Guy Fawkes, from 'Peeps into the Past' |
Born in York to Edward and Edith Fawkes, Guy Fawkes
was baptised a Protestant at St Michael le Belfry on the 16th April 1570. His
father was a proctor of the ecclesiastical courts and advocate of the
consistory court of the Archbishop of York, who died when the boy was eight.
Guy’s mother later married a Catholic, Dionis Baynbrigge and Guy Fawkes
converted to Roman Catholic.
Guy Fawkes went to Europe to fight for the Spanish Catholics
in the Eighty Years War. While fighting
in Flanders, he was asked by Thomas Wintour to join a plot by Robert Catesby to
kill the Protestant King James and as many Members of Parliament as possible.
In 1604 Fawkes met Robert Catesby, along with Thomas
Wintour, Thomas Percy and John Wright and at the Duck and Drake Inn to plan the
conspiracy. Over time they were joined by Francis Tresham, Everard Digby,
Robert Wintour, Thomas Bates and Christopher Wright.
Catesby planned to blow up the King as he opened
the Houses of Parliament on 5th November 1605, then to have Princess Elizabeth
kidnapped from Coombe Abbey. She was to be married to a Catholic nobleman and
installed as a Catholic monarch. The conspirators continued with this plan even
though Prince Henry, the heir to the throne, would not be at the opening of Parliament
and, therefore would not be blown up and could rightfully claim the throne
himself.
Renting a house next to the Houses of Parliament, the
Gun Powder Plot conspirators initially tried to tunnel under Parliament. Later,
they were able to hire a cellar under the House of Lords in the name of Thomas
Percy, which they filled with barrels of gunpowder. Having gained munitions
experience during the war in the Netherlands, Guy Fawkes was charged with
creating the explosion.
However, Francis Tresham became concerned the
explosion would kill his brother-in-law, Lord Monteagle, so he sent him a letter warning
him not to attend Parliament on 5th November. Being suspicious, Lord Monteagle
passed the letter to Robert Cecil, who ordered a search of the Houses of Parliament.
On 4th November Lord Monteagle and the Earl of Suffolk
searched the Lords Chamber and the vaults below. They found a man calling
himself John Johnson in the cellars. He claimed to be storing wood for Thomas Percy. At first they accepted his story, but later Lord
Monteagle suggested to the Earl of Suffolk that he knew Thomas Percy and didn’t know why he would need to store wood in
the vaults.
Having raised more suspicions, the King insisted the vaults be searched
again. That night armed guards searched the vaults and discovered the
thirty-six barrels of gunpowder and fire-lighting equipment as well as the
wood. Guy Fawkes was arrested at midnight on 4 November 1605 beneath the House
of Lords.
As the other Gun Powder Plot conspirators were rounded up, Guy Fawkes
was sent for torture. Technically torture was illegal, and James I had to personally
give a licence for its use. At first, he refused to speak under torture, but
finally Guy Fawkes signed a confession.
Guy fawkes torture signatures |
He
was found guilty of treason and sentenced to the traditional traitors' death -
to be 'hanged, drawn and quartered'. However, when he was executed on 31st
January, 1606 he jumped from the gallows, breaking his own neck. In so doing he
avoided being cut down while still alive and seeing his testicles cut off and
his stomach split open. His body was still hacked into quarters and his remains
sent to "the four corners of the kingdom" as a warning to others.
In celebration of thwarting the plot to blow up parliament bonfires were
lit across London. This custom spread across the country and 5th November
became a day of annual thanksgiving. Commemorative fireworks have been let off
since the mid-seventeenth century to mark the occasion. The Guy Fawkes legend continued
to grow, and by the 19th Century his effigy was being placed on the bonfires.
Although the religious aspects have been blurred over time, and it is no longer
seen as a day of thanksgiving, “Bonfire Night” is still a national celebration
in the United Kingdom.
A photomontage of fireworks from a Guy Fawkes Night display at Roundwood Park in Harlesden, London, by Billy Hicks |
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