The Gunpowder Plot was a failed attempt by a group of English Catholics, led by Robert Catesby, to assassinate King James I and VI of England and Scotland, along with the entire Protestant English Parliament, by blowing up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. According to the conspiracy theory, the Jesuits were the masterminds behind the plot, aiming to destabilize the Protestant government and restore Catholic rule in England.
As to King James' homosexuality and all that other crap posted by u/emet I am unfamiliar with this line of history. If anyone has a good sauce on it I'm willing to learn! I bet it's a bunch of Jesuit bullshit
Fuck Guy Fawkes and the glowtard CIA Anonymous LARP
Got it. I'll check that out. Regardless I'm grateful God prevented this plot because we got the 1611AKJV out of that faggot!
(I'll also dig around my corners of the realms to see if I can find any evidence of these accounts being falsified to smear him...we know how it goes with the writers of history)
can you link me to the Stuarts one? I can't find it
QUESTION: I have been told that King James was a homosexual. Is this true?
ANSWER: No.
EXPLANATION: King James I of England, who authorized the translation of the now famous King James Bible, was considered by many to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, monarchs that England has ever seen.
Through his wisdom and determination he united the warring tribes of Scotland into a unified nation, and then joined England and Scotland to form the foundation for what is now known as the British Empire.
At a time when only the churches of England possessed the Bible in English, King James' desire was that the common people should have the Bible in their native tongue. Thus, in 1603, King James called 54 of history's most learned men together to accomplish this great task. At a time when the leaders of the world wished to keep their subjects in spiritual ignorance, King James offered his subjects the greatest gift that he could give them. Their own copy of the Word of God in English.
James, who was fluent in Latin, Greek, and French, and schooled in Italian and Spanish even wrote a tract entitled "Counterblast to Tobacco",which was written to help thwart the use of tobacco in England.
Such a man was sure to have enemies. One such man, Anthony Weldon, had to be excluded from the court. Weldon swore vengeance. It was not until 1650, twenty-five years after the death of James that Weldon saw his chance. He wrote a paper calling James a homosexual. Obviously, James, being dead, was in no condition to defend himself.
The report was largely ignored since there were still enough people alive who knew it wasn't true. In fact, it lay dormant for years, until recently when it was picked up by Christians who hoped that vilifying King James, would tarnish the Bible that bears his name so that Christians would turn away from God's book to a more "modern" translation.
It seems though, that Weldon's false account is being once again largely ignored by the majority of Christianity with the exception of those with an ulterior motive, such as its author had.
It might also be mentioned here that the Roman Catholic Church was so desperate to keep the true Bible out of the hands of the English people that it attempted to kill King James and all of Parliament in 1605.
In 1605 a Roman Catholic by the name of Guy Fawkes, under the direction of a Jesuit priest by the name of Henry Garnet, was found in the basement of Parliament with thirty-six barrels of gunpowder which he was to use to blow up King James and the entire Parliament. After killing the king, they planned on imprisoning his children, re-establishing England as a state loyal to the Pope and kill all who resisted. Needless to say, the perfect English Bible would have been one of the plot's victims. Fawkes and Garnet and eight other conspirators were caught and hanged.
It seems that those who work so hard to discredit the character of King James join an unholy lot.
Learn more in this short video from authors David W. Daniels and Jack McElroy:
Looks like someone has discovered yet another long-running conspiracy character assassination hitjob. I'll be digging into this. Also yes there's 800 videos in that playlist so needless to say I'm not scrolling through all that lol
Is there a video or article you stand by that you could link me to?
The Gunpowder Plot was a failed attempt by a group of English Catholics, led by Robert Catesby, to assassinate King James I and VI of England and Scotland, along with the entire Protestant English Parliament, by blowing up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. According to the conspiracy theory, the Jesuits were the masterminds behind the plot, aiming to destabilize the Protestant government and restore Catholic rule in England.
