Bachelor Thesis-Elizabethan Secret Service
Bachelor Thesis-Elizabethan Secret Service
Bachelor Thesis-Elizabethan Secret Service
Faculty of Arts
Department of English
and American Studies
Michaela Macková
2009
1
I declare that I have worked on this thesis independently,
using only the primary and secondary sources listed in the bibliography.
……………………………………………..
2
Acknowledgement
I would like to thank to my supervisor Mgr. Pavel Drábek, Ph. D. for his
valuable advice and kind support and to Bc. Vlastimil Šprta and Mgr. Libor
Dorňák for the introduction to the world of espionage which inspired this work.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction.............................................................................................................. 6
4.5 Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex (1567-1601) and Anthony Bacon ............... 20
5.1 Types of the Service Carried out for the Spy Masters ................................... 22
7. Plots and Operations in which the Elizabethan Secret Service was Involved.. 36
4
7.5 The Parry Plot................................................................................................. 43
8. Conclusion .............................................................................................................. 57
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1. Introduction
Queen Elizabeth I‟s reign is often seen as the golden age in the history of
England. Culture in the form of literature, poetry and drama flourished; naval forces
explored the sea, brought great fortune to England, and became more powerful; national
feelings started to emerge; the religious question seemed to be more or less peacefully
settled – the Reformation was accepted; and the country expanded economically.
However happy these times in retrospective seem to be, there was a dark side to all of
that: religious discontent appearing from time to time needed to be repressed and a good
deal of political scheming had to take place in order to maintain England‟s position in
Europe and the Queen‟s position on the throne. As the Queen‟s chancellors and advisors
William Cecil, Lord of Burghley and Sir Francis Walsingham took care of this task,
Historical records show that these networks of agents, so called secret service,
played an important part in protecting England, Queen Elizabeth I, and her interests and
those of her country. Unfortunately, due to the fogginess of some facts, the part secret
neglected. Thus the aim of this thesis is to examine this role, especially the role the
secret service played in revealing plots against the Queen, and outline mechanics,
In order to explain how the secret service protected the Queen and the country, it
is desirable to introduce the reason why such protection was needed. Therefore the
second chapter of the thesis continues in the introductory tone and presents the
historical insight into the events which influenced the reign and the safety of the Queen.
Such a background is also important for a proper understanding of the issues of the era,
as they stood behind the very existence of the Elizabethan secret service.
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In order to ease the comprehension of the role the secret service played in
particular plots, chapters three, four, five, and six are concerned with the origins,
functions, organisation and mechanics of the Elizabethan secret service, with people
working in it and with techniques the secret service used. So, the origin of the
Elizabethan secret service is described in the third chapter as well as its functions and
mechanics. The fourth chapter discusses the spy masters directing the operations as the
people of theirs time, as the bearers of theirs functions and as the espionage
masterminds. The fifth chapter then introduces the types of people which worked for the
secret service, explains circumstances under which they were hired and defines the
specific jobs they performed. Finally the sixth chapter delves into the techniques the
The core of the thesis is chapter 7, on plots and activities in which the secret
service played an important part. The actual historical events are discussed with
particular focus on the role the secret service played in the protection of the Queen and
chapters 5 and 6. This chapter is followed by the final part of the thesis, where all the
facts concerning the role of the secret service are summarized and the conclusion of the
thesis is drawn.
