- Christopher Wright
Infobox Criminal
subject_name = Christopher Wright
image_size = 130px
image_caption = Christopher Wright
date_of_birth = 1570
place_of_birth =Welwick ,Yorkshire
date_of_death =8 November 1605
place_of_death = Holbeach House,Staffordshire
charge = Conspiracy to assassinate King James I and members of the houses of theParliament of England
penalty = never arrested
status =
occupation =
spouse = Margaret Ward
parents = Robert and Ursula Wright
children =Christopher Wright (
1570 -8 November 1605 ) was one of the conspirators in theGunpowder Plot , an unsuccessful attempt by a group of EnglishRoman Catholic s to blow-upWestminster Palace and kill the king, James I (James VI of Scotland), and members of both houses of Parliament, during the opening session on5 November 1605 , while the king addressed a joint assembly of both theHouse of Lords and the House of Commons. He was also charged with Treason but escaped high punishment.Biography
Christopher Wright, known as Kit, was born sometime in 1570 in
Welwick ,Yorkshire . He was the third child of Robert Wright and his second wife, Ursula Rudston. His oldest brother, John, would later be a co-conspirator in the Gunpowder Plot and many of the details of their early lives have been confused. He attended school at the free school of St Peter inYork with his brother andGuy Fawkes , as well asOswald Tesimond andEdward Oldcorne who would later become Jesuits and be implicated in the plot.Wright's family was devoutly Catholic; his parents spent time in prison in York for their beliefs (a total of 14 years between them) and Wright himself was a zealous Catholic. He was known to be taciturn and able to keep a secret.He was involved with Essex's unsuccessful
rebellion against Elizabeth I in 1601, but escaped serious punishment.Wright may have been sent to Spain after the death of Elizabeth to try to elicit Spanish support for a rebellion against the new king, James I, and it at the trial of the surviving conspirators after the failure of the plot,
Edward Coke suggested that it was in Spain that he renewed his friendship with Fawkes, who had been sent on a similar mission.According to Fawkes' testimony, Wright was the sixth member to join the conspiracy: Robert Catesby, Fawkes, Sir Thomas Percy,Thomas Wintour , and Christopher's brother John had formed the core of group andRobert Keyes joined the group later, but other sources suggest Keyes was the sixth member of the group and Wright,Robert Wintour and Lord John Grant joined sometime between late December 1604 and March 1605. Wright's role in the plot seems to have been minor, he was probably chiefly involved in digging the mine from Percy's rented house next to the House of Lords. The mine was later abandoned when it was discovered that a coal cellar beneath the House of Lords was available for rent, and the barrels ofgunpowder could be moved in without arousing suspicion once the lease was secured.Wright was married to Margaret Ward, the sister of Thomas Ward, the servant of Lord Monteagle who informed the conspirators of the "Monteagle Letter", which betrayed the plot by warning Monteagle to find an excuse not to attend the opening of Parliament. Because of this family connection to the Monteagle household, Wright has been suggested as the writer or instigator of the letter, although authorship is normally ascribed to
Francis Tresham .Wright was apparently the first of the conspirators to discover that Fawkes had been arrested, and suggested to Thomas Wintour that all the plotters should flee independently. Wright was sent to warn Percy to flee London, as he had been named in a proclamation after Fawkes' arrest. He accompanied Percy out of London and they met up first with Catesby and later with John Wright and Sir
Ambrose Rokewood . The group went first toAshby St Ledgers and then toHuddington Court , the Wintours' home. They met with other of the conspirators atDunchurch , and on7 November 1605 they arrived atHolbeach House inStaffordshire . Here, on8 November 1605 , they were surrounded by the men of Richard Walsh, the Sheriff ofWorcester . In the ensuing battle the conspirators fared badly: a stray spark from the fire ignited some gunpowder and in the resulting explosion some of the plotters were killed and others badly wounded. The Sheriff's men took the opportunity to rush the house and Wright, Percy and Catesby were shot. Some records say Wright's dead body was stripped by the Sheriff's men after they entered the house, but it is possible that although his wounds were mortal he may have survived for a day or two. The fate of his body is not recorded, and if he is buried, the location of the grave is unknown.References
*cite book|title=Criminal Trials Volume II|first=David|last=Jardine|date=1847|publisher=M. A. Nattali|pages=409|location=London
*cite book|title=The Gunpowder Plot and Lord Mounteagle's Letter|first=Henry Hawkes|last=Spink|origdate=1902|date=2005|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|pages=452|id=ISBN 1417930837
*cite web|url=http://www.gunpowder-plot.org/keyes.asp|title=Christopher Wright|publisher=Gunpowder Plot Society|accessdaymonth=25 July |accessyear=2007
*cite web|url=http://www.gunpowder-plot.org/kb10.asp|title=The King's Book|publisher=Gunpowder Plot Society|accessdaymonth=25 July |accessyear=2007
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.