As to King James' homosexuality and all that other crap posted by u/emet I am unfamiliar with this line of history. If anyone has a good sauce on it I'm willing to learn! I bet it's a bunch of Jesuit bullshit
Fuck Guy Fawkes and the glowtard CIA Anonymous LARP
Nah man I've studied history all my life especially the history of England
James was definitely a fag
Here's a timeline of British docs. You'll have to scroll down to the Stuarts to get to James but he's definitely covered here as is his homosexuality
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7nDVlstWlP_EGWO-_eoUZx7NDimunvVs&si=pp6RNCNiEZbVwzoi
Got it. I'll check that out. Regardless I'm grateful God prevented this plot because we got the 1611AKJV out of that faggot!
(I'll also dig around my corners of the realms to see if I can find any evidence of these accounts being falsified to smear him...we know how it goes with the writers of history)
can you link me to the Stuarts one? I can't find it
Dude I literally linked you all of history of England in chronological order
Scroll down to Henry 8 after him his daughter Elizabeth the 1 and after her was James 1
If you don't feel like scrolling just search James 1 documentaries
History is unanimous in this and it was well known then that he had young male favorites at court.
A quick search yielded a contrary take..
QUESTION: I have been told that King James was a homosexual. Is this true?
ANSWER: No.
EXPLANATION: King James I of England, who authorized the translation of the now famous King James Bible, was considered by many to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, monarchs that England has ever seen.
Through his wisdom and determination he united the warring tribes of Scotland into a unified nation, and then joined England and Scotland to form the foundation for what is now known as the British Empire.
At a time when only the churches of England possessed the Bible in English, King James' desire was that the common people should have the Bible in their native tongue. Thus, in 1603, King James called 54 of history's most learned men together to accomplish this great task. At a time when the leaders of the world wished to keep their subjects in spiritual ignorance, King James offered his subjects the greatest gift that he could give them. Their own copy of the Word of God in English.
James, who was fluent in Latin, Greek, and French, and schooled in Italian and Spanish even wrote a tract entitled "Counterblast to Tobacco",which was written to help thwart the use of tobacco in England.
Such a man was sure to have enemies. One such man, Anthony Weldon, had to be excluded from the court. Weldon swore vengeance. It was not until 1650, twenty-five years after the death of James that Weldon saw his chance. He wrote a paper calling James a homosexual. Obviously, James, being dead, was in no condition to defend himself.
The report was largely ignored since there were still enough people alive who knew it wasn't true. In fact, it lay dormant for years, until recently when it was picked up by Christians who hoped that vilifying King James, would tarnish the Bible that bears his name so that Christians would turn away from God's book to a more "modern" translation.
It seems though, that Weldon's false account is being once again largely ignored by the majority of Christianity with the exception of those with an ulterior motive, such as its author had.
It might also be mentioned here that the Roman Catholic Church was so desperate to keep the true Bible out of the hands of the English people that it attempted to kill King James and all of Parliament in 1605.
In 1605 a Roman Catholic by the name of Guy Fawkes, under the direction of a Jesuit priest by the name of Henry Garnet, was found in the basement of Parliament with thirty-six barrels of gunpowder which he was to use to blow up King James and the entire Parliament. After killing the king, they planned on imprisoning his children, re-establishing England as a state loyal to the Pope and kill all who resisted. Needless to say, the perfect English Bible would have been one of the plot's victims. Fawkes and Garnet and eight other conspirators were caught and hanged.
It seems that those who work so hard to discredit the character of King James join an unholy lot.
Learn more in this short video from authors David W. Daniels and Jack McElroy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPNuRs8baTA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-EKC0JvjcI
edit- wow they really don't want this book being sold https://www.amazon.com/James-Scotland-England-Unjustly-Accused/dp/0965677737
https://www.abebooks.com/book-search/kw/stephen-coston-king-james-unjustly-accused/
Looks like someone has discovered yet another long-running conspiracy character assassination hitjob. I'll be digging into this. Also yes there's 800 videos in that playlist so needless to say I'm not scrolling through all that lol
Is there a video or article you stand by that you could link me to?
806 videos? That's quite the history LN. Nothing left out for the conspiracy crowd?