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{{short description|16th- and 17th-century English conspirator in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605}} {{other people}} {{Good article}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}} {{Use British English|date=April 2012}} {{Infobox gunpowder plot | honorific_prefix = Sir | name = Everard Digby | image = EDigby.jpg | alt = Portrait of Sir Everard Digby | caption = Portrait of Digby | enlisted = 21 October 1605 | role = Uprising | apprehended = 8 November 1605 | birth_name = | birth_date = c. 1578 | birth_place = <!-- [[Stoke Dry]], [[Rutland]] --> | death_date = 30 January 1606 (aged 27β28) | death_place = [[Castle Baynard|Castlebaynard Ward]], [[City of London]], [[Middlesex]], England | death_cause = | other_names = | motive = [[Gunpowder plot]], a conspiracy to assassinate [[James I of England|King James VI & I]] and members of the [[Houses of Parliament]] | criminal_charge = | conviction = [[High treason]] | conviction_penalty = [[Hanged, drawn and quartered]] | conviction_status = | occupation = | spouse = Mary Mulsho | parents = Sir Everard Digby<br />Maria Neale | children = [[Kenelm Digby]], John Digby }} '''Sir Everard Digby''' (c. 1578 β 30 January 1606) was a member of the group of provincial members of the [[English nobility]] who planned the failed [[Gunpowder Plot]] of 1605. Although he was raised in an [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] household and married a Protestant, Digby and his wife were secretly received into the strictly illegal and underground [[Catholic Church in England and Wales|Catholic Church in England]] by the [[Society of Jesus|Jesuit]] priest Fr. [[John Gerard (Jesuit)|John Gerard]]. In the autumn of 1605, he made a [[Christian pilgrimage]] to the shrine of [[St Winefride's Well]] in [[Holywell, Flintshire|Holywell]], [[Wales]]. About this time, he met [[Robert Catesby]], who was planning to blow up the [[Palace of Westminster#Old Palace|House of Lords]] with [[gunpowder]] as an alleged act of [[tyrannicide]] and a [[decapitation strike]] against [[James VI and I|King James I]]. Catesby then planned to lead a popular uprising aimed at [[regime change]], through which a Catholic monarch would be placed upon the English throne. The full extent of Digby's knowledge of and involvement in the plot is unknown, but at Catesby's behest, Digby rented [[Coughton Court]] and prepared a "hunting party", ready for the planned uprising. The plot failed, however, and Digby joined the conspirators as they took flight through the [[English Midlands|Midlands]], failing to garner support along their way. Digby left the other fugitives at [[Holbeche House]] in [[Staffordshire]], and was soon captured and taken to the [[Tower of London]]. Digby was tried on 27 January 1606. Despite an eloquent defence, he was found guilty of [[high treason]], and three days later was [[hanged, drawn and quartered]]. ==Origins== The Digby family was of [[Leicestershire]] origin.<ref>'Tilton', in J. Nichols, ''The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicestershire'' 4 volumes in 8 (J. Nichols, London 1795-1811/Reprint by S.R. Publishers, Limited with Leicestershire County Council, 1971), III Part 1: East Goscote (1800), [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pst.000032377095&view=1up&seq=640 p. 462 ff.] (Hathi Trust).</ref> Sir John Digby (d. 1269) served on two [[crusades]], and, by 1418, Sir Everard "Greenleaf" Digby was Lord of Tilton and owner of the manor at Drystoke ([[Stoke Dry]]), and [[Rutland (UK Parliament constituency)|Rutland]]'s Member of Parliament. Sir Everard lost his life (and his family much of their fortune) fighting in 1461 for [[Henry VI of England|Henry VI]] against [[Edward IV of England|Edward IV]]. The family had a more positive reversal of fortune in 1485 when Sir Everard's sons fought for the victorious [[Henry VII of England|Henry VII]] at the [[Battle of Bosworth Field]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Digby Thomas|2001|pp=4β5}}</ref> ==Early life== Everard Digby was the eldest son of Everard Digby, Esquire (who died in 1592)<ref name="ODNB Digby">{{Cite ODNB | last = Nicholls | first = Mark |title=Digby, Sir Everard (c.1578β1606) | orig-year = 2004 | year = 2008 | doi = 10.1093/ref:odnb/7626}}</ref> and his wife Maria (nΓ©e Neale), daughter of Francis Neale of [[Tugby and Keythorpe|Keythorpe]] in [[Leicestershire]].