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2. Key events which Influenced the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I
The times of Queen Elizabeth‟s reign were, as well as the whole Tudor Era, very
turbulent. The Queen was almost constantly in great danger of being overthrown or
relations and subsequently to the formation of various conspiracies and plots aimed at
The first and the most important problem putting Elizabeth in danger was that
the question of the succession as well as the question of the state religion had been
complicated by the several marriages of Henry VIII, Elizabeth‟s father. It was because
of Elizabeth‟s mother, Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII broke free of Catholic Church in 1534,
declared himself the Head of the Church of England (Davies), and gave the primary
impulse to religious conflicts which later affected Elizabeth‟s reign. It was because of
Henry‟s marriage to his next wife, Jane Seymour, Elizabeth was proclaimed illegitimate
and only later she gained the right to the throne again, but as the third in line after
Edward, the son of Jane Seymour, and Mary Stuart, the daughter of Catharine of
In the time Henry VIII died, Edward VI was only ten years old and Edward
Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, became the Lord Protector of England (Tudor Place).
health was not very good in 1553, and in the same year, only at the age of 15, he died
(ibid). For a few days the new Queen was Jane Gray, descendant of Henry VIII‟s sister,
who was proclaimed the Queen by her father Henry Grey and her father-in-law John
Dudley, Duke of Northumberland (ibid). However, Mary Tudor, the rightful heiress to
the throne, had the bigger support of the army and of the people. She quickly got the
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throne back. Although Mary was only the half-sister of Elizabeth and a devoted
Catholic, when she entered the London as the new Queen, Elizabeth came with her in
During her reign Mary Tudor proceeded with the restoration of the Catholic
faith and her religious persecutions and her marriage with Philip II of Spain caused
many riots and displeasure among the people (“Mary I”). Despite the religious
differences, it seemed that Mary and Elizabeth got on well, especially because Elizabeth
consented to attend Mass, but soon it became apparent that it was not so (Dobson 33).
Mary started to be suspicious about Elizabeth, especially when her name was mentioned
in connection with Wyatt‟s uprising of 1554 (Tudor Place). This led to the interrogation
of Elizabeth in Tower of London and after that to her deportation into the house-arrest
in Woodstock where she patiently waited for her chance to inherit the throne (Dobson
34).
Eventually, after a few bloody years of reign, Mary Tudor was to die childless in
1558 and the succession finally went to the Protestant Elizabeth (Tudor Place). That not
only influenced the relations with Spain, as Mary‟s husband Philip proposed to
Elizabeth in order to maintain his rule over England and therefore she could control the
relations with Spain by procrastination of the answer (Britain Express), but it also
brought gradual changes in religious life of people of England once again. In April 1559
the Act of Supremacy passed “repudiating the authority of the Pope and re-establishing
a national English Church” (Browning 52). The Queen was declared the Supreme
Governor of the Church of England and everyone in public or church office had to
swear allegiance to her (Britain Express). The new Act of Uniformity was issued and
therefore the Book of Common Prayer was modified and the ministers were to use the
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designed to avoid giving offence to any one” (Browning 53). Despite Elizabeth‟s efforts
opposition started to be very active, the example of which was the Northern Rebellion
in 1569 (Browning 81). For Elizabeth that meant constant threat of conspirators wanting
to overthrow her, of attempts to bring the England back to the Catholic faith and of
efforts to put Mary Queen of Scots on the throne. The Catholic threat became more
severe in 1570, when the bull Regnans in Excelsis excommunicating Elizabeth was
vigorously pursued by authorities since every Catholic, not only from the realm of
England but also from abroad, could be a menace to the Queen and his doings would be
Concerning the recent history of successions, and the nature of the threat
jeopardizing Elizabeth, she needed the protection desperately, especially since she
stayed unmarried and without an heir. Thanks to William Cecil 1st Baron of Burghley1,
Sir Francis Walsingham, Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester or Robert Cecil, she had
that protection. They and actions they conducted, people they employed, information
they were able to get, in other words the secret service they directed, rescued the Queen
1
or Burleigh (spelling can differ in various sources)
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3. Basic Facts about the Elizabethan Secret Service
The first time England had a formally established secret service was in 1909
when the Committee for Imperial Defence decided to establish a Secret Service Bureau
(The Official SIS Website). Until then only informal organisations engaged in
intelligence activities existed from time to time, the intelligence network in Elizabethan
era being one of them. The following chapter offers a few facts on the origin of the
Elizabethan secret service, describes its functions and briefly explains how it worked.
