Remember, remember, the 5th of November..
I see no reason
Why gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot."
As i'm sure everybody is well aware, 5th of November is celebrated across the UK as Guy Fawkes Night (or more commonly now, simply Bonfire Night) This is of course in commemoration of the failure of the 1605 Gunpowder Plot in which radical Catholics, amongst who's number was a certain Guy Fawkes, attempted to blow up the Houses of Parliament, most of the nation's aristocracy, and the reigning Protestant King, James I. Fawkes, the explosives man, was captured red-handed with said barrels of gunpowder underneath the Commons chamber and to this day British people still burn an effigy called a "guy" on bonfires.
However, I wonder how many people recall the other and far more reaching significance of this date in British history, the anniversary of the "Glorious" Revolution of 1688, in which Parliament invited Duke William of Orange, a Dutchman, to overthrow and supplant the reigning Catholic monarch King James II, William's father-in-law and grandson of James I - a coup d'etat rather than a regicidal plot, and one which of course succeeded, and if you take the traditional Whig view, finally established Britain's constitutional monarchy in the form we still have it, more or less, today (but it also is still the primary historical motivation for the continuing troubles in N Ireland.)
it's always struck me as rather ironic that both events, involving that troubled dynasty of the House of Stuart, should be reverse mirrors of each other, a failed one in which disenchanted Catholics attempted to depose a reigning Protestant Establishment, and a successful one in which a Protestant Establishment overturned a reigning but highly unpopular Catholic King and his "popish" entourage - and taken together, both events make true exemplar of the old maxim,
"treason ne'er prospers, and what's the reason?
For if it prospers, none dare call it treason!"
(just a thought, for the day...)
edit - an aside for our Amurrican cousins - your city of New York was named thus not in honour of the English city of that name but rather for the Duke of York, said James II before he became king, as he was then Lord High Admiral of Charles II's Navy at the time of New Amsterdam's capture by the English from the Dutch.
Edited by - Tawakalna on 11/5/2006 3:16:03 PM