John Ayloffe | |
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![]() "Col. Aylof Desperately Wounded": Ayloffe attempts suicide after his capture during Argyll's Rising, from a contemporary commemorative card | |
Born | c. 1645 Foxley, Wiltshire |
Died | 30 October 1685 Fleet Street, London |
Occupation | Writer, lawyer, secret agent, conspirator, insurgent |
Genre | Satire |
Notable works | Marvell's Ghost |
John Ayloffe (c. 1645 – 30 October 1685) was an English lawyer, political activist, and satirist, described as "one of the most consistently committed radicals of the century". According to his contemporary and political opponent Sir Roger L'Estrange, there were few 'more daring men for a desperate exploit'. [1]
Throughout his career, he was a hardline opponent of the Stuart monarchy, producing a stream of satire and propaganda. His writings were characterised by their bitterly anti-French, anti-Irish, anti-Catholic tone, while the Stuarts were constantly compared to tyrants seeking to destroy English liberties.
In addition to his writings, he served William of Orange as an intelligence agent, and was a trusted supporter of Lord Shaftesbury during the 1679 to 1680 Exclusion Crisis. In 1683, he was forced into exile in the Dutch Republic due to his involvement in the 1683 Rye House Plot, an alleged attempt to assassinate Charles II and his Catholic brother James.
When James became king in 1685, he joined Argyll's Rising, a Scottish attempt to overthrow him; he was captured and executed in London on 30 October 1685.
The spelling of his surname varies, and contemporaries often spelt it Ayliffe. [2] He was born in Foxley in Wiltshire about 1645; his father John was a younger son of Sir George Ayloffe of Grittenham, Brinkworth, Wiltshire. [3]
The Ayloffes owned Grittenham, Foxley and other manors in north Wiltshire for many years. Ayloffe was a nephew by marriage of Royalist leader, the Earl of Clarendon, whose first wife was a daughter of Sir George Ayloffe. Clarendon himself referred to Ayloffe's father as someone he "dearly loved". [3] This also linked Ayloffe to the royal family through Clarendon's daughter Anne, first wife of the future James II of England. [4]
Although he has been identified as the John Ayloffe admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1666, [5] the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography states he matriculated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford in 1662. [1] By the 1670s, he was practising as a lawyer and his name appears regularly in the Calendar of Treasury Books, representing clients before the Lords of the Treasury. [6] He may have been the Ayloffe who represented Thomas Skinner in the constitutionally significant 1668 Skinner's Case . [3]
According to contemporaries, Ayloffe was strongly anti-Catholic, an extremist Whig and "doctrinaire republican" opposed to the Stuart monarchy. [7] His motives are disputed; Fountainhall claimed his father spent much of his money serving Charles I during the First English Civil War, but had been given little recompense at the 1660 Restoration. This supposedly provoked Ayloffe to "draw up with the republicans". [8]
Along with Andrew Marvell and William Carstares, Ayloffe is thought to have been part of an intelligence network led by Pierre du Moulin (d.1676), the secretary of William of Orange, which operated to oppose French and Catholic interference on English policy. At the opening of Parliament in October 1673, during the Third Anglo-Dutch War, Ayloffe threw a sabot under the Speaker's chair, supposedly a reference to French influence on the country. [1] He was briefly detained by the doorkeepers, but released on grounds of being insane, or "distracted". [9]
An active propagandist and versifier, Ayloffe has been identified as the author of "much of the republican doggerel of the 1670s". [10] As part of du Moulin's group, he helped smuggle propaganda into England, including pamphlets attacking Stuart foreign policy, their government and monarchy in general. [11] In 1678, he gave evidence in a Commons debate on the danger posed by Catholic soldiers "going into Ireland". During this, the sabot incident was used as evidence he was "mad", though Tory politician and lawyer Sir Thomas Meres argued "Mr. Ayliffe is a man of good sense, and points at what he intends". [12]
He was closely involved in the 1679 to 1681 campaign led by Lord Shaftesbury to exclude the Catholic James from succeeding his brother Charles II. Along with other members of the radical Green Ribbon Club, he supported helped organise the 1680 'Great Petition' demanding the recall of Parliament. Signed by 18,000 people, others involved included Richard Rumbold, Richard Nelthorpe and Robert Ferguson, all of whom were implicated in the Rye House Plot. [13]