{{#tag:ref|Maria Neale remarried to the recusant antiquary [[Sampson Erdeswicke]] in 1593, by whom she had 3 children in addition to the 14 she had borne to Everard Digby, as is shown by the inscription on Erdeswicke's monument at [[Sandon, Staffordshire]]. Erdeswicke died in 1603: his stepson Everard Digby was then living.|group="nb"}}<ref>S. Erdeswicke (ed. T. Harwood), ''A Survey of Staffordshire'' (1820), pp. xxxiii-xxxv: Inscription at [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_WZPRAAAAMAAJ/page/n49/mode/2up p. xxxv] (Internet Archive).</ref> The conspirator was a cousin of [[Anne Vaux]], who for years placed herself at considerable risk by sheltering [[Society of Jesus|Jesuit]] priests such as [[Henry Garnet]].<ref>{{Cite ODNB | last = Nicholls | first = Mark |title=Vaux, Anne (bap. 1562, d. in or after 1637) |orig-year = 2004 | year = 2008 | doi = 10.1093/ref:odnb/28159}}</ref> He was probably a near kinsman of the 16th-century scholar [[Everard Digby (scholar)|Everard Digby]], but it is clear that the scholar, who died in 1605,<ref>N. Orme, 'Digby, Everard (d. 1605), Church of England clergyman and author', ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (OUP 2004), [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/7625 online]</ref> was not his father, because as a Fellow of [[St John's College, Cambridge]] (a [[celibate]] calling) he could not have been married at the time when the young Everard and some of his 13 siblings were born, nor was he "Esquire", as the father is named in his ''[[inquisition post mortem]]'' of 1592.<ref>{{cite DNB |wstitle= Digby, Everard (fl.1590) |volume= 15 |last= Lee |first= Sidney |author-link= Sidney Lee |year=|pages= 50-51 |short= 1}}</ref> In 1596, while still a teenager, he married [[William Moulsoe|Mary Mulshaw]] (or Mushlo),<ref>{{Citation | last = Moshenska | first = Joe |title=A Stain in the Blood | publisher = William Heinemann: London |year=2016}}</ref> a young heiress who brought with her [[Gayhurst House]] in [[Buckinghamshire]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=168}}</ref> By all accounts their marriage was a happy one,<ref name="Fraserpp176177">{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=176β177}}</ref> and they had two sons; [[Kenelm Digby]] was born in 1603 at Gayhurst,<ref>{{Cite ODNB | last = Foster | first = Michael |title=Digby, Sir Kenelm (1603β1665) | orig-year = 2004 | year = 2009 | doi = 10.1093/ref:odnb/7629}}</ref> and John in 1605.<ref>{{Cite ODNB | last = Foster | first = Michael |title=Digby, Sir John (John Salisbury) (1605β1645) | orig-year = 2004 | year = 2009 | doi = 10.1093/ref:odnb/24540}}</ref> Unlike other English Catholics, Digby had little first-hand experience of England's [[recusancy]] laws. Following the death of his father he had been made a [[Ward (law)|ward of Chancery]] and was raised in a Protestant household.<ref name="Fraserpp176177"/> His wife Mary was converted to Catholicism by the Jesuit priest [[John Gerard (Jesuit)|John Gerard]]. When Digby fell seriously ill, Gerard used the occasion to convert him also, and the two subsequently became close friends, "calling eachother{{sic}} 'brother' when we wrote and spoke". Gerard was [[godparent|godfather]] to Digby's eldest son, Kenelm, and the Digbys also built a hidden chapel and [[sacristy]] at Gayhurst.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=169}}</ref> Digby frequented the court of [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]], and became informally associated with the Elizabethan [[Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms|gentlemen pensioners]].<ref name="ODNB Digby"/> His marriage had significantly expanded his holdings, however, and possibly for this reason he left court to manage his estates. He was apparently an unforgiving landlord, as his tenants in Tilton petitioned the Crown for redress when he failed to honour the expensive leases granted them by his father. He added to his property in [[Buckinghamshire]] by buying land in [[Great Missenden]], and a month after the queen's death his social station was elevated when on 24 April 1603 he was knighted by [[James VI and I|James I]] at [[Belvoir Castle]].