Guy Fawkes (13 April 1570 to 31 January 1606), Also Known As Guido Fawkes, the Name Adopted While Fighting for the Spanish in Th

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Guy Fawkes (13 April 1570 to 31 January 1606), Also Known As Guido Fawkes, the Name Adopted While Fighting for the Spanish in Th Guy Fawkes (13 April 1570 to 31 January 1606), also known as Guido Fawkes, the name adopted while fighting for the Spanish in the Netherlands, belonged to a group of provincial English Catholics who planned the failed conspiracy gunpowder, 1605. It wasa failed attempt to assassinate King James I of England and VI of Scotland by a group of provincial English Catholics led by Robert Catesby. MU. The death of Alex Forley is very confusing because we do not know if it is a suicide or a murder, but eventually you know. Wilver (Forley's doctor), he discovers that his patient has an affair with his wife Lisa. He faked the results and told Alex that he had abrain tumor, he did because he was afraid his wife would leave him. Alex Forley thought he had a tumor, which dragged the suicide could not live with the idea of having a brain tumor and died for it. Finally Wilver could save what remained of the marriage to Lisa. PE. Rod Eliot: A detective who has a wife and a child and he already works some time for the police. Bowen: A man who also works as detective at the police station and he’s the assistant of Detective inspector Rod Eliot, he has no wife and he always falls in love with the wrong woman. Alex Forley: The man who shot himself because he thought he had a brain disease, he was pretty rich, a good look and a beautiful house in London. Philip Wilver: The doctor and friend of Alex Forley, A busy and a bit depressive man. OP. Actually the book I liked it because it is very confusing. Especially by the constant visits and questioning of detectives who originally bundled the argument. But what caught my attention is the manner of death of the deceased, because it has never seen such things in other books of the same gender..
Recommended publications
  • The Gunpowder Plot Activity Pack
    TTHHEE GGUUNNPPOOWWDDEERR PPLLOOTT The Gunpowder Plot Activity Pack Welcome to Heritage Doncaster’s the Gunpowder Plot activity pack. This booklet is filled with ideas that you can have a go at as a family at home whilst learning about the Gunpowder Plot. Some of these activities will require adult supervision as they require using an oven, a sharp implement, or could just be a bit tricky these have been marked with this warning triangle. We would love to see what you create so why not share your photos with us on social media or email You can find us at @doncastermuseum @DoncasterMuseum [email protected] Have Fun! Heritage Doncaster Education Service Contents What was the Gunpower Plot? Page 3 The Plotters Page 4 Plotters Top Trumps Page 5-6 Remember, remember Page 7 Acrostic poem Page 8 Tunnels Page 9 Build a tunnel Page 10 Mysterious letter Page 11 Letter writing Page 12 Escape and capture Page 13 Wanted! Page 14 Create a boardgame Page 15 Guy Fawkes Night Page 16 Firework art Page 17-18 Rocket experiment Page 19 Penny for a Guy Page 20 Sew your own Guy Page 21 Traditional Bonfire Night food Page 22 Chocolate covered apples Page 23 Wordsearch Page 24 What was the Gunpowder Plot? The Gunpowder Plot was a plan made by thirteen men to blow up the Houses of Parliament when King James I was inside. The Houses of Parliament is an important building in London where the government meet. It is made up of the House of Lords and the House of Commons.
