Bacon, with others, is appointed to investigate…
February 1601 CE
Bacon, with others, is appointed to investigate the charges against Essex.
Bacon is subsequently a part of the legal team headed by Attorney General Sir Edward Coke on February 19 when Essex is tried before his peers on charges of treason.
Part of the evidence shows that he is in favor of toleration of religious dissent.
In his own evidence, he counters the charge of dealing with Catholics, swearing that "papists have been hired and suborned to witness against me."
Essex also asserts that Cecil had stated that none in the world but the Infanta of Spain had the right to the Crown of England, whereupon Cecil (who has been following the trial at a doorway concealed behind some tapestry) steps out to make a dramatic denial, going down on his knees to give thanks to God for the opportunity.
The witness whom Essex expects to confirm this allegation, his uncle William Knollys, is called and admits there had once been read in Cecil's presence a book treating such matters (possibly either The Book of Succession, supposedly by an otherwise unknown R. Doleman, but probably really by Robert Persons, or A Conference about the Next Succession to the Crown of England explicitly mentioned to be by Parsons, in which a Catholic successor friendly to Spain was favored).
Essex, however, denies he had heard Cecil make the statement.
Thanking God again, Cecil expresses his gratitude that Essex has been exposed as a traitor while he himself has been found an honest man.
Essex is found guilty.