<ref name="DigbyThomasp7">{{Harvnb|Digby Thomas|2001|p=7}}</ref>{{#tag:ref|Digby Thomas gives the date as 23 April instead.<ref name="DigbyThomasp7"/>|group="nb"}} Four days later he was present for Elizabeth's funeral in London.<ref name="ODNB Digby"/> ==Robert Catesby== {{see also|Gunpowder Plot}} In late August or early September 1605, Digby, his wife Mary, and their secret Jesuit chaplain [[Edward Oldcorne]] joined a pilgrimage organised by, amongst others, [[Henry Garnet]] and Anne Vaux.{{#tag:ref|The "others" were Eleanor Brooksby, her nephew William Brooksby, and his wife Dorothy.|group="nb"}} The party had set out from White Webbs at Enfield Chase, heading for the shrine of [[St Winefride's Well]] at [[Holywell, Flintshire|Holywell]], and had occasionally stopped along the way to collect more followers. As the thirty or so pilgrims returned from Holywell in mid-September, they stopped at [[Rushton Hall]] where [[Thomas Tresham (died 1605)|Sir Thomas Tresham]] had recently died, and then continued on to Digby's seat at Gayhurst.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=161β168}}</ref> On 21 October Digby, his wife Mary, Garnet and Vaux were at Harrowden celebrating a delayed [[Luke the Evangelist|Feast of St Luke]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=175β176}}</ref> While there he met [[Robert Catesby]],{{#tag:ref|Haynes and Fraser do not agree on the dates, or purposes here. Haynes was, however, published about ten years before Fraser, and therefore it is Fraser's chronology that is described from here, although Haynes's description of the meeting is used. Fraser is also apprehensive on the question of just how much Digby knew of Catesby's plot, whereas Haynes is certain that he was made fully aware from the beginning.|group="nb"}} who at some point asked him to swear an oath of secrecy before introducing him to what later became known as the Gunpowder Plot. English Catholics had hoped that the years of persecution they suffered during Elizabeth's reign would end when [[James VI and I|James I]] came to the throne, as his attitude appeared moderate, even tolerant towards Catholics. In Catesby's view, however, James had reneged on his promises, and he had quickly lost patience with the new [[Stuart Dynasty]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=41β42}}</ref><ref>{{Citation | last = Haynes | first = Alan | title = The Enduring Memory of the Gunpowder Plot | url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/civil_war_revolution/gunpowder_haynes_01.shtml | publisher = bbc.co.uk | date = 5 November 2009 | access-date = 14 July 2010}}</ref> He therefore planned to kill James by blowing up the [[Westminster Palace#Old Palace|House of Lords]] with gunpowder, and then inciting a popular revolt during which a Catholic monarch would be restored to the throne.<!-- Plot details not specifically cited in this text --> Catesby had enlisted the aid of other Catholics, but had borne much of the scheme's financial cost and was running out of money.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nicholls|1991|p=41}}</ref> The group had therefore agreed to expand their numbers. To this end Catesby had recruited [[Ambrose Rookwood]]βa young and wealthy Catholic with a stable of fine horsesβand a wealthy cousin, [[Francis Tresham]].<ref name="Fraser 2005 170β176">{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=170β176}}</ref><ref name="ODNB Tresham">{{Cite ODNB |last=Nicholls |first=Mark |title=Tresham, Francis (1567?β1605) |year=2004 |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/27708}}</ref> The extent of Digby's knowledge of the plot is unknown,<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=206}}</ref> but in the opinion of author Alan Haynes, Digby was shocked by what he heard, and asked what would become of some of their Catholic friends. Catesby replied "Assure your selfe that such of the nobilitie as are worth the saving shalbe preserved and yet knowe not of the matter." None of their friends would be caught in the explosion.