    [Show full text]
  • Tudors and the Reformation
    Knowledge Organiser: Tudors and the Reformation The Catholic Church faced criticism in the Chronology: what happened on these dates? Vocabulary: define these words 16th century, leading to the Reformation. Martin Luther pins his ‘95 theses’ to the A promise to reduce time spent Some rulers left it and set up their own 1517 Indulgence churches, causing plots, revolts and wars. church door in Wittenberg. in purgatory. Summarise your learning Henry VIII declares himself head of the A movement that divided the 1534 Reformation Church of England. Christian Church in Europe. Criticisms The quality and practices of the of the Church were criticised by Martin The process of dissolving England’s A person that disagrees with the Catholic 1536 Heretic Luther. monasteries begins. official Church. Church Edward VI becomes king and begins to A group of Christians, who broke 1547 Protestant accelerate the Reformation in England. away from the Catholic Church. The Reformation spread across The belief that Jesus Christ is The Mary I becomes queen and tries to reverse Europe, weakening the position 1553 Transubstantiation physically present in the bread Reformation the Reformation in England. of the Catholic Church. and wine during mass. Elizabeth I succeeds Mary and sets up her Declaration that a marriage is 1559 Annulment Henry’s Henry VIII wanted a divorce and own Religious Settlement. invalid. ‘Great had to break from Rome to get Who were these people? What were these events? Matter’ one. The closure and sale of A former monk, who started the Protestant Dissolution Martin Luther England’s monasteries. Reformation in Europe. Impact of In England, the monasteries were Mary, Queen of A rival to the English throne, who fled there the dissolved and the Church Scots after her nobles revolted.
    [Show full text]
  • British Festivals: Guy Fawkes, Bonfire Night
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by PublicacionesDidácticas (E-Journal) British festivals: Guy Fawkes, Bonfire Night Autor: Martínez García, María Rosario (Maestra de Lenguas Extranjeras (Inglés), Maestra de Inglés en Educación Primaria). Público: Maestros o profesores de lengua inglesa de cualquier etapa educativa. Materia: Inglés. Idioma: Inglés. Title: British festivals: Guy Fawkes, Bonfire Night. Abstract The powerpoint explained next is about the festivity of "Guy Fawkes", or also known as "Bonfire Night". Through different images the story is told and the meaning of why it is celebrated is explained, not very known in Spain. Information is given about how it is celebrated in the United Kingdom and the different activities children carry out there. A rhyme will be taught and finally evaluation activities are given. Keywords: british culture, guy fawkes, bonfire night. Título: Festifvidades Británicas: Guy Fawkes. Resumen El PowerPoint explicado a continuación trata sobre la festividad de "Guy Fawkes", o también llamada "la noche de la hoguera". A través de imágenes se cuenta la historia y el significado de por qué se celebra esta festividad, en España poco conocida. Se da información de cómo se celebra en el Reino Unido y las distintas actividades que realizan los niños allí. Se les enseña una rima y finalmente se dan actividades de evaluación oral. Palabras clave: Cultura inglesa, actividades, noche de la hoguera. Recibido 2016-01-21; Aceptado 2016-01-25; Publicado 2016-02-25; Código PD: 068075 British culture is one of the most important aspects to treat in our English classroom.
    [Show full text]
  • History of the Gunpowder Plot & Guy Fawkes Night Four Hundred Years Ago, in 1605, a Man Called Guy Fawkes and a Group Of
    History of the Gunpowder Plot & Guy Fawkes Night Four hundred years ago, in 1605, a man called Guy Fawkes and a group of plotters attempted to blow up the Houses of Parliament in London with barrels of gunpowder placed in the basement. They wanted to kill King James and the king’s leaders. Houses of Parliament, London Why did Guy Fawkes want to kill King James 1st and the king’s leaders? When Queen Elizabeth 1st took the throne of England she made some laws against the Roman Catholics. Guy Fawkes was one of a small group of Catholics who felt that the government was treating Roman Catholics unfairly. They hoped that King James 1st would change the laws, but he didn't. Catholics had to practise their religion in secret. There were even fines for people who didn't attend the Protestant church on Sunday or on holy days. James lst passed more laws against the Catholics when he became king. What happened - the Gunpowder Plot A group of men led by Robert Catesby, plotted to kill King James and blow up the Houses of Parliament, the place where the laws that governed England were made. Guy Fawkes was one of a group of men The plot was simple - the next time Parliament was opened by King James l, they would blow up everyone there with gunpowder. The men bought a house next door to the parliament building. The house had a cellar which went under the parliament building. They planned to put gunpowder under the house and blow up parliament and the king.
