Catholics had made several assassination attempts against …
Years: 1600 - 1611
Catholics had made several assassination attempts against Protestant rulers in Europe and in England during the late sixteenth century, including plans to poison Elizabeth I.
On Kings and the Education of Kings, published in 1598 by the Jesuit Juan de Mariana, had explicitly justified the assassination of the French king Henri III—who had been stabbed to death by a Dominican friar in 1589—and some English Catholics until the 1620s will continue to believe that regicide is justifiable to remove tyrants from power.
Much of the "rather nervous" James I's political writing is "concerned with the threat of Catholic assassination and refutation of the [Catholic] argument that 'faith did not need to be kept with heretics'".
James denounces the Catholic Church on 19 February 1604, shortly after he discovers that his wife, Queen Anne, had been sent a rosary from the pope via one of James's spies, Sir Anthony Standen.
Three days later, he orders all Jesuits and all other Catholic priests to leave the country, and reimposes the collection of fines for recusancy.
James changes his focus from the anxieties of English Catholics to the establishment of an Anglo-Scottish union.
He also appoints Scottish nobles such as George Home to his court, which proves unpopular with the Parliament of England.
Some Members of Parliament make it clear that in their view, the "effluxion of people from the Northern parts" is unwelcome, and compare them to "plants which are transported from barren ground into a more fertile one".
Even more discontent results when the King allows his Scottish nobles to collect the recusancy fines.
There are five thousand five hundred and sixty convicted of recusancy in 1605, of whom one hundred and twelve are landowners.
The very few Catholics of great wealth who refuse to attend services at their parish church are fined twenty pounds per month.
Those of more moderate means have to pay two-thirds of their annual rental income; middle class recusants are fined one shilling a week, although the collection of all these fines is "haphazard and negligent".
When James came to power, almost five thousand pounds a year (equivalent to over ten million pounds as of 2008) was being raised by these fines.
Puritan influences grow in spite of James I.
The King James Bible is issued, providing the basis for the anti-Catholic policy of individual Bible reading and interpretation.
Catholic conspirators plotting to topple the Protestant monarchy engage English Catholic mercenary Guy Fawkes to stow gunpowder barrels in a vault under the House of Lords and explode them on November 5, 1605, when the king opens Parliament.
An anonymous letter unravels the Roman Catholic-backed Gunpowder Plot in 1605, enabling the authorities to thwart the Catholic terrorists’ plan to blow up Parliament and the king.
During a search on November 4, 1605, Fawkes is arrested and reveals the plot under torture; he will be executed on January 31 of the following year.
Locations
People
Groups
Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Gunpowder Plot
