Henry Garnet

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Henry Garnet
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Henry Garnet

Henry Garnet or Garnett (1555May 3, 1606) was an English Jesuit, executed due to his involvement in the Gunpowder Plot of November 5, 1605. He was the son of Brian Garnett, headmaster of Nottingham High School from 1565 – c. 1575.

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[edit] Early life

Born at Heanor in Derbyshire, Garnet was educated at Winchester and afterwards studied law in London. Having become a Roman Catholic, he went to Italy, joined the Society of Jesus in 1575, and acquired under Bellarmine and others a reputation for varied learning. In 1586 he joined the mission in England, becoming superior of the province on the imprisonment of William Weston in the following year. In the dispute between the Jesuits and the secular clergy known as the Wisbech Stirs (1595-1596) he zealously supported Weston in his resistance to any compromise with the civil government. His antagonism to the secular clergy was also shown later, when in 1603 he, with other Jesuits, was the means of betraying to the government the Bye Plot, contrived by William Watson, a secular priest. In 1598 he was professed of the four vows.

Garnet supervised the Jesuit mission for eighteen years with conspicuous success. His life was one of concealment and disguises; a price was put on his head; but he was fearless and indefatigable in carrying on his propaganda and in ministering to the scattered Catholics, even in their prisons. The result was that he gained many converts, while the number of Jesuits in England increased during his tenure of office from three to forty. It is, however, in connection with the Gunpowder Plot that he is best remembered. His part in this, for which he suffered death, needs discussion in greater detail.

[edit] Involvement in the Gunpowder Plot

[edit] Association with Conspirators

In 1602 Garnet received briefs from Pope Clement VIII directing that no person unfavourable to the Catholic religion should be allowed to succeed to the throne. About the same time he was consulted by Catesby, Tresham and Winter, all afterwards involved in the Gunpowder Plot, on the subject of the mission to be sent to Spain to induce Philip III to invade England. According to his own statement he disapproved, but he gave Winter a recommendation to Father Creswell, an influential person in Madrid.

Moreover, in May 1605 he gave introductions to Guy Fawkes when he went to Flanders, and to Sir Edmund Baynham when he went to Rome. The preparations for the plot had now been actively going forward since the beginning of 1604. On June 9, 1605, Catesby asked Garnet whether it was lawful to enter upon any undertaking which should involve the destruction of the innocent together with the guilty. Garnet answered in the affirmative, giving as an illustration the fate of persons besieged in a town in time of war. Afterwards, feeling alarmed, according to his own accounts, Garnet admonished Catesby against intending the death of not only innocents but friends and necessary persons for a commonwealth, and showed him a letter from the pope forbidding rebellion. According to Sir Everard Digby, however, Garnet, when asked the meaning of the brief, replied that "they (meaning the priests) were not to undertake or procure stirs, but yet they would not hinder any, neither was it the pope's mind they should, that should be undertaken for Catholic good. This answer, with Mr Catesby's proceedings with him and me, gave me absolute belief that the matter in general was approved, though every particular was not known." Both men were endeavouring to exculpate themselves with their accounts, though, and therefore both statements are subject to suspicion.

[edit] Garnet Learns of the Plot

A few days later, according to Garnet, the Jesuit, Oswald Tesemond, known as Greenway, informed him of the whole plot by way of confession. Garnet would later claim that he expressed horror at the design, and urged Greenway to do his utmost to prevent its execution. Subsequently, after his trial, Garnet said he could not certainly affirm that Greenway intended to relate the matter to him in confession.

Garnet's conduct in keeping the plot a secret after Greenway's confession has been a matter of considerable controversy, not only between Roman Catholics and Protestants, but amongst Roman Catholic writers themselves. Father Martin Delrio, a Jesuit, writing in 1600, discussed the exact case of the revelation of a plot in confession. Almost all learned doctors, he said, declared that the confessor could lawfully reveal it to authorities. But, he added, keeping the plot a secret was the safer and better doctrine, and more consistent with religion and reverence to the holy rite of confession.

According to Bellarmine, Garnet's zealous friend and defender, if the person confessing remains secretive, it is lawful for a priest to break the seal of confession in order to avert a great calamity. But he justified Garnet's silence by insisting that it was not lawful to disclose a treasonable secret to a heretical king. According to Garnet's own opinion, a priest cognizant of treason against the state is bound to find all lawful means to discover it salvo sigillo confessionis. Garnet had not thought it his duty to disclose the treasonable intrigue with the king of Spain in 1602, though he was not restricted by the seal of confession at that time. Too, although Garnet was perhaps bound by confessional secrecy with Greenway's information, he still had Catesby's earlier revelations to act upon. Garnet appears to have taken no steps whatever to prevent the crime, beyond writing to Rome in vague terms that he feared a calamity, which aroused no suspicions in that quarter. At the same time he wrote to Father Parsons on September 4 stating that as far as he could see, the minds of the Catholics were quieted.

Garnet's movements immediately prior to the attempt were certainly suspicious. In September, shortly before the expected meeting of Parliament on October 3, Garnet organized a pilgrimage to St Winifred's Well in Flintshire, which started from Gothurst (now Gayhurst), Sir Everard Digby's house in Buckinghamshire. The trip included visits to Rokewood and stopped at the houses of John Grant and Robert Winter, three of the conspirators. During the pilgrimage Garnet asked for the prayers of the company for some good success for the Catholic cause at the beginning of Parliament. After his return, he went on October 29 to Coughton in Warwickshire, near where the conspirators were to have assembled after the explosion. On November 6, Bates, Catesby's servant and one of the conspirators, brought him a letter giving news of the failure of the plot and requesting advice. On the 30th Garnet addressed a letter to the government in which he protested his innocence with the most solemn oaths, as "one who hopeth for everlasting salvation".