    [Show full text]
  • Gunpowder, Treason and York
    Gunpowder, treason and York Marianka Swain explores the birthplace of Guy Fawkes, and separates fact from enduring myth MAP ILLUSTRATION: REBECCA LEA WILLIAMS LEA REBECCA ILLUSTRATION: MAP discoverbritainmag.com 37 York Clockwise, from left: The Shambles hide a violent past; All Saints Pavement; the street’s overhanging design protected the meat traded there; the Guy Fawkes Inn; St Michael le Belfry; the plot is discovered Previous page: A 19th-century wood engraving of Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators ALAMY/PORTRAIT ESSENTIALS/CW IMAGES/CLEARVIEW/MSP TRAVEL IMAGES/TOMMY (LOUTH)/ HERITAGE IMAGE PARTNERSHIP LTD/VISITBRITAIN/ANDREW PICKETT LTD/VISITBRITAIN/ANDREW PARTNERSHIP IMAGE HERITAGE (LOUTH)/ IMAGES/TOMMY TRAVEL ALAMY/PORTRAIT IMAGES/CLEARVIEW/MSP ESSENTIALS/CW emember, remember, the fifth immediate family were Protestants: he and Pulleyn and Percy families in Scotton. From sympathies: his home city was teeming with “Contrary to of November” rings out across his sisters were baptised in the 16th-century 1582, he attended St Peter’s School in York gruesome tales. York’s All Saints Pavement Britain, as notorious plotter Guy St Michael le Belfrey Church, which today with brothers John and Christopher “Kit” church houses the replicas of the helmet, popular opinion, Fawkes is burned in effigy on features a facsimile of his baptismal entry. Wright, who later joined the Gunpowder sword and gauntlets of Thomas Percy, the conspiracy was RBonfire Night. His part in the failed 1605 His father was a proctor and advocate at Plot, and future priests Oswald Tesimond, 7th Earl of Northumberland, who led the Gunpowder Plot still echoes through history, the Archbishop’s consistory court, and died Edward Oldcorne and Robert Middleton.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spanish Match and Jacobean Political Thought, 1618-1624
    Opposition in a pre-Republican Age? The Spanish Match and Jacobean Political Thought, 1618-1624 Kimberley Jayne Hackett Ph.D University of York History Department July 2009 Abstract Seventeenth-century English political thought was once viewed as insular and bound by a common law mentality. Significant work has been done to revise this picture and highlight the role played by continental religious resistance theory and what has been termed 'classical republicanism'. In addition to identifying these wider influences, recent work has focused upon the development of a public sphere that reveals a more socially diverse engagement with politics, authority and opposition than has hitherto been acknowledged. Yet for the period before the Civil War our understanding of the way that several intellectual influences were interacting to inform a politically alert 'public' is unclear, and expressions of political opposition are often tied to a pre-determined category of religious affiliation. As religious tension erupted into conflict on the continent, James I's pursuit ofa Spanish bride for Prince Charles and determination to follow a diplomatic solution to the war put his policy direction at odds with a dominant swathe of public opinion. During the last years of his reign, therefore, James experienced an unprecedented amount of opposition to his government of England. This opposition was articulated through a variety of media, and began to raise questions beyond the conduct of policy in addressing fundamental issues of political authority. By examining the deployment of political ideas during the domestic crisis of the early 1620s, this thesis seeks to uncover the varied ways in which differing discourses upon authority and obedience were being articulated against royal government.
