Today is Guy Fawkes Day, but maybe that doesn't mean what you think it means..

avatar

I would imagine that most people are pretty aware of who Guy Fawkes is, but I think that many people's impression about who this person actually is might be a little skewed by virtue of a couple of films and a group of anonymous group of hackers whose name i can't recall at the moment.

Today (at least where I am in the world) is November 5th and while it is officially known as Bonfire Night a lot of people call it Guy Fawkes Night.

29f8dbbc25a44c399379b202537a8533_r646x751.jpg
source

What do you really know about Guy Fawkes? If the honest answer to that is "not a great deal" don't be ashamed... until i started researching this piece I have to admit that I just assumed that he was a hero to the people some time ago. After all, V for Vendetta made it appear that way so it must be true, right?

Well, to some people at the time of his arrest he probably was a hero, but to others, he was a traitor of the highest order to the country that he lived in. Again, it depends on which side of the proverbial "fence" a person was on.

MI_Guy_Fawkes.jpg
source

In the mid 16th to the early 17th centuries, England was undergoing a time of religious transformation. To be fair, so was the rest of Europe in some fashion or another because we always need to be at war over something.

Basically, Catholics began to find themselves as the recipients of persecution for their faith once the throne "changed hands" to Queen Elizabeth I in 1558. The Catholic faith was all but completely outlawed from this point forward as publicly practicing the faith was punishable by law.

Guy Fawkes was a Catholic and he was part of a group of individuals who planned what is now known as the "Gunpowder Plot" in which a tremendous amount of (you guessed it!) gunpowder was stockpiled under both houses of Parliament with the intention being to detonate it when England's Parliament were to meet (all of them, at once) on the 5th. The Royal Family and most other heads of state were also meant to be targets on the same day.


source

The idea was that once all the ruling class were destroyed, Catholicism could reign supreme in the land once more.

I am reminded of the song by Megadeth called Holy Wars because this whole killing for religion seems like something "I cannot understand." However, that was the case with The Gunpowder Plot.

There were a lot of people involved in this plot that would be discovered later but the reason why Fawkes is so famous for it is because he was the only person on the scene when the gunpowder was discovered. His said his name was John Johnson and he stuck to this lie until the order was handed down that it is "ok to use torture during the interrogation" on Nov 6th. John Johnson quickly turned into Guy Fawkes and he spilled the beans on everyone involved in the plot to assassinate, well.... everyone.

Guy wasn't even the guy in charge of the whole thing.

If it hadn't been for one person, himself a Catholic, there is a really good chance that the attack would have been carried out successfully as well.


source

Someone inside Fawke's inner circle sent a letter to a nobleman named Lord Monteagle warning him to not attend Parliament on the 5th. The idea was the Catholic Monteagle would have more loyalty to his faith than to the leadership of his country but it didn't pan out that way. The good lord (again, depending on how you look at it) revealed the letter to the Chief Minister of King James I instead and while they didn't know specifically what they were looking for, they had a hunch it must be near the Parliament building since that was specifically mentioned in the letter.

To this day no one knows who sent this anonymous letter.

maxresdefault.jpg
source

This plan to destroy Parliament wouldn't be successfully carried out until the year 2032, or at least that is how it is depicted in the film V for Vendetta.


The 5th of November was celebrated from 1606 henceforth by official decree. However, it wasn't a gathering of merriment celebrating the majesty of Guy Fawkes, as a lot of people today assume. It was a celebration of the capture and execution of him or more specifically, celebration of his failure to overthrow the country.

It was originally ordered that Nov 5th was to be a nationally recognized day of remembrance requiring the churches of England to speak about this day in a sermon, every year. Private and public parties would also burn effigies of Fawkes in celebration of how the country was saved from destruction in 1605.


source

It is still celebrated today, but there isn't much in the way of religion associated with it and I can't comment about if patriotism is part of it or not. I am not from the U.K. so I can't say for sure - but perhaps it has gone down a similar path that Independence Day has gone in the United States - it's just a day to eat and drink a lot and if you have them, light some fireworks - because that is what holidays are for.

Remember, remember, the 5th of November
The Gunpowder Treason and Plot;
I know of no reason why the Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.

Please keep in mind that it is not my intention to start any sort of religious debate, i just know a lot of people that celebrate Fawkes as a hero for the common man, and while that might be true in some regard, i think their opinion of this is based on a Hollywood film rather than history. If you meet someone that holds Guy Fawkes in high regard, I would be very curious to know if they are aware of his real history



0
0
0.000
34 comments
avatar

I knew the story but not all the details. I find it interesting that they had to say it was ok to torture as that must have been going on for years already.
We celebrate Guy Fawkes night but not Halloween as that is how I grew up. These days though Halloween has kind of taken foot in various societies and I believe it isn't the people, but the retailers who have made it happen.

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

When i was looking for fact clarification about various things i encountered that the rising popularity of Halloween was threatening this holiday, particularly in former colonies. Well, now i know it is true!

0
0
0.000
avatar

It is under threat as if you think about it who benefits from Guy Fawkes. Retailers that have a license to see fire works whereas Halloween they all sell things and it is more lucrative. Retailers are always looking for an opportunity to boost sales and this is why it is on the calendar now.

0
0
0.000
avatar

oh i would be willing to bet that Halloween is an opportunity for much senseless spending. In the States, there are pop up SUPERSTORES that sell only Halloween stuff from say, mid-Sept to Oct 30th, then they completely vacate the premises until the following year.

