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THROCKMORTON (or THROGMORTON), See also: English conspirator, was the son of See also: Sir See also: John Throckmorton of
See also: Feckenham in See also: Warwickshire, and his wife Margery See also: Puttenham
.
Sir John had been concerned in Wyat's See also: rebellion against See also: Queen Mary Tudor, but was afterwards known as a sympathizer with the See also: Roman Catholic party in the reign of Queen See also: Elizabeth, and in 158o was removed from his office of chief
See also: justice of See also: Chester for irregularities in his office, but probably because he was suspected of disloyalty by the See also: government
.
See also: Francis was educated at See also: Hart See also: Hall,
See also: Oxford, which he entered in 1572
.
In 1576 he was enrolled in the Inner See also: Temple
.
At Oxford he had come under the influence of the Roman Catholics, whose power was still See also: great in the university, and must have heard of Edmund Campian (q.v.) who had See also: left shortly before he him-self entered the university
.
When Campian and Parsons came to See also: England in 1580 to conduct the Jesuit propaganda against Queen Elizabeth, Francis Throckmorton was one of a society of members of the Inner Temple who See also: united to hide and help them
.
In that See also: year he went abroad, first to join his See also: brother See also: Thomas, who was engaged with the exiled Roman Catholics in
See also: Paris, and then to travel in See also: Italy and See also: Spain
.
While abroad he consorted with exiled papists, and was undoubtedly engaged in treasonable intrigues
.
In 1583 he returned to See also: act as the confidential See also: agent of an elaborate conspiracy which had for its See also: object the invasion of England by a French force under command of the duke of See also: Guise, or by Spaniards and Italians sent by See also: Philip II. for the purpose of releasing the imprisoned Mary Queen of Scots and restoring the authority of the
See also: pope
.
Throckmorton possessed, or occupied, a See also: house on See also: Paul's See also: wharf, See also: London, which served as a meeting-place for the conspirators
.
Many plots were being carried on alongside of the chief one, and the suspicions of the government were aroused
.
Throckmorton's See also: constant visits to the See also: Spanish ambassador, Bernardino de See also: Mendoza, attracted See also: attention, and he was arrested in See also: October 1583
.
He was ciphering a letter to Queen Mary when the constables came upon him suddenly, but he found See also: time to send a See also: casket of compromising papers by a trustworthy maidservant to Mendoza, and a card in cipher in which he promised to reveal nothing
.
As he refused to confess when brought before the council, he was put on the See also: rack in the Tower
.
He resisted a first application of the torture, but his strength and courage failed when he was threatened with a second, and he made a full confession
.
At a later See also: period he retracted and asserted that his avowals were false and had been extorted from him by See also: pain, or had been put in his mouth by the examiners
.
His confession agreed, however, fully with what is known from other See also: sources of the See also: plot, and there can be no doubt that when his house was searched the constables found lists of his confederates, plans of harbours meant for use by See also: foreign invaders, See also: treatises in defence of the title of the Queen of Scots to the See also: throne of England, and " infamous libels on Queen Elizabeth printed beyond seas." His trial, which in the circumstances was a See also: mere formality, took place on the 21st of May 1584, and he was executed at See also: Tyburn on the loth of See also: July
.
The arrest and confession of Throckmorton were events of great importance
.
They terrified the conspirators, who fled abroad in large numbers, and led to the expulsion of the Spanish ambassador and so to war with Spain
.
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