Traditionally
Bonfire Night is held in Britain on 5th November. It celebrates the
defeat of a conspiracy to blow up the Houses
of Parliament with the then king, James I, in it. Bonfire
Night is celebrated with bonfires and fireworks.
The
Story of the Gunpowder Plot & Guy Fawkes
On
5th November 1605, two years after the death of Queen Elizabeth
I, soldiers discovered a man called Guy Fawkes in a cellar
under the Houses of Parliament. With him were at least twenty
barrels of gunpowder. Guy Fawkes was arrested and tortured.
At last he gave way and told his torturers about a plot to
blow up Parliament, together with the King, James I, his Ministers
and Members of Parliament.
Guy
Fawkes was a Roman Catholic who had been angered by the
failure of King James, who was after all the son of the Catholic
Mary Queen of Scots, to grant more religious toleration to
Catholics. He had joined with a group of four other Catholics
led by Robert Catesby in the plot to kill the king. Catesby
had made the mistake of inviting other Catholics to join
the plot. One of these was called Francis Tresham. Tresham
wrote a letter to his brother-in-law Lord Monteagle warning
him not to go to Parliament and Monteagle told the government.
Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators were executed as traitors.
In
1606 Parliament agreed to make 5th November a day of public
thanksgiving and ever since then the day has been celebrated
with fireworks and bonfires.
Bonfires
and Burning the Guy
In
some ways Bonfire Night is related to the ancient
festival of Samhain, the Celtic New Year. Bonfires
formed an important part of the Celtic New Year
celebrations - warding off evil spirits. Bonfires
play a part in many customs all over the world.
On November 5th as part of Bonfire Night celebrations
we too light bonfires. What makes the British
Bonfire Night celebrations special is the burning
of the guy. The guy is a figure usually made
by the children out of old clothes, papier mache
and anything else we can use. It represents Guy
Fawkes and is burnt on the bonfire. Sometimes
in the week or so before Bonfire Night children
will take their guys on to the street and beg "a
penny for the Guy". The money then goes
towards the fireworks.
In Sussex, towns such as Lewes compete to have the best Bonfire
Night celebrations. The guys used in these celebrations can be
enormous - the height of a small house - and under the guy's arm
is placed a barrel of gunpowder, so you can imagine the bang when
it goes off! Attempts are regularly made on world records - a few
years ago we saw a successful attempt on making the world's largest
Catherine wheel. The Sussex celebrations still reflect some of
the anti-Catholic feelings which were part of the Bonfire Night
celebrations of the past.
Bonfire
Food
One of the best parts of Bonfire Night is bonfire food. Try baking
potatoes in the bonfire, sausages cooked over the flames and marshmallows
toasted in the fire. Of course, ask an adult to help you - fire
can be dangerous.
|