[edit] Implication and Arrest

It was not till December 4, however, that Garnet and Greenway were, by the confession of Bates, implicated in the plot; and on the same day Garnet relocated from Coughton to Hindlip Hall, near Worcester, a house furnished with cleverly contrived hiding places. Here he remained for some time in concealment in company with another priest, Oldcorne, alias Hall, but at last on January 30, 1606, unable to bear the close confinement any longer, they surrendered and were taken up to London, being well-treated during the journey by Salisbury's express orders. Garnet was examined by the council on February 13 and frequently questioned during the following days, but refused to incriminate himself, and a threat to inflict torture had no effect upon his resolution. Subsequently, however, Garnet and Oldcorne were placed in adjoining rooms and enabled to communicate with one another. Eavesdroppers were able to gain information in this way on several occasions. Garnet at first denied all speech with Oldcorne, but subsequently on March 8, confessed his connection to the plot. He was tried at the Guildhall on the 28th.

[edit] Trial and execution

Garnet was clearly guilty of misprision of treason, an offence which exposed him to perpetual imprisonment and forfeiture of his property. (English law had no exemption for a religious figure whose actions permitted the execution of a preventable crime.) Strangely enough, however, the government passed over Garnet's incriminating conversation with Greenway, and relied entirely on the strong circumstantial evidence to support the charge of high treason. Garnet's trial, like most in those days, was not governed by modern rules of evidence and was influenced by the political situation. The case against Garnet was bolstered by general political bias against the Jesuits as a whole, who had been complicit in former plots against the government.

The prisoner did himself no favors with his numerous false statements and his adherence to the doctrine of equivocation [see: Doctrine of mental reservation]. Garnet claimed that equivocation was only justified in cases of necessary defence from injustice, or of obtaining some good of great importance when there is no danger of harm to others. He felt he could justify his lies to the council on the basis of their own conduct towards him, which included treacherous eavesdropping and fraud, and also threats of torture. Moreover, the prosecution's attempt to force Garnet to incriminate himself was opposed to the spirit and tradition of English law.

Garnet was declared guilty. Despite the irregular character of the trial, it is considered likely that the verdict was justified. He was executed on May 3rd 1606. Garnet acknowledged himself justly condemned for his concealment of the plot, but maintained to the last that he had never approved it. The king, who had shown him favor throughout and who had forbidden his being tortured, directed that he should be hanged till he was dead and that the cruelties of drawing and quartering should be omitted.

[edit] Garnet's Straw

Soon after his death the story of the miracle of Garnet's Straw was circulated all over Europe, according to which a blood-stained straw from the scene of execution which came into the hands of one John Wilkinson, a young and fervent Roman Catholic, who was present, developed Garnet's likeness. In consequence of the credence which the story obtained, Archbishop Bancroft was commissioned by the privy council to discover and punish the impostors. Garnet's name was included in the list of the 353 Roman Catholic martyrs sent to Rome from England in 1880, and in the 2nd appendix of the Menology of England and Wales compiled by order of the cardinal archbishop and the bishops of the province of Westminster by R Stanton in 1887, where he is styled a martyr whose cause is deferred for future investigation.

The passage in Macbeth (Act ii. Scene iii.) on equivocators no doubt refers especially to Garnet. His aliases were Farmer, Marchant, Whalley, Darcey Meaze, Phillips, Humphreys, Roberts, Fulgeham, Allen. Garnet was the author of a letter on the Martyrdom of Godfrey Maurice, alias John Jones, in Diego Yepres's Historia particular de Ia persecución de Inglaterra (1599); a Treatise of Schism, a manuscript treatise in reply to A Protestant Dialogue belween a Gentleman and a Physician; a translation of the Stemma Christi with supplements (1622); a treatise on the Rosary; a Treatise of Christian Renovation or Birth (1616).

[edit] Authorities

Of the great number of works embodying the controversy on the question of Garnet's guilt the following may be mentioned, in order of date:

  • A True and Perfect Relation of the whole Proceedings against ... Garnet a Jesuit and his Confederates (1606, repr. 1679), the official account, but incomplete and inaccurate
  • Apologia pro Henrico Garneto (1610), by the Jesuit L'Heureux, under the pseudonym Endaemon-Joannes, and Dr Robert Abbot's reply, Antilogia versus Apologiam Eudaemon-Joannes, in which the whole subject is well treated
  • Henry More, Hist. Provinciae Anglicanae Societatis (1660)
  • D. Jardine, Gunpowder Plot (1857)
  • J. Morris, SJ, Condition of the Catholics under James I (1872), containing Father Gerard's narrative
  • J. H. Pollen, Father Henry Garnet and the Gunpowder Plot (1888)
  • S. R. Gardiner, What Gunpowder Plot war (1897), in reply to John Gerard, SJ, What was the Gunpowder Plot? (1897)
  • J. Gerard, Contributions towards a Life of Father Henry Garnet (1898)

See also State Trials II., and Cal. of State Papers Dom., (1603-1610). The original documents are preserved in the Gunpowder Plot Book at the Record Office.

A more recent version of Henry Garnett's story can be found on the website of the /Heanor & District Local History Society.


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.