Three main problems prevented the play from being attributed to Shakespeare from the beginning:
In recent years, critics have reviewed the work with a new eye, and have concluded that some passages are as well-written as any of Shakespeare's early histories, especially King John and the Henry VI plays. In addition, there are passages in the play which are direct quotes from sonnets known to have been written by Shakespeare.
The plot of the play centers around the Countess of Salisbury, beset by rampaging Scots, who is "rescued" by King Edward III, who vows to get her into his bed. The play makes many jibes at Scotland and the Scots, a view which has led some critics to believe that it is this work which caused George Nicolson, Queen Elizabeth's agent in Edinburgh, to write in 1598 to William Cecil, Lord Burghley, protesting the way Scots were being portrayed on the London stage.
External Links Text of Edward III (http://shakespeare.about.com/library/weekly/bled3scenes.htm)
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