Read The Gunpowder Plot: Terror & Faith in 1605 Online
Authors: Antonia Fraser
‘Antonia Fraser has written an excellent book which unravels the whole story of the plot, exploring the background, keeping close to the evidence, and, above all, bringing the characters to life… a judicious and very readable account’
Hugh Trevor-Roper,
Literary Review
‘Every few years a work of history appears that succeeds in connecting its subject to the deeper questions troubling modern society. This is one such book’
Amanda Foreman,
Independent
‘It has a fine narrative flow, for Antonia Fraser recognises that history is essentially a story, and a gripping one at that. She writes with verve and imagination’
Kenneth Baker,
Daily Telegraph
‘Fraser’s meticulously researched book is an excellent read… Antonia Fraser has shed much light on one of the most controversial episodes in English history’
Martin Jacques,
Observer
The Gunpowder Plot
Terror & Faith in 1605
ANTONIA FRASER
History to the defeated
May say Alas but cannot help nor pardon –
W. H. AUDEN
, Spain, 1937
FOR
Edward
who would have defended them
Lucy
who would have hidden them
Paloma
who would have succoured them in exile
Contents
Map of the conspirators in the Midlands
PART ONE
:
Before the Fruit Was Ripe
1 Whose Head for the Crown?
2 The Honest Papists
3 Diversity of Opinions
PART TWO
:
The Horse of St George
4 A King and his Cubs
5 Spanish Charity
6 Catesby as Phaeton
PART THREE
:
That Furious and Fiery Course
7 So Sharp a Remedy
8 Pernicious Gunpowder
9 There Is a Risk…
10 Dark and Doubtful Letter
PART FOUR
:
Discovery – By God or the Devil
11 Mr Fawkes Is Taken
12 The Gentler Tortures
13 Fire and Brimstone
14 These Wretches
15 The Heart of a Traitor
16 The Jesuits’ Treason
17 Farewells
18 Satan’s Policy?
Elizabeth I with Time and Death
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
James I
(National Galleries of Scotland)
Accession medal of James I
(British Museum, London)
Anne of Denmark, Marcus Gheerhaerts,
c.
1605–10
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
Charles Duke of York (the future Charles I), Robert Peake
(City of Bristol Museum and Art Gallery)
Arbella Stuart, anon., 1589
(National Trust Photographic Library, London/John Bethell)
Princess Elizabeth, Robert Peake
(National Maritime Museum, London)
Engraving of the conspirators
(Bodleian Library, Oxford)
Ben Jonson
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
William Shakespeare
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
Robert Cecil, Ist Earl of Salisbury, (attrib.) John de Critz
(National Portrait Gallery, London)
Sir Everard Digby
(Ashmolean Museum, Oxford)
Thomas Wintour’s two signatures
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
Thomas Habington of Hindlip and his wife
(British Library, London)
Vestment embroidered by Helena Wintour
(Stonyhurst College, Lancashire)
The Browne Brothers, Isaac Oliver
(Burghley House, Stamford)
Life in a recusant household, illustrated by a scene from the childhood of Mary Ward
Rushton Hall, Northamptonshire
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Hindlip House, Worcestershire
(British Library, London)
Baddesley Clinton
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Coughton Court
(Coughton Court, Warwickshire)
Huddington Court
(Huddington Court, Worcestershire)
Map of Westminster
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive)
Tower of London,
c.
1615, Van Meer
(Edinburgh University Library)
Ashby St Ledgers
(Ashby St Ledgers, Northamptonshire)
The Cellars of the House of Lords
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Guy Fawkes entering Parliament
(Ashmolean Museum, Oxford)
A contemporary Dutch print of the Gunpowder Plot
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
The anonymous letter delivered to Lord Monteagle
(Public Record Office, London)
Garnet’s straw
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Father Henry Garnet, SJ, by Jan Wiericx
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
St Winifred’s Well, Holywell, Clwyd
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Father Garnet’s last letter to Anne Vaux
(Weidenfeld and Nicolson Archive, London)
Sir Edward Coke
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
The entry in the Commons’ Journal for 5 November 1605
(House of Lords Record Office, London)
Letter of King James authorising the torture of Guy Fawkes
(Public Record Office, London)
Instruments of torture at the time of the Gunpowder Plot
(Royal Armouries, HM Tower of London)
Guido Fawkes’ signatures before and after torture
(British Library, London)
Engraving of Father Garnet on the scaffold, C. Screta
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Victorian impression of Guy Fawkes being taken to the scaffold
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
Etching of Guy Fawkes laying his sinister trail, 1841
(Hulton Getty Collection Ltd, London)
The Papists’ Powder Treason
(Henry E. Huntingdon Library and Art Galley)
The search of the cellars of the House of Lords
(Times Newspapers Ltd, London)