<ref name="ODNB Digby"/> He asked if Catesby had spoken of the matter with Garnet, or any other Jesuits; although Catesby was in no doubt that the Jesuits disapproved of any such action, he lied and said that he would not act without their approbation. Catesby then named the other conspirators, and promised Digby that as soon as they reached Gayhurst he would demonstrate that their religion allowed such acts of [[regicide]], thus dissuading the young lord from confessing to Garnet and discovering the Jesuit's opinion of the matter.<ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|pp=77β78}}</ref> Catesby told him to rent [[Coughton Court]] from the head of the Throckmorton family, so that he would "the better to be able to do good to the cause [kidnap Princess Elizabeth]". From there, he was to organise a hunting party (in reality a group of armed men on horseback) and be ready for some kind of military manoeuvre.<ref name="Fraser 2005 170β176"/> Digby also provided monetary assistance; he promised Β£1,500 after fellow plotter [[Thomas Percy (Gunpowder Plot)|Thomas Percy]] failed to pay the rent due for several properties in Westminster.<ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|p=80}}</ref> ==Hunting party== [[File:Guy Fawkes House -Dunchurch-20May2005.jpg|right|thumb|Guy Fawkes House, formerly known as the Red Lion, where Digby was installed on 4 November 1605]] On 2 November at Gayhurst, while making preparations for his hunting party, Digby was visited by Gerard. Having noticed that the house was almost completely empty, the Jesuit asked him if there was "any matter in hand" and if Garnet knew of it. Keen not to implicate Gerard, despite being told less than two weeks earlier that the plot had Jesuit approval, Digby told him that there was nothing he knew of "or could tell him of". Although Gerard later used this conversation to defend himself against those who accused him of involvement in the plot, he lived to regret not being given the opportunity to dissuade Digby from his course.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=196}}</ref> Two days later Digby and his servants were ensconced at the Red Lion inn, in [[Dunchurch]], where his hunt was to take place. He took with him several items of clothing, including "a white satin doublet cut with purple". Also present, but uninvolved, were his uncle, Sir Robert Digby, [[Humphrey Littleton]] and his nephew [[Stephen Littleton]]. They ate supper, before being joined by fellow conspirator [[John Grant (Gunpowder Plot)|John Grant]] and a friend. Also invited was the stepbrother of plotters [[Robert and Thomas Wintour]], John Wintour. They attended a mass the next morning, conducted by a Father Hammond, before the party moved on.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=198β199}}</ref> Around midnight on 4 November, [[Guy Fawkes]] was discovered guarding the gunpowder the plotters had placed beneath the House of Lords, and arrested. Those conspirators still in London soon took flight for the Midlands, finding along the way those who had already left to prepare for the planned uprising. They met Digby and his party at Dunchurch.<ref>{{cite web |title=Parishes: Dunchurch and Thurlaston Pages 78-86 A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 6, Knightlow Hundred. |url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol6/pp78-86 |website=British History Online |publisher=Victoria County History, 1951 |access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> Catesby told Digby that the king and [[Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury|Salisbury]] were dead, and "if true Catholics would now stir, he doubted not that they might procure to themselves good conditions". Digby was won over, but many of his party were less than impressed at being so badly deceived, and worse, being associated with treason. One of his servants asked Digby what would happen to them; Digby told him that although he was aware of their ignorance, "but now there is no remedy".