News and Politics | November 05, 2008 | 27 comments

It's Guy Fawkes Day! Remember, remember the 5th of November.

Image
Moopak
The English, among other talents, are adept at nurturing their grudges. How else does one explain the enduring enmity toward Guy Fawkes, a conspirator in a plot to blow up Parliament in 1605? Some four centuries after Fawkes was caught, tortured and executed for his role in a scheme that never came to fruition, Britons still celebrate his demise each Nov. 5 by burning his likeness in effigy and setting fireworks ablaze.
One of the ironies of Fawkes' legacy is that he was a late addition to the infamous "Gunpowder Plot." Born a Protestant in 1570, Fawkes enlisted in the Spanish army in the Netherlands around 1593, shortly after converting to Catholicism. Co-conspirators Robert Catesby, Thomas Winter, Thomas Percy and John Wright enlisted Fawkes as a ringer, reasoning that his military skills — he had participated in the 1595 capture of Calais, France — and his anonymity as a foreign soldier made him an ideal candidate to help execute their plan.

Fawkes' henchmen were zealous Catholics who believed that by beheading the government, they might usher in a new era of Catholicism in Protestant England. Led by Catesby, they hatched a plan to explode gunpowder under Parliament during a state opening, when King James I, his queen, and other family members and government leaders were inside. The plot was set for Nov. 5, 1605, and in the preceding days, the conspirators rented a cellar underneath the building, where Fawkes stashed at least 20 barrels of gunpowder.

Things didn't go according to plan. The plotters sought wider support, and, as the story goes, one of the individuals to whom they reached out alerted his brother-in-law, a lord, not to attend Parliament on Nov. 5. The building was searched, and Fawkes was apprehended along with his stockpile of gunpowder. Tortured on the rack, he revealed the names of his co-conspirators. Some of them were killed while resisting arrest; others, including Fawkes, pled not guilty and went to trial, where they were convicted of high treason. In January, 1606, the remaining conspirators were hanged, drawn and quartered. Parliament immediately established Nov. 5 as a day of celebration.

Today, Guy Fawkes Day — also known as Bonfire Night — is marked across the United Kingdom by celebrations. To foot the bill for the traditional fireworks, children roam the streets in the days leading up to the event, brandishing their effigies — known as "Guys" — and ask passers-by for a "penny for the guy." Families gather for food and festivities that might seem incongruous with the event's bloody origins — although perhaps not as incongruous as lighting fireworks and bonfires to celebrate an abortive attempt at arson.

In recent years, Fawkes' legacy has broadened. He provided the inspiration for the tile character in the Wachowski brothers' V for Vendetta, in which a masked crusader embarks on a terrorist campaign against a totalitarian British dystopia. Fawkes also proved an effective fundraising rally cry for onetime U.S. presidential candidate Ron Paul, who garnered more than $4 million on the holiday in 2007 from a website commemorating Fawkes. This year, revelers will gather across Britain — most notably in Lewes, a town once known as a hotbed of anti-Catholicism sentiment that throws one of the British Isles' biggest conflagrations — and in nations ranging from South Africa and Canada to New Zealand and Australia. Guards will also perform the annual search —more pageantry than precaution—of the Houses of Parliament to ensure no would-be Fawkes is lurking. Though the animosity and rituals may merely be symbolic at this point, the celebrations still burn brightly.
  1. groups:
    News and Politics,   Current News UK,   Britain,   Lifestyle
  2. tags:
    News and Politics Current News UK UK History 20 more
  3.     
    |

27 comments // It's Guy Fawkes Day! Remember, remember the 5th of November.

  • Kylsport
  • VSBoD
  • DEgan
    • 0
      DEgan  
    • This holiday always bothered me... originally, it was just a celebration of anti-catholic and anti-irish prejudices. In fact, for years they burned effigies of the pope and "paddies" (stereotypical Irish dummies... whatever that would look like). Now, I know almost all of the people who celebrate it today don't harbor any of those prejudices and probably don't even realize the significance of the bonfires (beyond celebrating the burning-alive of someone... kinda gruesome in its own right...) But I can't help but feel its similar to those who would wave the Confederate flag here in the states... sure they may only think of it as a celebration of their cultural heritage-but they fail to recognize that it is also a symbol of hate to many others... I don't know... if you guys have fun, then have fun. Just think about what it really means to burn an effigy of someone.

    • 3 years ago
  • Oni_Kagura
  • rainbowryan420
  • checkerchic89
    • 0
      checkerchic89  
    • Not too be a geek or anything, but Guy Fawkes actually served as the inspiration for Alan Moore's graphic novel, V for Vendetta. The Wachowski brothers did not create the world of V, but they did do an excellent job of adapting it to the big screen.

      Check out the graphic novel sometime though, it's well worth it. Alan Moore is one of the best.

    • 3 years ago
  • Hendrix_Is_God
    • 0
      Hendrix_Is_God  
    • Love bonfire night! Its all about alexandra palace this saturday! The biggest fireworks show in the country and its free!!! over 100,000 attended last year, so get your ass over there this year!

    • 3 years ago
  • achromatic
  • Vierotchka
  • MizPiz
    • 0
      MizPiz  
    • In honor of Guy Fawkes DayFawkes day, everyone most go to their state's/province's main government building and blow it up. If you live in Washington D.C, you can blow up the senate, and London gets Parliament (hey, if you don't succeed, try and try again).

    • 3 years ago
  • Mr_Costello
  • Nettle
    • 0
      Nettle  
    • Image
    • Remember, remember the Fifth of November
      The Gunpowder treason and plot.
      I know of no reason, why gunpowder treason,
      should ever be forgot.

    • 3 years ago
  • lfm
    • 0
      lfm  
    • Nettle:

      .... this reality feels comforting and uplifting, having november 5th 2008 go by considerably peacefully, during such a historical movement.

    • 3 years ago
  • aswift1
  • TheBox193
  • leoniDb
  • idealist
    • 0
      idealist  
    • damn i love this holiday! thank you current for reminding me of my heritage.. ill be sure to get plastered and burn something today.
      heheheheheh :)

    • 3 years ago
  • Stevox
    • 0
      Stevox  
    • This holiday is only to give the English an excuse to go out into the middle of a field and get drunk. I'm not sure they really need the excuse any more.

    • 3 years ago
  • Argon18
    • 0
      Argon18  
    • I wouldn't say they held a grudge since when I was in Britain decades before the movie they more like admired Fawkes for his audacity to try and blow up Parliment.

    • 3 years ago
  • CCashman
    • 0
      CCashman  
    • Argon18:

      When I went to see the Tower of London a few years back, the tour guide, in full Elizabethan-guard regalia, told us of Guy Fawkes, "the only man to come to Parliament with an original idea - to blow it up."

    • 3 years ago
  • kellysontheroad
  • UrbanGypsy
  • abbym0308
  • judiestar
more from News and Politics:

top videos