The immediate reason for the Gunpowder Plot was the realization on the part of the conspirators that James I was not going to follow a policy of toleration towards the Catholic, a point proved in the Hampton Conference. In addition, Catholic Spain was weakened by the many wars and unable to provide assistance to any revolution.
Though Robert Catesby was the brain behind the conspiracy, Guy Fawkes was to execute it. The plotters rented a cellar under the House of Lords. By March 1605, 36 barrels of gunpowder were hidden in the cellar. The conspirators did want the fellow Catholics in the parliament to be killed. One of them wrote to his friend lord Monteagle about the plot. However, the letter was discovered and plot foiled. Guy Fawkes was caught red-handed as he tried to ignite the gunpowder. Fawkes was arrested and imprisoned. He was tortured but did not reveal the names of the co-conspirators. The fellow conspirators proudly proclaimed themselves after they had fled. Fawkes was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging. However, Fawkes did not like to face the ignominy and he jumped the scaffold and broke his neck. Later he was hanged.
Guy Fawkes' name is celebrated in the works of John Milton (Paradise Lost) Charlotte Bronte (Jane Eyre), Charles Dickens (David Copperfield), and J.K Rowling (Chamber of Secrets). Songs of John Lennon and Jethro Tull also allude to Fawkes. Of course, the contemporary works condemned him. Anarchists continue to admire him and believe that he was "the only man to enter the parliament with honorable intentions". It is still a tradition in Britain to search the cellars of Westminster before the royalty made their annual appearance. November 5 is regarded as Guy Fawkes Day in England and celebrated with fireworks, bonfires and by burning effigies of the conspirator
See http://www.britannia.com/history/g-fawkes.html for further reading.
Published by Kay Kay
I love to eat, go out with friends, watch movies, and generally have fun. View profile
- How to Celebrate Guy Hawkes DayThe 400 year old celebration of the failed revolution of Guy Fawkes and his conspirators burns on.
- England and Constitutional Confusion"Remember, remember the fifth of November / the gunpowder, treason and plot, / I see of no reason why gunpowder treason / Should ever be forgot..." This traditional rhyme that commemorates Guy Fawkes and his failed 'G...
- V for Vendetta: The Norsefire and the U.S. GovernmentAs the V for Vendetta of old critiqued Margret Thatcher's culture of fear in the 1980's, the 2006 film does the same for the Bush Administration.
- The Philosophy of V for VendettaAn analysis of the philosophy behind the movie V for Vendetta.
- Symbolism in V for VendettaA brief look at various uses of symbolism in the film "V For Vendetta."
- Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot
- V for Vendetta is Best Picture of the Year
- Book Review: Faith and Treason, the Story of the Gunpowder Plot, by Antonia Frasier
- Remember Remember the Fifth of November
- Remember V for Vendetta: A Review
- V for Vindicated : V for Vendetta
- V for Vendetta: Tackling Totalitarianism, Anarchy, Freedom

2 Comments
Post a CommentHe's just a wonderful reminder... of the things at hand !!!
Excellent!!!!!!!!!!!