<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=205β206}}</ref> ==Flight== On 6 November the fugitives raided [[Warwick Castle]] and managed to secure more horses, before moving on to Norbrook to collect stored weapons. From there they continued their journey toward [[Huddington]]. Catesby ordered his servant (and fellow plotter) [[Thomas Bates]] to deliver a letter to Father Garnet at [[Coughton Court]]. Catesby and Digby asked Garnet to excuse their recklessness, before asking for his help in raising an army in Wales. Garnet's reply begged them to stop their "wicked actions", and to listen to the Pope's teachings. When the priest tried to comfort Mary Digby, also at Coughton Court, she burst into tears.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=217β218}}</ref> With their ever-decreasing band of supporters, the remaining fugitives arrived at Huddington at about 2:00 pm. Any expectation they had of support began to vanish; almost everyone they met showed concern only for their own safety, fearful of being involved with traitors. The next morning they rode through the rain, stopping briefly to help themselves to supplies from the home of the absent [[Thomas Windsor, 6th Baron Windsor|Lord Windsor]] at [[Hewell Grange]]. Still the locals refused to have anything to do with them; Digby later admitted that "not one man" joined them. They arrived that night at [[Holbeche House]] on the border of [[Staffordshire]], and tired and desperate, spread out some of the now-soaked gunpowder in front of the fire, to dry out. A spark from the fire landed on the powder and the resultant flames engulfed Catesby, Rookwood, Grant, and another man.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=220β223}}</ref> ==Surrender== Catesby and fellow conspirators [[Thomas Percy (Gunpowder Plot)|Thomas Percy]], [[John and Christopher Wright|John Wright and his brother Christopher]] were killed by the [[High Sheriff of Worcestershire|Sheriff of Worcester]]'s men early on 8 November,<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=223β225}}</ref> but Digby had already left to give himself up (the only conspirator to do so). With two servants, possibly Bates and his son, he took several horses and hid in nearby woods. Their tracks were soon found, however, and with some hesitation (Digby had intended to surrender himself to someone more worthy), early that morning he presented himself to the most senior-looking of his adversaries.<ref name="ODNB Digby"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=235β236}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|pp=101β102}}</ref> While Digby was taken to the Tower of London, Gayhurst was ransacked; the servants' belongings were stolen, the livestock was sold cheaply, and Mary Digby was left destitute. The sheriff later remarked "All goods are carried away, even to the very floor of the great parlour."<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=241}}</ref> At the Tower, Digby's two trunks of clothing were searched, and found to contain Β£100 in gold, and Β£50 in [[argent|white money]]. [[William Wade (English politician)|William Waad]], Lieutenant of the Tower, asked if he could take Β£50 to pay for Digby's food and bedding.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bengsten|2005|p=91}}</ref> {{Quote box | quote = Yesterday I was before Mr Attorney and my Lord Chief Justice, who asked me if I had taken the Sacrament to keep secret the plot as others did. I said that I had not, because I would avoid the question of at whose hands it were.| source = Everard Digby, 10 January 1606<ref name="Nichollsp56">{{Harvnb|Nicholls|1991|p=56}}</ref> | align = right | width = 33%}} Digby unsuccessfully sought an audience with James to try and explain himself, in Fraser's opinion suggesting either that the extent of his involvement was limited, or that he was "astonishingly naive and trusting of his sovereign's forgiveness." While imprisoned he busied himself with writing secret letters, smuggled from the Tower and not rediscovered until [[Kenelm Digby]]'s death in 1665. Although he was fortunate not to suffer the fate of Guy Fawkes, who was tortured on several occasions,<ref>{{Harvnb|Northcote Parkinson|1976|pp=91β92}}</ref> one of these letters hints that it had been "in a fashion, offered". He described his refusal to cooperate with his interrogators, boasted of his deceit, and how there was nothing he could do to make the plot appear less abhorrent to fellow Catholics.