The first reference about intelligence activities of England dates back to 14th
century. During the reign of Henry VII permanent agents abroad obtained information
and were paid from special funds (Čerňak 18). This was further developed in times of
Cardinal Wolsey who used the technique of interception of letters as well. Also Henry
correspondence, but the difference was that his men copied letters and sent them to their
original destination (Čerňak 21). The same man, Thomas Cromwell “ran secret agents
in Europe on behalf of Henry VIII” (The Official SIS Website). During Elizabeth‟s
reign the network of agents, their use and their techniques evolved even more and they
became more systematic and elaborate (see following chapters). But it was no sooner
than in “the 1580s, [when] the country was facing the twin threat of Catholic conspiracy
and Spanish invasion, that [Sir Francis Walsingham] actually created his „secret
The main function of the secret service was the same as the function of every
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and reliable information was the key element leading to the success of the majority of
In those times, espionage also served as the useful means of making the policy.
The first intelligence activities went hand in hand with diplomatic duties (Čerňak 19).
Some foreign envoys, for example, performed not only their diplomatic duties and
negotiations, but also their secondary task – collecting information on the economics of
the foreign country, on the military power, on the ruler, on the people at court, on exiles
from his country etc. In this way they were providing their superiors with useful
information which made their decision making process concerning the negotiations with
Unfortunately receiving information from envoys and diplomats was not often
and royal parsimony” (Haynes 15). When envoys did not want to perform the task, or
they could not be sent (i.e. embassy was closed) agents had to fill the gap in information
gathering (ibid). Therefore, for example “Sir Francis Walsingham became responsible
growing Catholic threat, both internally and externally; the religiously inspired plans to
invade England; and the intentions and policies of the major players on the European
political stage” (Hutchinson 83). This shows that in the Elizabethan era agents and
informers were also used in order to protect the Queen from the conspirators, assassins
and attempts to overthrow her and to restrict and report on activities of Catholics in the
When the diplomatic solution failed and the country found itself on the verge of
the war with Spain, the secret service gained another function – to weaken the enemy.
For example the recruitment of sailors for the attack of the first Spanish Armada was
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very negatively influenced by the prognoses of fortune-tellers and oracles foretelling the
disasters and storms in the summer of 1588, which were spread by secret service agents
who were told to do so by their spy master Francis Walsingham (Hutchinson 224). This
shows the effective means for this kind of task were disinformation and propaganda (see
6).
Sir Francis Walsingham, being one of the most successful of the spy masters,
was not only the master of propaganda, but also the master of the “sham” plots (Nicholl
135), plots which demonstrated that it was the spy masters who controlled agents and
their activities, not the Queen who had only a partial influence on the spy masters‟
actions and employees. It comes to the least honourable function of the secret service,
which was to play an active part in such plots. When Walsingham needed to catch a
“big fish” among the conspirators, or needed the Queen to feel endangered, he did not
hesitate to fabricate, with the assistance of his agents, a new plot against Her Majesty to
As can be seen from previous subchapters, the secret service was not a formally
England. Intelligence activities of the Elizabethan espionage was, as Haynes points out,
but [which] ultimately had a collective, that is national, purpose” (xi). The types of
individuals employed and their techniques will be discussed in the following chapters as
well as the officers controlling the secret service, William Cecil, Baron of Burghley; Sir
These very officers, the spy masters, were the pillars of the secret service. All of
them had their contacts at home and abroad which they gained during their social
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intercourses, on study or diplomatic journeys abroad or during their service to the
Queen (Hutchinson 84). “At its peak, [Walsingham‟s] extensive espionage network is
said to have numbered fifty-three spies and eighteen agents in foreign courts, as well as
a host of informers within the English realm itself” (Hutchinson 16). These contacts,
agents, informers and even various random people feeling obliged to serve the country
wrote letters to the spy masters. Every spy master, with the assistance of his secretaries,
was able to handle and sort out an enormous number of correspondence (Haynes 15).