    [Show full text]
  • T * I No 13 GUY FAWKES, OH the HISTORY of the UNPOTOEE
    t * I No 13 GUY FAWKES, OH THE HISTORY OF THE UNPOTOEE PLOT, \ I GUY FAWKES. OK THE GUNPOWDER PLOT. The conspiracy called the Gunpowder Plot must, for various reasons, be considered as one of the most remarkable occurrences in English history. The atrocity of the design, the ex- tent of the mischief intended, and the myste- rious manner in which the scheme is represented to have been detected upon the eve of its exe- cution, would alone be sufficient to give a surpassing interest to the story; while tne observance of the anniversary periodically awakens the remembrance of Guy Fawkes and his associates, and perpetuates the memory of the transaction by rendering its leading fea- tures familiar even to our children. In order to form a fair judgment of the causes which produced the Gunpowder Trea- son, and to comprehend the motives of those who were engaged in it, it is necessary to con- isider generally the state of the English Catho- Hlics at that period, and to take a summary view of the penal restrictions and liabilities to which, at the commencement of the reign of James I., the adherents to the Roman Churcl were subject. The laws passed against recusants in the latter years of the reign of Elizabeth were ex- tremely severe; and whatever may have been the object with which they were passed, and without discussing the debatable question of -t GUY FAWKKS, OR their necessity for the preservation of the Pro- testant establishment from the practices of dis- affected and turbulent fanatics, at that time excited and encouraged by the mischievous in- terference of the Pope, it may be observed that their effect undoubtedly was to withdraw from the Catholics the common rights and liberties of Englishmen, and to place all persons, how- ever loyal to the existing Government, who ad- hered, from conscience and principle, to the ancient religion, in a state of unmerited perse- cution and suffering.
    [Show full text]
  • James I and Gunpowder Treason Day.', Historical Journal., 64 (2)
    Durham Research Online Deposited in DRO: 01 October 2020 Version of attached le: Accepted Version Peer-review status of attached le: Peer-reviewed Citation for published item: Williamson, P. and Mears, N. (2021) 'James I and Gunpowder treason day.', Historical journal., 64 (2). pp. 185-210. Further information on publisher's website: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X20000497 Publisher's copyright statement: This article has been published in a revised form in Historical Journal https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X20000497. This version is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND. No commercial re-distribution or re-use allowed. Derivative works cannot be distributed. c The Author(s) 2020. Additional information: Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. Durham University Library, Stockton Road, Durham DH1 3LY, United Kingdom Tel : +44 (0)191 334 3042 | Fax : +44 (0)191 334 2971 https://dro.dur.ac.uk JAMES I AND GUNPOWDER TREASON DAY* PHILIP WILLIAMSON AND NATALIE MEARS University of Durham Abstract: The assumed source of the annual early-modern English commemoration of Gunpowder treason day on 5 November – and its modern legacy, ‘Guy Fawkes day’ or ‘Bonfire night’ – has been an act of parliament in 1606.
    [Show full text]
  • Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot
    Maestralidia.com Guy Fawkes and the gunpowder plot Why do we learn about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot? In England, in 1605 during the reign of James I, an act of treason was planned. At the last moment, the Gunpowder Plot fails, and now we commemorate the traitors - and in particular Guy Fawkes - every year with Bonfire Night! Who is Guy Fawkes? Guy Fawkes (1570 to 1606), also known as Guido Fawkes, is one of a group of Catholic plotters who plans to blow up the Parliament - now known as the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. What is the Gunpowder Plot? At the time, King James I is on the throne. England had broken away from the Catholic faith and the Church of Rome in Henry VIII's reign (by 1536), but there are still many Catholics in the country. Guy Fawkes, with a group of thirteen Catholic plotters, plans to overthrow the King and put a Catholic monarch back on the throne. The plotters put barrels of gunpowder in the cellars of the Parliament. They plan to set of the gunpowder during the opening of Parliament, on 5th November 1605. One or more of the plotters, however, are worried that some of their fellow Catholics and friends would be at the opening. A certain Lord Monteagle receives a letter warning him don’t go to the Parliament because of the danger. Lord Monteagle shows the letter to the King, and the cellars are thoroughly searched and Guy Fawkes caught. After several days of horrible torture, Guy Fawkes gives up the names of his plotters and all are found guilty and executed.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gunpowder Plot
    The Gunpowder Plot Teacher Resource Pack In this Resource Pack you will find: 1. The Journey to 1605 3. Pre-Visit Classroom Activities 4. Post-Visit Activity Starters (Cross-Curricular) An illustrated timeline highlighting key figures i. What do we know about the Tower of London? connected to the Tower of London and the An activity to introduce the Tower of London Ideas to extend children’s learning Gunpowder Plot, including things to look to the class, with the opportunity for children back in the classroom. out for on the day of your visit. to share their knowledge. A follow-up post-visit activity is also included: What did we find out 5. Useful Links 2. Setting the Scene: about the Tower of London? A selection of web links providing i. The Tower of London: Palace, Prison, Fortress ii. Playing by the Rules further information and ideas. ii. Religion and Monarchy in the lead up to 1605 A two-part activity to help children gain an A concise introduction to the Tower of London understanding of why the Gunpowder Plot and the key themes surrounding the Gunpowder happened. Plot. This background information will help you Part One uses the context of sport to get prepare your class for their visit and support you children thinking about what is important to in delivering our proposed pre-visit activities. them and how it would feel to be deprived of it. Part Two aims to link the children’s discoveries from Part One to the religious context in which the Gunpowder Plot took place.