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nicholls|1991|pp=56β57}}</ref> Digby also carved an inscription on the wall of his cell, extant as of 1996.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=248}}</ref> In December 1605 Mary Digby wrote to the [[Sir Robert Cecil|Earl of Salisbury]] complaining that the Sheriff of Buckinghamshire had allowed people to strip their house for his profit, even her closet, and had not allowed them any of their clothes or linen. She entreated him for the life of her husband and his intercession with King James.<ref>''HMC Salisbury Hatfield'', vol. 17 (London, 1938), pp. 538β9.</ref> ==Trial and execution== [[File:The execution of Guy Fawkes' (Guy Fawkes) by Claes (Nicolaes) Jansz Visscher.jpg|thumb|300px|right|alt=A busy urban scene. Medieval buildings surround an open space, in which several men are being dragged by horses. One man hangs from a scaffold. A corpse is being hacked into pieces. Another man is feeding a large cauldron with a dismembered leg. Thousands of people line the streets and look from windows. Children and dogs run freely. Soldiers keep them back.|Print of members of the Gunpowder Plot being hanged, drawn and quartered]] Digby was tried on the same day as seven of his surviving co-conspirators, in [[Palace of Westminster#Westminster Hall|Westminster Hall]], on Monday 27 January 1606. As the king and his family watched in secret, the charges against the plotters were read aloud. Alone amongst them Digby pleaded "Guilty", and was tried on a separate indictment.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=263β266}}</ref> Dressed in a black satin suit and "tuff taffetie gown",<ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|p=110}}</ref> he gave a short and moving speech, defending his actions by explaining his affection for Catesby, and the cause of his religion. He accused King James of reneging on his promises of toleration for Catholics, and told of his fears of harsher laws against recusancy. He also pleaded on behalf of his family, that they should not pay for his actions, before making a final request to be beheaded.<ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|p=113}}</ref> His words fell on mostly deaf ears. The prosecution poured scorn on James's supposed perfidy, and ridiculed Digby for asking for leniency where he would have given none. Along with the other plotters, he was found guilty. As they were led from the hall, Digby exclaimed: "If I may but hear any of your lordships say, you forgive me, I shall go more cheerfully to the gallows." The reply came back, "God forgive you, and we do."<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=271β273}}</ref> He spent his last few days in the Tower writing letters to his wife and his sons, urging the two brothers to avoid the examples set by figures such as [[Cain and Abel]].{{#tag:ref|Kenelm Digby was three years old when his father died, and was removed by his family from the custody of his mother, and made a ward of Archbishop [[William Laud]].<ref name="Digbyfather">{{Citation | last = Fulton | first = John F. | title = Sir Kenelm Digby, F.R.S. (1603β1665) | journal = Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London | volume = 15 | year = 1960 | pages = 199β210 | publisher = The Royal Society, hosted at jstor.org | jstor = 531039 | doi=10.1098/rsnr.1960.0019| s2cid = 143873436 | doi-access = free }} {{subscription required}}</ref>|group="nb"}} He also wrote poetry: :Who's that which knocks? Oh stay, my Lord, I come: :I know that call, since first it made me know :Myself, which makes me now with joy to run :Lest he be gone that can my duty show. ::Jesu, my Lord, I know thee by the Cross ::Thou offer'st me, but not unto my loss.