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Frizer then claimed to have sold them on Woodleff's behalf, but for only £30.
Skeres and Frizer are disappointed to not to find the diamonds in the box.
He abuses Frizer and threatens him with a knife.
Ten days later, he was stabbed to death by Ingram Frizer.
Not all of Frizer's business dealings were honest.
Marlowe snatched Frizer's dagger and wounded him on the head.
The jury concluded that Frizer acted in self-defence, and within a month he was pardoned.
Ned proves that Frizer, who has a short temper, killed all the people who could have known about the diamonds.
The Queen sanctioned Frizer's pardon just four weeks later.
Surviving legal records show Frizer to have been a fairly well-to-do business man profiting from buying and selling property.
Marlowe was lounging on a bed just behind them when Frizer and he got into an argument over "the reckyninge" - the bill.
In this surmise Frizer is no more than one of Skeres's associates, and not the principal player.
He attacks them, but they overpower him and manage to drive the car towards Skeres and Frizer.
Woodleff signed a bond for £60 in exchange for some guns that Frizer supposedly had in storage.
That Poley, Frizer and Skeres all made a living from being able to lie convincingly may have been relevant too.
Witnesses testified that Frizer and Marlowe had earlier argued over the bill, exchanging "divers malicious words."
While Julie and Ned are in the car, Skeres and Frizer go to get the shoe box.
Ned manages to shoot Skeres and Frizer, and Julie kills Poley.
Eleanor is known because it was at her house that Christopher Marlowe was killed during a quarrel with Ingram Frizer.
Honan considers it possible that, given the circumstances, it was Thomas Walsingham himself-accustomed "not to look far into Frizer's.
The film begins with detectives Poley, Frizer, and Skeres, who interrogate Ned after they torture him.
After a day of chatting in the garden, one of them, a man named Ingram Frizer, plunged a dagger into Marlowe's eye while the others looked on.
At Deptford, Marlowe, Frizer, Poley and Skeres discover that the man whose body they have been given died from a stab wound.
Zeigler was writing before Leslie Hotson discovered the records of the inquest into the death of Marlowe, identifying his killer as Ingram Frizer.
He discovered the identity of Ingram Frizer, the killer of Christopher Marlowe, and reconstructed the shape of the original Shakespearean theater.