Posted on 11/05/2024 12:19:48 PM PST by Red Badger
‘Remember, Remember the 5th of November’ is a rhyme that commemorates the night that Guy Fawkes and his comrades tried to blow up the Houses of Parliament With the clocks having gone back an hour, winter’s dark nights have returned to the UK. But a ray of brightness is seen on - and around - Bonfire Night, which is tonight.
The 5 November celebration is always accompanied by a cacophony of fireworks, the waving of sparklers and the crunch of toffee apples. But it has its origins in a dark period of British history, where religious persecution and political upheaval nearly saw the nation tear itself apart.
One of the flashpoints came in 1605, when Guy Fawkes and several accomplices - including an ancestor of Game of Thrones actor Kit Harington - attempted to blow up the Houses of Parliament. So, who was Guy Fawkes, what exactly was the Gunpowder Plot - and why do we celebrate Bonfire Night. Here’s what you need to know.
Who was Guy Fawkes?
Guy Fawkes was born in York in 1570. His father, Edward, was a church lawyer and prominent Protestant in the city, while his mother, Edith, was part of a family that included secret Catholics.
The denomination of Christianity had to practise in private at the time due to persecution during the reign of Elizabeth I - the last of the Protestant Tudor dynasty. This was because many plots against Queen Elizabeth had been led by Catholics, while Britain’s enemies at the time included the Catholic countries France and Spain.
When Fawkes was eight, his father died and his mother remarried - tying the knot with Dionysius Bainbridge. Guy Fawkes was drawn into his stepfather’s religion and converted to Catholicism.
When he was 21, Fawkes travelled to Europe to fight for Catholic Spain against Protestant Dutch reformers who were in the midst of what is now known as the Eighty Years War. After a decade of fighting, he met fellow Englishman Thomas Wintour in Spain.
At the time, Wintour was looking for people to join a group of Catholic conspirators based in England, led by his cousin Robert Catesby - an ancestor of Game of Thrones star Kit Harington. It saw Fawkes return to England in 1604, where protestant Scottish king James I had been crowned king the previous year.
What was the Gunpowder Plot? When he returned to the British Isles, Guy Fawkes became part of the Gunpowder Plot, which was led by Robert Catesby. The plan was to blow up Parliament during its state opening on 5 November, when James I, the Queen and his heir would all be in the same place.
The plan was to install King James’ daughter Elizabeth on the throne to serve as a Catholic puppet queen. There were 13 conspirators in all:
Guy Fawkes
Robert Catesby
Thomas Wintour
Robert Wintour (Thomas’ brother)
John Grant (brother-in-law to the Wintours)
Francis Tresham (Catesby’s second cousin)
Thomas Bates (Tresham’s servant)
Christopher Wright (Fawkes’ childhood friend)
John Wright (Christopher’s brother)
Thomas Percy (the brother-in-law of the Wrights)
Everard Digby
Ambrose Rookwood
Robert Keyes
The plotters rented cellar space that extended below the Houses of Parliament. Fawkes was the only member of the group who knew anything about gunpowder - he was an explosives technician during his military days.
It is believed this was the reason why he was left in the cellar to set off the fuse for the explosives. But Fawkes was discovered before he could blow anything up.
An anonymous letter tipped off the authorities that an explosion was planned. It led to a search of the spaces in, around and underneath Parliament and the discovery of Fawkes along with 36 barrels of gunpowder - although the number of barrels is disputed.
Fawkes was questioned and then locked up in the Tower of London where he was tortured. After days of holding out, he named his co-conspirators and signed a confession.
Robert Catesby, the Wright brothers, and Thomas Percy were discovered and shot after having fled to the Midlands, while the conspirators were taken to the Tower of London. There, they were tried and then sentenced to death for treason.
On 31 January 1606, they were dragged behind a horse along the streets of London to Westminster Yard where they were hung, drawn and quartered.
Guy Fawkes’ Legacy
Since his death, Guy Fawkes has lived on as a symbol of rebellion around the world. In part, this has been down to 2005 film ‘V for Vendetta’, in which a protagonist wearing a Guy Fawkes mask attempts to bring down a fascist dictatorship in the UK.
Ever since the film’s release, protesters have taken to wearing Guy Fawkes masks to protect their identities and make a political point. The mask has also become synonymous with ‘hacktivist’ group Anonymous.
Why do we celebrate Bonfire Night?
After the Gunpowder Plot was foiled, James I passed a thanksgiving act to celebrate its failure and his survival. Called the Observance of 5 November Act 1605, it involved a special church service, bonfires and fireworks. This Act remained in law until 1859.
Despite no longer being a legal requirement, celebrations have taken place ever since and often see effigies of Guy Fawkes - as well as contemporary political figures - burnt on the bonfire.
The event is also celebrated in countries which used to be part of the British Empire. Another tradition stemming from the event that continues to this day occurs during the state opening of Parliament - an event which kicks off the Parliamentary year. A ceremonial search for hidden explosives is still undertaken by the Yeomen of the Guard in the cellars below the Palace of Westminster.
My hero: the only man ever to enter Parliament with honest intentions.
V
BOOM!💣
Celebrating the failure of a plot may end up just reminding others how to do the same thing but without getting caught.
V for Vendetta was so on point. They thought the Right would be the evil ones, but the ant- Totolitarian message remains.
As fate would have it, all of the current British royal family are descended from princess Elizabeth. Her grandson was George I, the first of the Hanoverians.
Note who gets tossed in the slammer over there.
The movie “V” was good, kind of like “1984”, but with a positive ending, and then there’s Gunpowder, on HBOMAX, for a period dramatization of the gunpowder plot. For me, both are entertaining.
I often wonder about that - if viewers and producers can see through the fictionalized protagonists and antagonists in the movies they watch and produce.
Perhaps “V for Vendetta” can only be made with the P and A they fictionalize, but I have no problem in seeing the totalitarian Left in the double-cross antagonists of the movie.
Great movie!
Especially Covid.
IIRC, he Fawked up.
Robert Catesby had a quicker, more merciful end than Guy Fawkes did…
Trivia: Kit Harington is a direct descendant of Robert Catesby on his mother's side. Harington's full birth name is Christopher Catesby Harington.
Harington also was Jon Snow in Game of Thrones
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I read somewhere the theory that the whole Gunpowder Plot was a fake (like Jan. 6) and the participants who got punished for their role were just dupes. Not sure if any serious historians of that period buy that theory.
In colonial New England, November 5 was celebrated every year to express their hatred of the Catholic Church.
Our commonly-used word "guy" comes from Guy Fawkes' name.
Thanks for the info! 👍🙂
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