Thomas Lee, four days after the apprehension …
Years: 1601 - 1601
February
Thomas Lee, four days after the apprehension of Essex on charges of treason, seeks the assistance of Sir Henry Nevill and Sir Robert Crosse (with four other gentlemen) to surprise the queen in her privy chamber at supper tim.
His plan is to lock her in and pin her up until she signs a warrant for the delivery of Essex.
However, Crosse informed the authorities of their plan, and Lee is apprehended as he watches the door of the chamber in preparation for an attempt on the following evening.
Lee is tried the next day.
Crosse testifies against him.
Lee denies the construction put upon his words by the attorney-general and speaks boldly in defense of Essex, who had written in commendation of him to Lord Mountjoy.
He admits that "it was ever my fault to be loose and lavish of my tongue", adding that "he had lived in misery and cared not to live, his enemies were so many and so great".
Upon conviction and sentencing, he pleads for his son's inheritance.
He is put to death at Tyburn the same day, dying "very christianly".
Locations
People
- Charles Blount, Lord Mountjoy
- Elizabeth I
- Francis Bacon
- Hugh Roe Ó Donnell
- Hugh Ó Neill
- Robert Cecil
- Robert Devereux
- Thomas Lee (army captain)
Groups
Topics
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Elizabethan Period
- Anglo-Spanish War of 1585-1604
- Nine Years' War in Ireland, or Tyrone's Rebellion
