Read Conspiracies: The Facts * the Theories * the Evidence Online
Authors: Andy Thomas
Tags: #Conspiracy Theories, #Social Science
When a leading member of the Catholic gentry, Anthony
Babington, became heavily involved in the plot to overthrow
Elizabeth, it was his damning correspondence with Mary, detail-
ing planned events and overseas invasions (this time from Spain,
France and Italy), backed up by Mary’s written consent, that final y gave Walsingham his chance. With a few more incriminating
references falsely added into copies of the letters for good measure (presumably to ensure the absence of any mitigating loopholes),
there was no longer any question of the plotters’ guilt, and
typical y horrific executions, torture and prosecutions followed, culminating in the final demise of Mary, convicted of treason
and beheaded in 1587. With no obvious replacement to take on
a ral ying role for Catholicism, the rumble of threatened rebellion quietened for a while.
A conspiracy of a less overarching kind occurred in 1601,
when Robert Devereux, second earl of Essex, who had fallen out
of favour with the now aged Elizabeth, led an insurrection that
did actual y lead to military action on the streets of London. It was aimed more at restoring his own prestige at court, rather
than being an attempt at all-out regime change; enough support
was rallied to lead 300 armed men into the city, but the general
population failed to respond to the cause, and its few followers
were easily quelled, leading to Devereux’s inevitable execution.
Although his intentions were largely self-centred, some supporters had seen an opportunity to use the rebellion as a spark for a
wider Catholic uprising – including one Robert Catesby, who,
having been wounded in the skirmishes, managed to escape
with a brief imprisonment and hefty fine. Four years later, as we shall see, Catesby would be at the core of one of the most famous conspiracies of all time.
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The Shakespeare Conspiracy
One of the more curious tactics used by the Essex rebels was
the mounting of a production of William Shakespeare’s play
Richard II
at London’s Globe Theatre the night before the failed coup (not
Richard III
, as Hol ywood’s 2011 take on proceedings had it, courtesy of Roland Emmerich’s controversial Shakespeare
conspiracy film
Anonymous
). The play’s theme of a preening monarch, prey to dubious advisers and falling into paranoia before being deposed by rebellion and ultimately murder, was apparently
intended to help stir the mob to civil unrest, in the hope that the Essex revolt would gain the people’s support next day. Although
its intentions failed on this occasion, it is a strong early example of propaganda and public conditioning being spread through the
guise of popular entertainment.
Shakespeare himself has, in recent years, come under the gaze
of several conspiracy claims, with many considering a common
playwright incapable of expressing so many rich insights into
human affairs and displaying such broad knowledge of courtly
etiquette without at least some kind of outside input. It has been widely speculated that more venerable figures such as Sir Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe or Edward de Vere, the seventeenth
earl of Oxford, may well have contributed to the plays, or authored them entirely, aliased to protect their names from what was then
seen as a somewhat disreputable profession. Speculation has been
bolstered by the absence of any substantial recorded information
about Shakespeare himself. Inevitably, most academics round
heavily against this view, but there has been a steady increase in the number of leading classical actors and scholars prepared to consider openly that the figure we know as William Shakespeare may have
been a composite front for either another author or a committee of contributors, which may or may not have included the bard himself.
The often volatile reaction against this theory produces in
itself another telling example of how ingrained establishment
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resistance is to anything that threatens the status quo. This
was keenly il ustrated with the release of the aforementioned
Anonymous
movie in 2011, which opts for the de Vere
hypothesis, mixing in the Essex rebellion for dramatic purposes.
What was plainly intended as entertaining distraction rather
than historical depiction (which, as we have seen, is hardly to be relied upon) was nonetheless met with some of the most vitriolic
attacks seen towards mainstream cinema for some time, rooted
largely in sheer outrage that anyone might so publicly challenge
the authority of such a great British institution. However,
the movie’s shrewd inclusion of famous Shakespearian actors
(including Derek Jacobi and Mark Rylance), obviously happy
to put their names to something fronting the controversial idea,
led to one of the most overt media discussions of a conspiracy
theory, albeit a light one, yet seen. This at least stimulated a
little more awareness that there
are
other views to the narrow selection usual y voiced in the mainstream, even if they were
met by a barrage of condemnation.
The Gunpowder Plot
When Elizabeth I died in 1603, her failure to marry and produce
children or to name an heir resulted in Mary Stuart’s eldest son
being imported from Scotland and crowned the new English
monarch as James I. Although one might have expected James
to bear some resentment for the execution of his mother, he
dutiful y maintained the Church of England. A few acknowledged
Catholic sympathizers had somehow managed to retain a quiet
presence at court throughout Elizabeth’s reign, tolerated as long as there was no open practice of their faith, which remained a
punishable offence. Some had hoped the arrival of James might
free them of this shackle, but he showed little sign of initiating a full emancipation.
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One Catholic unable to contain his disappointment was one
Robert Catesby, the resentful survivor of the 1601 Essex rebellion.
Together with the aid of several other conspirators – most
famously Guido (Guy) Fawkes – Catesby formulated a plan to
assassinate James, together with his court and government, by
igniting barrels of gunpowder stored in a convenient undercroft
that ran beneath the old House of Lords. Had it succeeded, the
blast would have constituted the largest peace-time explosion
then witnessed, probably wiping out anyone within an eighth of
a mile (as a television experiment in 2005 demonstrated).1 It was planned for detonation during the state opening of Parliament on
5 November 1605; the hope was that a national Catholic uprising
would follow, led by forces in the English Midlands, after which
James’s nine-year-old daughter, another Elizabeth, would be
installed as a puppet queen, loyal once again to Rome.
These machinations have been recorded by history as the
‘Gunpowder Plot’, perhaps one of the most famous conspiracies
of all time, still commemorated in Britain in its famous ‘Bonfire Night’ celebrations. Although awareness of its source inspiration seems to fade with each generation, some towns still uphold its
fuller traditions, such as Ottery St Mary in Devon and, most
spectacularly, Lewes in East Sussex (this author’s birth town).
Even today, the Lewesian streets see effigies of Pope Paul V and
Guy Fawkes (along with more contemporary political ogres of the
moment) blown up to annual controversy, as the events of 1605,
together with the Marian persecutions, are remembered with
large-scale pageantry, il ustrating the profound effect religious strife of old has had on the country.
The full details of the Gunpowder Plot are less important here,
but it is highlighted to demonstrate an example of a conspiracy
(one descended from several previous intrigues) that has become
a marked fixture in the nation’s calendar. England’s history, in
particular, is therefore indelibly defined by the recognition that conspiracies do most certainly occur. If then, why not still now?
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The misplaced assertion that only in days of yore did such things happen, and that too many lessons have been learned to ever allow it today, is a weak one, given the evidence.
Harder-nosed truthseekers might point out that the Gun-
powder Plot was merely yet another assassination attempt, a failed terrorist rabble-rousing on behalf of a persecuted minority, rather than a full contrivance to defraud the people, as ‘conspiracy’ is often defined today. However, a twist to the events of 1605 may
throw another light on it.
Catesby, together with his band of co-conspirators, was
ultimately undone when an anonymous informant sent a letter
to William Parker, fourth baron Monteagle, warning him not to
attend the opening of Parliament if he valued his life. Inevitably, Monteagle raised the alarm and Fawkes was consequently
apprehended as he guarded the powder barrels in the early hours
before the opening of Parliament. As ever, interrogations, torture, retreats, shoot-outs and appalling executions followed, and the day of the Gunpowder Plot was done. But perhaps not quite dusted.
Who sent the crucial letter to the baron? This question has
never been satisfactorily answered. It was widely assumed that the anonymous hand was most likely that of Francis Tresham, one of
the plotters. As brother-in-law to Monteagle, he might reasonably have been concerned about his welfare. But Tresham, even when
dying of a mysterious illness while imprisoned in the Tower of
London, continued to deny sending the letter, and his involvement was never proven. This is where claims of a ‘false-flag’ operation have arisen.
Even at the time, voices were raised that, just as Mary Stuart’s
communications with co-conspirators had been openly set up
and monitored to implicate her, so also might the Gunpowder
Plot have been actively encouraged or even arranged by James’s
advisers, with or without his direct knowledge. There were many
who desired to stir firmer legislation against Catholics, and, sure enough, the revelation of the potential y devastating scheme
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provided justification for the stiffest sanctions against the Roman Church in many years. Although the subsequent public reaction
perhaps fell short of the all-out pogroms that hardliners might have hoped for, nonetheless much of the population enthusiastical y
embraced the bell-ringing and firing of cannons (eventual y to
become the more familiar bonfire and firework frenzies) that were official y decreed must take place each 5 November as an annual
reminder of the baleful dangers of Catholicism.
If the Gunpowder Plot
was
a set-up, its result was a success and the upshot was the same (just as the West made useful capital of 9/11 by grateful y making it the launch pad for a new crusade
into the Middle East), even without the false-flag connotations.
But continuing suspicion has fallen on Robert Cecil, first earl
of Salisbury, secretary of state and ‘spymaster’ for the King, and a protégé of the Mary Stuart-baiting Sir Francis Walsingham.
In addition to seeking greater legislation against Catholics, he
was also eager to stoke new pretexts for war against Spain and
Portugal, through which England could rise to new power and
influence (which, several conflicts and a century later, it did, as the British Empire rose). It is said by some that Thomas Percy, one of Catesby’s conspirators, was a double agent, actively working
for Cecil, and that Tresham was in fact poisoned in the Tower to
remove his awkward protestations of innocence – for if
he
hadn’t written the damning letter to Monteagle, other hands would
inconveniently have to be investigated.
John Gerard, a Jesuit priest who had been implicated as being
involved in the plot despite his denials (although he was certainly connected to Catesby’s circle), plainly believed it was a case of official y sponsored terrorism. In the 1606 tract
A Narrative of the
Gunpowder Plot
, published after his flight into exile, Gerard wrote:
For purposes of State, the government of the day either
found means to instigate the conspirators to undertake
their enterprise, or, at least, being, from an early stage of the
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undertaking, ful y aware of what was going on, sedulously
nursed the insane scheme till the time came to make capital
out of it. That the conspirators, or the greater number of them,
real y meant to strike a great blow is not to be denied, though
it may be less easy to assure ourselves of its precise character;
and their guilt will not be pal iated should it appear that, in
projecting an atrocious crime, they were unwittingly playing
the game of plotters more astute than themselves.
Jesuits are themselves held in heavy suspicion by some conspiracy theorists today, but a number of odd things do arise around the