With information in these letters every spy master disposed according to its importance
or reliability – answered with advice or further instructions, sent another agent to solve
Concerning the fact the means of delivering information were very limited in the
Elizabethan era, these letters, or in some cases oral messages, had to be carried from the
correspondence was therefore very high and government‟s official posting arrangements
were not the best either. Roads were miserable, postmen were badly paid and indolent,
the number of horses available was not sufficient enough to handle all dispatches, or the
animals were not treated very well and therefore were unreliable (Haynes 20). Under
these circumstances the spy masters had to keep their own stables of postal horses and
These households of servants, as they were private, were financed by the spy
masters themselves. The same applied to their own private networks of intelligencers
they first directed mainly in order to use them for their own purposes (Haynes XV).
Even though they later used them as a means of protecting of the Queen and the
country, the Queen tended to underfund the espionage efforts in general, so even in
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times employment of agents became more systematized and Walsingham‟s secret
service was fully established, the spy master still had to pay some expenses by himself
(Haynes 54). “Calculations of the annual sums on [Walsigham„s] secret service offer
amounts varying between a few hundred and thousands of pounds” (Haynes 55). The
Queen‟s first subvention on secret service was recorded in 1982 (Nicholl 125). Here is
the example of one such summary of sums, the royal exchequer, therefore the Queen,
1583-4: £5,753 14 s. ½ d.
1584-5: £10,030 9 s. 4 d.
1585-6: £9,455 16 s. 11 d.
Those are the sums Robert Cecil in 1610 included into his memorandum with
secret service details, so they are probably the most accurate estimates available.
Concerning the cost of the secret service, of the most importance is that gradually
Elizabeth started to “[regard] spying as the cheapest [and] handiest substitute for
resident diplomats” (Haynes 192), which explains why the Queen, although she did not
have the direct command on the operations of the secret service, was finally willing to
2
Haynes quoted from Read, Conyers. Mr Secretary Walsingham and the Policy of Queen Elizabeth.
Vol 2. Oxford: The Clarendon P, 1925. 370-1.
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4. The Spy Masters
What we call the Elizabethan secret service could not work or be established
without men who not only conducted their own networks of agents, but who also
functioned as councillors and advisors of the Queen and thus knew very well what was
going on in the realm of England and outside it. The secret service was directed by the
most influential men of the Elizabethan Privy Council, by the trio: Lord Burghley, the
Earl of Leicester and Sir Francis Walsingham. Of course they also had their successors
as far as the conducting of the secret service matters is concerned, who are of a similar
importance: Robert Cecil, son of Lord Burghley and Queen‟s favourite Earl of Essex,
who cooperated with Anthony Bacon (Haynes 124-5). In the following subchapters all
of these men will be briefly introduced, not so much as the important statesmen, but as
William Cecil was a prominent figure at court already in the reign of Edward IV
(Pulman 30). During the reign of Mary Tudor he remained in the country and stayed in
contact with Elizabeth (ibid). As soon as Elizabeth succeeded the throne, he became her
chief minister and main advisor (ibid). Thus from 1558 until 1578 he was Secretary of
State and from 1572 Lord Treasurer (Golding). The title of the 1st Baron of Burghley he
received in 1571 (ibid). Until his death he remained in good terms with Elizabeth.
The position of Secretary of State was, before William Cecil was appointed,
more or less the office of clerk, but he made it the most important office of state
everything presented to the Queen and became her most important advisor, one who
“could get decisions and answers out of [her] as no one else could” (Budiansky 46). His
position requested capability to manage enormous amount of work and the knowledge
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of everything what was going on in the country and abroad. Because of the need to
revise and summarize all he knew he wrote a countless number of memoranda filled
with facts he got. It is only natural, that such a man, in need of information, but
reluctant to share it with others, created the network of his own informers.
from 55 sources (Haynes 15). “In 1572 he had material from eight French cities, six
towns in German states and empire, five in Low Countries, five in Italy, four in
Scotland, two in Spain and one in Africa” (Haynes 16). Casual correspondence he
managed with the help of two personal secretaries, but with secret matters, with
ciphered letters (Haynes 18). These dispatches only sometimes endorsed his secretary
(ibid).