Allegedly organised by Rumbold, the plan was to ambush Charles and his brother as they returned to London from Newmarket in March 1683. It was betrayed before being put into action, although there is considerable debate as to how serious it was, or what its objectives were. [14] Along with many others, including Rumbold, Nelthorpe and Ferguson, a warrant was issued for his arrest; he escaped to the Dutch Republic, although his property was confiscated. [1]
In 1684 he returned covertly to England to raise funds amongst Nonconformist ministers for a proposed uprising against the Stuart monarchy. This was largely a failure as few people would speak to him due to his reputation as an "atheist and a man of no conscience". [15]
The most prominent opposition leaders in Holland were Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll, convicted of treason in 1681, and Charles' illegitimate son, James Scott, Duke of Monmouth, exiled for his involvement in the Rye House Plot. Preparations for a rising became more urgent when James became king after the death of Charles in February 1685, and the two agreed to work together. To ensure co-ordination, a leading Scots exile, Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun accompanied Monmouth, while Rumbold and Ayloffe went with Argyll. [16]
Unfortunately, Argyll's Rising failed to attract significant support, and was fatally compromised by divisions among the rebel leadership, Ayloffe and Rumbold being among the few to emerge with any credit. After Argyll was captured on 18 June, the others were ordered to disperse and Ayloffe was soon taken. Severely beaten by his captors, he later attempted suicide by stabbing himself in the abdomen, although the wounds were not serious. He later said it was "the most base and cowardlie thing he had ever done in his life", but he was "tired of living". [8]
While most of those associated with the Rising were tried in Scotland, including Rumbold, Ayloffe's connections meant he was well treated after his initial capture. Brought to London, he refused to co-operate with the authorities, and was executed at the junction of Fleet Street and Chancery Lane on 30 October. His remains were then displayed on Temple Bar alongside those of Richard Nelthorpe who was executed on the same day in High Holborn having been captured serving with Monmouth.
In his entry for 30 October, diarist Roger Morrice wrote "Mr. John Ayloffe died this day about 11 a Clock over-against the Temple, he was very composed and sedate". [17] The official account of his execution, penned by L'Estrange, which depicts a repentant Ayloffe offering prayers for the King, the people and the Protestant religion, appears so completely inconsistent with all of his recorded opinions and behaviour it is likely propaganda. [18]
A story was widely circulated amongst Whig sympathisers that prior to his death, James had interviewed Ayloffe personally. James was said to have reminded Ayloffe "you know it is in my power to pardon you, therefore say that which may deserve it", whereupon Ayloffe retorted "though it is in your power, it is not in your nature to pardon".
The only work definitely attributed to Ayloffe is a satiric homage to his friend Andrew Marvell. In addition, his biographer George de Forest Lord attributed to him a number of verse satires previously assigned to Marvell, based on several distinct characteristics of Ayloffe's writing. These include a bitterly anti-French, anti-Irish, and anti-Catholic tone; comparing the Stuarts with Roman tyrants, who threaten the rights of Magna Carta; a "sombre and humourless" quality; and visionary imagery. Based on this, the pamphlets Britannia and Raleigh, Oceana and Britannia and The Dream of the Cabal, amongst others, are tentatively assigned to Ayloffe. [19]
Ayloffe has been suggested as possibly connected to "Captain Ayloffe's Letters", printed in 1701 by Abel Boyer, a Whig publisher. [20]
The Monmouth Rebellion, also known as the Pitchfork Rebellion, the Revolt of the West or the West Country rebellion, was an attempt to depose James II, who in February 1685 succeeded his brother Charles II as king of England, Scotland and Ireland. A group of dissident Protestants led by James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, eldest illegitimate son of Charles II, opposed James largely due to his Catholicism.
The Rye House Plot of 1683 was a plan to assassinate King Charles II of England and his brother James, Duke of York. The royal party went from Westminster to Newmarket to see horse races and were expected to make the return journey on 1 April 1683, but because there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March, the races were cancelled, and the King and the Duke returned to London early. As a result, the planned attack never took place.
Henry Sydney, 1st Earl of Romney was an English Army officer, Whig politician and peer who served as Master-General of the Ordnance from 1693 to 1702. He is best known as one of the Immortal Seven, a group of seven Englishmen who drafted an invitation to William of Orange, which led to the November 1688 Glorious Revolution and subsequent deposition of James II of England.
