Even the history recorded in yesterdays newspapers was overwhelmingly distorted, do you think that in the 400 years since the Gunpowder Plot, that there could have been distortion of Guy Fawkes intentions?
I read about this on zerohedge, apparently the monarchy from Elizabeth 1st through to James 1st, who was the reigning monarch at the time of The Plot, were spending and borrowing much faster than they could collect tax. There were taxes on beards, windows, incorrect clothing etc. Seems possible that your average English revolutionary might have had some legitimate political complaints besides the protestant/catholic thing.
Then there's the whole "Guy Fawkes was Italian" thing, as if that being true would lend support to the idea of it being a Catholics vs Protestants situation.
Another thing that stands out is the traditions that came out of it: one was burning effigies of Guy Fawkes on November the 5th. I wonder who started that tradition up.
The other tradition is the "Remember, remember..." childrens rhyme. That's more ambiguous in it's possible intent and origins, but maybe that's the point. It tells the listener both to remember, and never to forget. But it doesn't explain why. I don't know if there are some other lines to the rhyme that do explain, but it seems unlikely that any such lines explain the reason unambiguously, as the writer claims to "know of no reason why" in the second line. So maybe the point of it to communicate the idea that there is some secret or controversy surrounding the reason to remember.
You bring up a good point; history is written by the victors. The scenario presented is very common throughout history; when an empire needs a massive military to conquer other nations, they borrow far more than they could ever hope to pay back, tax with the only hopes of paying off the interest, and devalue their issued currency for a transfer of wealth from the users to the state; this is certainly not going unnoticed today, even with the intentionally complex system, and I have no doubt this wasn't nearly as hidden in his day; then again, there was no need to, since the people of this time period were, on average, very simple. However, Fawkes's intentions, even if the history is fabricated to some degree, are clear; even if he wasn't intending to restore a monarch, if it's true that he was intending to kill one, he would still not be accomplishing anything great, since a new monarch was bound to have taken the throne anyway; once a state is deeply ingrained into the minds of its people, it's fruitless to attempt to root it out through killing the figurehead; they just seek another monarch who will, especially after the point of no return, continue the last monarch's plot.
Remember remember the fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason and plot.
I see no reason why gunpowder, treason
Should ever be forgot...
It seems as though it's a warning to rulers who perform poorly that nobody forgets what could happen; reminds me of this quote:
"I don't think we should be governing ourselves. What need is a king, and every now and then if the king’s not doing a good job, we kill him." -- George Carlin