From the high number of informers, his most capable one was Francis
Walsingham, who “supplied [Cecil] with information and advice on foreign affairs and
[...] was [his] chief agent in breaking up the Ridolfi plot” (Nicholl 123). Walsingham
became his protégé and successor even though Cecil had more conservative approach to
the matter of foreign policy, especially in case of France and Spain, and preferred
diplomacy and foreign affairs. After the accession of Mary Tudor he left for abroad
where he studied and travelled and gained most of his foreign contacts (Pulman 33).
When he returned, he spent some time at court and in 1568 he was already working for
William Cecil (Haynes 26). In 1570 he was sent to France and soon he was given the
post of ambassador there (Pulman 33). When he returned he became the Queen‟s
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advisor and in 1573 he was appointed Secretary of State and remained in the office until
his death (ibid). He not only served as the Secretary of State, but was also “the spy
importance as it had in the times of William Cecil. Walsingham was, as well as Cecil,
obsessed with information gathering and secrecy. He maintained more secretaries, but
he also had written more memoranda filled with more detailed information. He also had
In 1585 he had 111 correspondents and it is said that around 1580 he “had
agents based in twelve towns or cities in France, nine in Germany, four in Italy, three in
the Low Countries, four in Spain and others within the huge Turkish Empire in Algiers,
Tripoli and Constantinople” (Hutchinson 89). With communication four servants helped
him: Nicholas Faunt, Francis Milles, William Waad and Robert Beale (Nicholl 130).
The last two were the close secretaries of his, who helped him manage secret service
matters. Walsingham was not as secretive as William Cecil, at least in case of the secret
assistants and some conveyed their information through other agents (Hutchinson 98).
Because of this, his secretaries criticized him. They thought that he was employing too
many people, in comparison to Cecil, and therefore endangering the secrecy of his
dispatches (Bossy 147). Nevertheless, it seems that he obsessively kept the identities of
his agents in secret – when he was sent to Scotland, he was unwilling to let William
Cecil or the Queen to handle his arrangements and thus minimal intelligence came from
18
The secret service of Francis Walsingham already was not really private secret
service as he shared some intelligence with William Cecil and Leicester. Thanks to the
high number of his foreign contacts his secret service developed into the huge network
of spies abroad and home serving the country as any other before.
Earl of Leicester was a controversial figure at court and was one of the Queen‟s
favourites. He was said to desire to marry Elizabeth and once he was a possible husband
to Mary Queen of Scots (Martin). In 1563 he became the member of Privy Council and
Master of Horses, the office he held until his death (Pulman 29). The title he gained in
1564 (Martin). From 1585 to 1587 he led the military campaign in the Netherlands and
His network of spies was clearly personal, created in order to keep up with
William Cecil, who was said to be his rival. The secret service contacts of Leicester are
difficult to trace as the records were destroyed (Haynes 18). The number of his
correspondence only once surpassed the limit of 55 of William Cecil (Haynes 15). Still
he plentifully used the help of his secretaries. At first Edmund Campion worked for
him, before he went to exile, then he employed Jean Hotman and Gabriel Harvey. All of
these men were profound academics (Haynes 18). From 1579 Arthur Atey handled the
secret correspondence for him. Atey not only took care of ciphered materials, but also
Although Leicester himself did not hunt for informers as much as William Cecil
or Francis Walsingham, his network of agents cannot be omitted and his capability to
keep up with Walsingham and Cecil shows he really was not only a man of great
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Robert Cecil was the younger son of William Cecil who followed his father‟s
footsteps. In 1591 he became member of the Privy Council and soon he was practically
performing the duties of the Secretary of State, although he was appointed in this
function only in 1596 (Lockyer). During the last years of Queen Elizabeth‟s reign he
rivalled with Earl of Essex both in contest for Queen‟s favour and in the successes of
theirs personal secret services (ibid). In these last years he also started secret
communication with James (ibid). When James came to the throne, this communication
brought him a privileged position of a member of James‟s Council and of his advisor
(ibid).
