Remember,
remember the 5th of November.
Guy
Fawkes (13 April 1570 – 31 January 1606), also known
as Guido Fawkes, the name he adopted while fighting for the Spanish
in the Low Countries, belonged to a group of
provincial English Catholics who
planned the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605.
Fawkes was born and
educated in York.
His father died when Fawkes was eight years old, after which his mother married
a recusant Catholic.
Fawkes later converted to Catholicism and left for the continent, where he
fought in the Eighty Years' War on the side of Catholic
Spain against Protestant Dutch reformers. He travelled to Spain to seek
support for a Catholic rebellion in England but was unsuccessful. He later
met Thomas Wintour, with whom he returned to
England.
Wintour introduced Fawkes
to Robert Catesby, who planned to
assassinate King James I and restore a Catholic
monarch to the throne. The plotters secured the lease to an undercroft beneath
the House of Lords, and Fawkes was placed in charge
of the gunpowder they
stockpiled there. Prompted by the receipt of an anonymous letter, the
authorities searched Westminster Palace during the early hours of
5 November, and found Fawkes guarding the explosives. Over the next few
days, he was questioned and tortured, and eventually he broke. Immediately
before his execution on 31 January, Fawkes jumped from the scaffold where
he was to be hanged and broke his neck, thus avoiding the agony of the drawing and quartering that followed.
Fawkes became synonymous
with the Gunpowder Plot, the failure of which has been commemorated in England
since 5 November 1605. His effigy is often burned on a bonfire, commonly
accompanied by a firework display.
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