    [Show full text]
  • KS2 Gunpowder Treason & Plot Timeline
    Gunpowder Treason & Plot: Timeline Factsheet 1564-1616 William Shakespeare’s lifetime 24 March 1603 Queen Elizabeth I dies and James I takes over the throne. 1604 The Plot takes shape 20 May Robert Catesby, Thomas Winter, Jack Wright, Thomas Percy and Guy Fawkes meet in a London pub called the Duck and Drake. Catesby reveals his plan to blow up Parliament. 24 May Thomas Percy rents a small house next to the Lords’ Chamber. December The plotters start digging their tunnel under the wall of the House of Lords. 1605 The Gunpowder Plot fails March The plotters rent a storeroom under the House of Lords and begin to smuggle in barrels of gunpowder. 26 October Lord Monteagle receives the mysterious letter warning him of the evil plan. 4 November King James orders a search of the Houses of Parliament. Guy Fawkes is found in the storeroom with the gunpowder and is arrested. 5 November The rest of the plotters leave London, most of them headed for the Midlands. 7 November Fawkes makes his first confession in the Tower of London. 8 November Catesby, Percy and the Wright brothers are killed in a shoot-out at Holbeach House. 9 November King James makes a speech about the Plot at the Opening of Parliament. 1606 Trials and executions 27 January Digby, Grant, Fawkes, Keyes, Rookwood, the Winters and Bates go on trial at Westminster Hall. 30 January Digby, Robert Winter, Grant and Bates are executed in St Paul’s Churchyard. 31 January Fawkes, Rookwood, Thomas Winter and Keyes are executed in Old Palace Yard, Westminster.
    [Show full text]
  • Rastrick High School Year 8 History History Home Learning: 17Th Century England Information Booklet
    Rastrick High School Year 8 History History Home Learning: 17th Century England Information Booklet Y8 History Home Learning: How Bloody and Brutal was 17th Century England? Information booklet Lesson Two: Were witches real? Witches in the 1600s were believed to be usually old poor women with: • birth marks, pocs or warts on their face • Sunken faces with hairy lips • and familiars. Familiars were demons that followed witches that were believed to assume the form of animals, usually cats. These ideas that we hold about what witches look like are stereotypical. Stereotype means an oversimplified image of a person or thing that are usually wrong. In 1597 James I produced a book on witchcraft entitled ‘Daemononlogie’. In the book he explained how to ‘spot’ a witch simply by looking for the previous signs. He also said a witch could be spotted: 1. If they are a friend, neighbour or relative of a witch. 2. If a person dies or has an accident after arguing with the accused. 3. If everybody who lives near the person believes that they are a witch. Why did people believe in witches? Lesson Three: Were witches real? Who was Matthew Hopkins? A bloodthirsty Altofts man was responsible for the deaths of more than 300 women - according to an old legend. Nearly 350 years ago self-styled ‘Witch-finder General’ Matthew Hopkins roamed the counties of eastern England preying on elderly women. His reign of terror began in 1644 when he was employed by towns to seek out and destroy women believed to be witches. Such has been the interest in Matthew Hopkins’ crimes that in 1968 Vincent Price starred in a horror film called The Witch- finder General.
    [Show full text]