Sir Roger L'Estrange was an English pamphleteer, author, courtier and press censor. Throughout his life L'Estrange was frequently mired in controversy and acted as a staunch ideological defender of King Charles II's regime during the Restoration era. His works played a key role in the emergence of a distinct 'Tory' bloc during the Exclusion Crisis of 1679–81. Perhaps his best known polemical pamphlet was An Account of the Growth of Knavery, which ruthlessly attacked the parliamentary opposition to Charles II and his successor James, Duke of York, placing them as fanatics who misused contemporary popular anti-Catholic sentiment to attack the Restoration court and the existing social order in order to pursue their own political ends. Following the Exclusion Crisis and the failure of the nascent Whig faction to disinherit James, Duke of York in favour of Charles II's illegitimate son James, 1st Duke of Monmouth, L'Estrange used his newspaper The Observator to harangue his opponents and act as a voice for a popular provincial Toryism during the 'Tory Reaction' of 1681–85. Despite serving as an MP from 1685 to 1689 his stock fell under James II's reign as his staunch hostility to religious nonconformism conflicted with James's goals of religious tolerance for both Catholics and Nonconformists. The Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the collapse of the Restoration political order heralded the end of L'Estrange's career in public life, although his greatest translation work, that of Aesop's Fables, saw publication in 1692.
Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll was a Scottish peer and soldier.
John Drummond, 1st Earl of Melfort, styled Duke of Melfort in the Jacobite peerage, was a Scottish politician and close advisor to James VII & II. A Catholic convert, Melfort and his brother the Earl of Perth consistently urged James not to compromise with his opponents, contributing to his increasing isolation and ultimate deposition in the 1688 Glorious Revolution.
Major-General George Douglas, 1st Earl of Dumbarton KT was a Scottish military officer who spent much of his career in the service of King Louis XIV. In 1678, he returned to England; as a Catholic, he was a trusted servant of King James II and went into exile with him after the 1688 Glorious Revolution. He died at the palace of St Germain-en-Laye in March, 1692.
James II and VII was King of England and Ireland as James II and King of Scotland as James VII from the death of his elder brother, Charles II, on 6 February 1685, until he was deposed in the 1688 Glorious Revolution. The last Catholic monarch of England, Scotland, and Ireland, his reign is now remembered primarily for conflicts over religion. However, it also involved struggles over the principles of absolutism and divine right of kings, with his deposition ending a century of political and civil strife by confirming the primacy of the English Parliament over the Crown.
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Richard Rumbold (1622–1685) was a Parliamentarian soldier and political radical, exiled for his role in the 1683 Rye House Plot and later executed for taking part in the 1685 Argyll's Rising.
Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Huntingdon was a 17th-century English politician and Jacobite. One of the few non-Catholics to remain loyal to James II of England after November 1688, on the rare occasions he is mentioned by historians, he is described as a 'facile instrument of the Stuarts,' a 'turncoat' or 'outright renegade.'
Robert Leke, 3rd Earl of Scarsdale was an English politician and courtier, styled Lord Deincourt from 1655 to 1681.
Henry Cornish was a London alderman, executed in the reign of James II of England.
Sir John Cochrane of Ochiltree was a Scottish nobleman, soldier, and conspirator.
Nathaniel Wade was an English lawyer and conspirator implicated in the Rye House Plot and participant in the Monmouth Rebellion.
Richard Nelthorpe was an English lawyer, a conspirator in the Rye House Plot.
Argyll's Rising, also known as Argyll's Rebellion, was an attempt in June 1685 to overthrow James II and VII. Led by Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll, the rising was intended to tie down Royal forces in Scotland while a simultaneous rebellion under James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth began in England. Both rebellions were backed by dissident Protestants opposed to the accession of the Roman Catholic James to the throne.
Sir Hugh Campbell was a baronet of Cessnock in Ayrshire. His lineage was from the Campbells of Loudoun.
Sir George Campbell of Cessnock in Ayrshire was a 17th-century statesman. His lineage was from the Campbells of Loudoun. His father was Sir Hugh Campbell and his mother was Elizabeth Campbell.
Ann Smith was an English anti-Catholic political activist. A devout Baptist, she and her family sheltered the rebel 9th Earl of Argyll when he was in hiding in London and fled with him to the Spanish Netherlands in 1683. She lived with her husband in Utrecht and following his death funded Argyll's Rising in Scotland and the contemporaneous Monmouth Rebellion in England. She hosted fellow conspirator Elizabeth Gaunt in Amsterdam and received a royal pardon for her activism in 1686, after which time records of her life cease.