Getting the autograph of your favorite celebrity can be a great experience for most. For serious philographers, (autograph collectors) living celebrities, John Hancocks are just the tip of the iceberg. For these collectors, the most valuable autographs are those of deceased historical figures. Still more valuable are those same signatures decorating handwritten documents and, especially, personal letters. The most expensive autograph in the world, if sold today, would be worth around $5 million dollars.That would be William Shakespeare and, if affixed to a play written in his own hand, it would easily be worth ten times as much.
He may have authored such famous works as A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet and a remarkable number of histories regarding England’s many kings, but only six copies of Shakespeare’s autograph are known to have survived to the current day. In fact, these are some of the only examples we have of the legendary bard’s handwriting, as not a single manuscript handwritten by Shakespeare has yet been discovered. Three of the surviving signatures are attached to his will. The other three adorn the deed to a house in London, the playwright’s mortgage and his testimony in a legal case.
Shakespeares signature can be viewed at the British Library in London which is near Kings Cross Railway Station.
It must be said that in ye older days lawyers often signed documents on behalf of their clients, so buyer beware.
Considering the autograph itself, it isn’t surprising that so few examples of his handwriting still exist. In fact, his atrocious penmanship may explain at least some of the many variants on his surname, from the dull and pedestrian Shaxberd to the evocative and famous Shakespeare.
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