Showing posts with label Gunpowder plot conspirators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gunpowder plot conspirators. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 January 2017

The Execution of Guy Fawkes

HISTORY FACTS:

On This Day, 31st January 1606, the infamous Guy Fawkes was executed for his part in the Gunpowder Plot.
 
During his torture, I mean interrogation, there's a difference apparently, Guy Fawkes was asked the question, "What were you doing in possession of so much gunpowder?"
 
On November 5th, 1605, Guy Fawkes was found in the tunnels beneath the Houses of Parliament with 36 barrels of Gunpowder. Trying to explain your way out of that one and claim innocence would not be easy.
 
Guy Fawkes asked for the mildly hot poker to be removed from his bottom, a popular interrogation technique still used by the United States, and not torture, as there is a difference. He then said, "to blow you Scotch beggars back to your native mountains."
 
"To blow you Scotch beggars back to your native mountains."
- a popular English drinking game in the early 1600s.

King James, who would have been blown to teeny-tiny bits along with the Palace of Westminster, had Guy Fawkes been able to carry out his plan, had a mild admiration for Fawkes and his steadfastness, resolution, and ability to hold a poker face like no other before him.
 
The admiration didn't stop the King ordering Fawkes be tortured. I mean interrogated. Although he did indicate the torture, sheesh, interrogation, be light at first.
 
"Don't use the hedgehogs unless they are completely necessary,"
- the King was heard to say.

Guy Fawkes was tried and found guilty of high treason.
 
The Attorney General, Sir Edward Coke, took a sip of Pepsi and told the court the conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot should be, "...put to death halfway between heaven and earth as unworthy of both."
 
And continued, "Their genitals would be cut off and burned before their eyes, and their bowels and hearts removed. After lunch, they would then be decapitated and their dismembered parts displayed so as to become 'prey for the fowls of the air'."
 
Yep. Sir Edward Coke was a pretty serious guy. Perhaps he should have switched to decaf.
 
On the 31st January 1606, Guy Fawkes and three of his fellow conspirators, Thomas Wintour, Ambrose Rookwood, and Robert Keyes, were dragged from the Tower of London by a horse to the Old Palace Yard in Westminster.
 
The other three had their punishments first. Guy Fawkes was to watch as they were hanged, some longer than others, but all were cut down before they died. Whilst conscious, they had their dangly bits sliced off, before they were disembowelled, and finally quartered.
 
Finally it was the turn of Guy Fawkes. But, it would seem, after being forced to watch the others go through a nasty ending, he didn't much like to suffer it himself.
 
As he climbed the ladder to the noose, he decided to jump and broke his neck. He was killed instantly. Some say he merely fell, but either way he avoided the eye-watering part of having is little Guy lopped off.
 
The rest of the procedure was still carried out. His body parts were then distributed to the four corners of the kingdom to be displayed as warning to others that would consider traitorous thoughts.
Fun Fact:
The penis of Guy Fawkes found its way to the Scottish Highlands,
where it was impaled on a twig and set alight using gunpowder from one of the barrels
he had smuggled into the tunnels beneath the Houses of Parliament.

Saturday, 5 November 2016

HISTORICAL FUN: History facts 5th November

HISTORICAL FACTS for NOVEMBER 5th

On This Day In History in 1605, Guy Fawkes was arrested for the part he played in the infamous Gunpowder Plot.
 
Remember, remember the fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason and plot.
I see no reason why gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot.
 
In the early hours of the 5th of November, 1605, Guy Fawkes was discovered in the tunnels beneath the Houses of Parliament with dozens of barrels of gunpowder.
 
His plan was simple: Blow up Parliament and kill King James I of England.
 
Unknown to Guy Fawkes, the Palace of Westminster, the Houses of Parliament, and the tunnels beneath the buildings had been undergoing a rigorous search.
 
There had been a warning. A warning of a catastrophe and plot of such treason that was unrivalled in the entire history of England. Each room, each corridor, each nook and cranny were searched. Each stairwell and each tunnel were scoured.
 
Guy Fawkes was found with his arsenal of destruction.
 
For days Guy Fawkes was questioned, then tortured, so he would give up the names of his fellow conspirators. The pain got too much, and one by one, the names of the Thirteen were extracted.
 
Robert Catesby, Thomas Wintour, John Wright, Guy Fawkes and Thomas Percy. Robert Keyes, Thomas Bates, Robert Wintour, Christopher Wright, John Grant, Ambrose Rookwood, and Sir Everart Digby.
 
Guy Fawkes was eventually tired for treason, the verdict in no doubt.
 
He as taken from the Tower of London, dragged on wattled hurdles to the Old Palace Yard at Westminster. For his execution, he would have a view of the building he intended to blow up.
 
Three of his fellow conspirators, Thomas Wintour, Ambrose Rookwood, and Robert Keyes, were hung before being quartered.
 
Guy Fawkes himself was the last to be executed, having to endure watching his friends undergo the torture first.
 
Instead of suffering from being Hung for a few minutes before he died, he jumped and his neck was instantly broken as the rope tightened. His body was then quartered and his body parts taken to the four corners of the kingdom to be displayed as a warning to any would-be traitors.
 
On This Day in 1688, King William III of England, well he wasn't at the time, landed in Brixham with his Dutch fleet.
 
He, of course, was William of Orange at the time, and married to Queen Mary II of England, who wasn't Mary II at the time, just Mary Stuart, daughter of King James II of England, who was King James II of England at the time.
 
Although not for much longer.
 
As William of Orange, who was about to be King William III of England, was about to depose him.
 
On This Day history in 1912, Woodrow Wilson won the presidential elections in the United States of America.