Essex, beheaded on Tower Green on February…
February 1601 CE
Essex, beheaded on Tower Green on February 25, 1601, becomes the last person to be beheaded in the Tower of London. (It is reported to have taken three strokes by the executioner Thomas Derrick to complete the beheading.)
At Sir Walter Raleigh's own treason trial later on, in 1603, it will be alleged that Raleigh had said to a co-conspirator, "Do not, as my Lord Essex did, take heed of a preacher. By his persuasion he confessed, and made himself guilty."
In that same trial, Raleigh will also deny that he had stood at a window during the execution of Essex's sentence, disdainfully puffing out tobacco smoke in sight of the condemned man.
Devereux's conviction for treason means that the earldom of Essex is forfeit, and his son does not inherit the title.
King James I after the Queen's death will reinstate the earldom, however, in favor of the disinherited son, Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex.