the text.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/03/restored-scribble-may-be-shakespeare-signature/#ixzz1r1Y8KnqE - http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/03/restored-scribble-may-be-shakespeare-signature/#ixzz1r1Y8KnqE



Replies:
Posted By: Centrix Vigilis
Date Posted: 03-Apr-2012 at 20:09
It's not yet known who scrawled "Wm Shakespeare" across the title page of the legal treatise "Archivonomia," a collection of Saxon laws published during the reign of http://www.livescience.com/18407-mysterious-cursed-gems-diamonds.html - Elizabeth I of England
 
Yep. but intriguing ntl. good un Tj.


-------------
"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence"

S. T. Friedman


Pilger's law: 'If it's been officially denied, then it's probably true'




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