Robert Cecil at first was not interested and did not have time to run the secret
State, he realized he would not do without a network of informers (Haynes 168). His
secret service was built up on informers of his father and some of Walsingham‟s, even
though it was not easy to identify, who Walsingham‟s informers were, and was
influenced by the need of intelligence to help in the war against Spain (Haynes 171).
Robert Cecil‟s organizers recruiting agents and his agents were scattered
throughout the whole Europe. They were all sending him valuable information and were
paid from government funds (Haynes 171). These payments he sent to his agents via
merchants and the organizers (ibid). This information as well as the precise numbers of
agents are nowadays known thanks to the document he created before 1598, where his
employees and payments given to them had been enlisted (Haynes 170). His extensive
intelligence network and his brains were successful followers of the previous spy
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Robert Devereux was another of Elizabeth‟s favourites and courtiers. In 1587 he
was appointed Master of Horses and in 1587 he gained his title (“Essex”). He took part
in many important military activities. In 1596 he captured Cadiz and in 1599 he was in
Ireland to suppress Tyrone‟s rebellion (ibid). He is best known for his attempt of
regaining his power in 1601 when he sponsored the performance of Richard III and
(ibid).
As well as other spy masters, in his position even Essex needed the informers.
Especially when he felt his position at court is threatened by Robert Cecil. However, he
was not able to handle the everyday work of spy master and so he needed someone
reliable who would have contacts, and who would provide him with an intelligence
network (Haynes 124). Such a man was Anthony Bacon, William Cecil‟s nephew,
previously working as informer both for Walsingham and for William Cecil (Haynes
125).
Though Bacon did not really like handling the correspondence and directing the
spies, he took the post and deciphered materials he received, prepared extracts of the
most important information and forwarded that all to Essex (Haynes 148-9). Even
though Essex was not particularly good in assessing intelligence materials, this secret
network worked quite well, especially in France and Italy (Haynes 148). Essex was
therefore able to keep up with Robert Cecil, at least in times when Cecil was not really
interested in the secret service matters. Because of this lack of Cecil‟s interest in secret
service matters was Essex able to employ some of former Walsingham‟s agents.
Nevertheless, Essex‟s secret service started to fall apart as Essex started to fall out of
Queen‟s favour and as soon as Robert Cecil turned his attention to conduction of his
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5. People Working for the Elizabethan Secret Service
“The typical Elizabethan spy was a man of middling to low status” (Nicholl
writers, musicians, even the former criminals and conspirators were hired by, or in
another way persuaded to work for, the spy masters. More or less all these claimed, they
were great patriots but in fact they did the job for money or from fear (ibid).
conviction, profession and skills usually influenced which task they were asked to
perform and the longevity of theirs service. Therefore the people of certain social status,
of certain skills, could be usually found in the certain position in the secret service. In
the following subchapters the way of recruiting such people and the specific types of
service they performed, together with their social and working background, will be
discussed.
5.1 Types of the Service Carried out for the Spy Masters
The informers were simply ordinary observers who gathered information and
passed it to the spy masters. They were not involved in any dirty work and they did not
infiltrate in any important position (Nicholl 127). They merely reported on events both
in England and abroad. As a matter of fact, nowadays, they would not be needed
because of reporters and elaborate news system, but with the speed information spread
in the 16th century, the good informers were the necessity and the basis of the secret
service.