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=279}}</ref> Digby was [[hanged, drawn and quartered]] early on Thursday 30 January. Throngs of spectators lined the streets as he was strapped to a [[Wattle and daub|wattled]] [[hurdle]], and alongside Robert Wintour and John Grant was dragged by horse to the western end of [[Old St Paul's Cathedral]] churchyard. Thomas Bates was delivered in a similar fashion, but from the [[Gatehouse Prison]]. Armed guards interspersed along the route were there to defend against any possible rescue, but did not keep the miscreants' families from witnessing the fate of the four men. Cold and grubby, Digby was the first of the four to face the executioner. He mounted the scaffold and addressed the audience, telling them that he knew he had broken the law, but that morally, and in the eyes of his religion, he had committed no offence. He asked for God's forgiveness, and the country's, and protested the Jesuits' and Father Gerard's innocence. He refused the attentions of a Protestant clergyman, speaking to himself in Latin, before saying goodbye to his friends.<ref name="Fraserpp277280">{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=277β280}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|p=115}}</ref> Digby was then stripped of his clothing, except for his shirt. Murmuring "O Jesus, Jesus, save me and keep me", he climbed the ladder and was hanged for a short period. The executioner cut the rope, and Digby fell back to the scaffold, wounding his forehead. Fully conscious, he was taken to the block and castrated, disembowelled, and quartered. Wintour, Grant and Bates followed.<ref name="Fraserpp277280"/><ref>{{Harvnb|Haynes|2005|pp=115β116}}</ref> The remaining four conspirators suffered similar fates the following day, at the [[Old Palace Yard]] in Westminster.<ref>{{cite ODNB |last=Nicholls |first=Mark |title=Rookwood, Ambrose (c. 1578β1606) |year=2004 |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/24066}}</ref> ==References== ===Notes=== {{reflist|group="nb"}} ===Footnotes=== {{reflist|colwidth=30em}} ===Bibliography=== {{refbegin}} *{{citation |last=Bengsten |first=Fiona |title=Sir William Waad, Lieutenant of the Tower, and the Gunpowder Plot |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=89NarZPrQ7sC | location = Victoria, Canada; Oxford, England |edition=illustrated |publisher=Trafford Publishing |year=2005 |isbn=1-4120-5541-5}} * {{Citation | last = Digby Thomas | first = Roy | title = Digby: The Gunpowder Plotter's Legacy | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=-EKZF3J795cC | publisher = Janus Publishing Company Ltd | year = 2001 | isbn = 1-85756-520-7 | location = London}} *{{citation |last=Fraser |first=Antonia |author-link=Antonia Fraser |title=The Gunpowder Plot |publisher=Phoenix |year=2005 | location = London |orig-year=1996 |isbn=0-7538-1401-3}} *{{citation |last=Haynes |first=Alan |title=The Gunpowder Plot: Faith in Rebellion |publisher=Hayes and Sutton |year=2005 |location=Sparkford, England |orig-year=1994 |isbn=0-7509-4215-0}} *{{Citation | last = Longueville | first = Thomas | title = The Life of a Conspirator; Being a Biography of Sir Everard Digby by One of his Descendants | year = 1895 | url = https://archive.org/details/cu31924028038440 | publisher = K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co Ltd | location = London}} *{{Citation | last = Nicholls | first = Mark | title = Investigating Gunpowder Plot | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=RiHpAAAAIAAJ | publisher = Manchester University Press | year = 1991 | location = Manchester | isbn = 0-7190-3225-3}} *{{citation |first=C. |last=Northcote Parkinson |author-link=C. Northcote Parkinson |title=Gunpowder Treason and Plot |year=1976 |publisher=Weidenfeld and Nicolson | location = London | isbn=0-297-77224-4}} {{refend}} {{Gunpowder Plot}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Digby, Everard}} [[Category:1570s births]] [[Category:1606 deaths]] [[Category:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism]] [[Category:English criminals]] [[Category:English Roman Catholics]] [[Category:Executed Gunpowder Plotters]] [[Category:People executed by Stuart England by hanging, drawing and quartering]] [[Category:16th-century English nobility]] [[Category:17th-century English criminals]] [[Category:16th-century Roman Catholics]] [[Category:17th-century Roman Catholics]] [[Category:Executed English people]] [[Category:Prisoners in the Tower of London]] [[Category:Knights Bachelor]]
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