0
0
0.000
avatar

We have pop up Christmas stores taking over empty shops on a one month lease in shopping centers and high streets but thankfully no Halloween shops yet. It is fairly big but obviously not like the States. More for the kids getting sweets. Our road normally gets closed off as there is a high powered police officer somewhere around here and the kids trick or treat.

0
0
0.000
avatar

And, all this time I thought Guy Fawkes day was supposed to celebrate Alex Jones/Infowars/The weeb hackers Anonymous and all the freedom boners they bring.

Also, now I kinda feel like watching V for Vendetta. It's been, like, 7 or 8 years since I last watched it.

0
0
0.000
avatar

yeah, it's a pretty interesting film isn't it? The action alone is reason enough.

0
0
0.000
avatar

And, the full display of cock and balls in the first 7 minutes alone. Nothing gets my nipples harder than that. And, lets not forget the full penetration scenes later on. Just a beautiful film overall.

0
0
0.000
avatar

i don't remember either of those things. Ok gonna put it on the list for tomorrow!

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

Yeah, but it's only on the special directors cut which was uploaded onto pornhub only for some reason. Really weird shit.

0
0
0.000
avatar

To listen to the audio version of this article click on the play image.

Brought to you by @tts. If you find it useful please consider upvoting this reply.

0
0
0.000
avatar

For sure, knowing the number of atheist and agnostic people that probably hold him in high regard they would probably be surprised to know that he was a staunch Catholic as you have mentioned here and the preservation not the destruction of religion was the reason for his actions. Indeed, it is sad that violence is ever associated with religion in any way no matter the religion or the reason.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I'm a little disappointed in myself for not knowing more. I'd be curious to know if people from the U.K. are very well versed in what he was actually all about because I would imagine that most non UK or former colony people are aware of this information. Hopefully a Brit will chime in.

0
0
0.000
avatar

A lot of Brits probably don't know the history. It's just an excuse for fireworks and I'm hearing a few around us tonight. I knew it was a Catholic plot. We also had Catholic rulers who persecuted the protestants. Religion is often used as an excuse for extreme cruelty. Just one of the reasons I'm not a believer.

0
0
0.000
avatar

yeah, i didn't want to go down that road in my write up but all the history points to the fact that The Protestants were basically just doing what the Catholics had already been doing for quite some time. It was only "evil" and necessary to overthrow it once the other guys had that power. Kind of reminds me a bit of what is going on in this very platform at the moment. :)

0
0
0.000
avatar

I don't think you can compare a few downvotes with the killing that went on back then, on both sides. Steem has a lot of people who feel entitled to rewards regardless of their effort and what the community think.

0
0
0.000
avatar

That's not what I meant at all. Let's just drop it lol. It's my fault for bringing it up. 😆

Posted using Partiko Android

0
0
0.000
avatar

Honestly people care little now about the history and just huddle around a bonfire regardless of the weather which in November is typically freezing and wet.

It’s a strange custom and non brits probably think we are a little insane. I don’t go to them anymore as they tend to be governed in order to stop people getting burned and injured by fireworks.

So yes it’s much safer now than when I was a kid but the excitement has been drilled out of it. Call it a getting old and not giving a crap attitude anymore I guess.

Posted using Partiko iOS

0
0
0.000
avatar

lol. I think a big part of the fun during July 4th was the fact that we were kids and our parents were really ok with the fact that we were purchasing and using what is basically explosives when i was a kid. I mean i had a lot of them. Did we occasionally hear about a kid blowing their fingers off? Of course, but honestly, something bad was always going to happen to that kid.

I think being allowed to be around potential danger was actually a good thing and well, none of that is really allowed anymore is it?

0
0
0.000
avatar

It’s not allowed and it was very dangerous. I used to throw bangers all the time. It was more of a challenge to buy them being underage.

In the Far East they are more like explosives and there are no restrictions. The triangular packets I have seen in the Philippines literally through you back when they detonate!

Posted using Partiko iOS

0
0
0.000
avatar

Sometimes I wondered what would happen if he was successful in blowing up all those ruling class in both Houses!!

Would Catholic Church control the whole world and the Pope became the Emperor?

0
0
0.000
avatar

I saw it trending today but I didn't really know the story behind it. Thanks for the enlightenment

Posted using Partiko Android

0
0
0.000
avatar

As a person who's born and raised in the UK the sentiment of Bonfire Night being a "celebration of his failure to otherthrow the country" is accurate. The occasion is in no way about celebrating either Guy Fawkes or his allies as they are essentially portrayed as terrorists. This is the interpretation I and those that I know have been taught.

What I do not think we were taught, however, is much about their motives - and if we were it certainly wasn't lingered on because that part of the article is new news to me. I had no idea that the Gunpowder Plot was a response to outright discriminatory laws, and this knowledge adds a lot of nuance to the situation as opposed to the very binary "good guy bad guy" narrative I've up until now been exposed to. I do not condone violence, but violent (especially if defensive) protests have had an impact on the future for marginalised groups, such as the Stonewall Riots. Makes me think about how different things would've be if the plan had succeeded and how the whole event would probably have been hidden away from the history books by the lawmakers in such case.

0
0
0.000
avatar

That's a very interesting perspective on this and i was thinking that when i was researching this topic as well.

It's funny to me that the Catholics were so upset about the religious persecution they suddenly found themselves at the behest of, after a very long period of doing precisely that to all other religions.

I'm with you about the hating violence thing and you are certainly right that if the plan had been successful it wouldn't even be recognized by the history books in all likelihood. For decades following the event it would likely have been illegal to even talk about it.

0
0
0.000