Of course their information did not have to be reliable every time. They could
misinterpret what they had seen or they could be misinformed on purpose. Some of
3
The labels “intelligencer-informer” and “intelligencer-spy” are based on Nicholl‟s division of agents
(127).
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informers even made up the new information in order to be rewarded (Nicholl 135). To
check the information, the spy masters used, if it was possible, number of observes in
one area.
servants or other households‟ members who worked as the informers. Merchants were
recruited, because they had to know what was going on in the world in order to prosper
opportunity. Students saw this service as a good starting point of their carriers, as the
carrier and quality of living depended on the system of patronage (Nicholl 120), but
they considered it “no more than an anxiety-inducing temporary option” (Haynes 13).
Those students, who desired for more anxiety, were willing to perform not only the task
of the mere informer, but also the task of the spy (see 5.1.2). As well as students and
merchants, also writers “were an obvious source of recruits. They were intelligent,
educated, observant young men. They knew the international language, Latin, and the
literary tastes of the day gave them a good smattering of French and Italian” (Nicholl
202). They were often in need of money, they travelled a lot and their profession offered
a great social mobility (ibid). All of these were good premises for espionage work. Of
course that, as well as students, the more adventurous ones, became spies. Hence the
Nevertheless, the overlap of the roles of informers and of spies appeared more
often in cases of envoys, ambassadors and their secretaries. Those could be mostly also
regarded as mere informers, but often they became moles. To decide what task they
An ordinary observer could improve his skills so much and inform the spy
masters so well that he was eventually hired as more specialized agent, the custom
23
searcher. Such agents could be found mostly in ports and on the border with Scotland
as horsed patrols (Budiansky 93). They searched ships and travellers from abroad for
suspicious materials, hidden messages and letters (Hutchinson 84), watched the ports
The task had to be carried out by the inconspicuous personality with the
inconspicuous behaviour. Therefore it was performed by men of lower status, who did
not raise the suspicion when in ports. These men often did the job because they needed
to be in good terms with the spy masters, but their main concern was again money
(Haynes 4). Thus it is not surprising that the custom searchers were sometimes
suspected to be corrupted and some of them really were (Haynes 41). However, their
use was essential (see 7.3) as they were the first, the front line of the secret service for
The searchers were used not only by English spy masters, but also by their
carefully and they had to have certain skills too. These messengers, although they were
mere letter carriers or fund and letter distributors of the spy masters, had to remain
anonymous or unknown, had to risk their lives by carrying the secret messages and
often had to cross-dress or hid the messages in imaginative way in order to carry them
through the searchers (see 6). They also played an important part in interception of
correspondence by carrying the letters whenever and wherever they were asked to, in
The men hired for this task were agents performing it beside the task of mere
information-gatherer (Haynes 49); former agents, who were not successful or were
discovered and therefore could not continue in their previous work (Haynes 51); or
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bribed ordinary people like merchants, who were paid to smuggle the messages (see
7.6).
In case messengers failed in their task to carry a letter safely to its receiver, the
most important letters were ciphered. This was done by the people of skills suitable for
the work of deciphering or cipher making – decipherers. The job usually managed
secretaries of ambassadors and of the spy masters, or the decipherers hired purposely
Secretaries handled the secret service matters like the deciphering of letters, the
forwarding sensitive information and sorting out the correspondence (Haynes 17). They
were able to decipher the letter when they had at their disposal the key, and they were
able to write the ciphered letter according to the given key. The specialized decipherers,
on the contrary, were not only able to decipher unknown ciphers without the key but
task of the gathering of information, but also infiltration to the suitable positions, places
or groups and playing “dirty game” in order to gain the needed information or in order
according to tasks they performed most often and places where they operated.
Of the most importance, considering the tense religious situation in England and
the high number of Catholics involved in various plots against the Queen, were anti-
catholic agents. As the label suggests, they spied on Catholics. They either were
Catholics, and in order to save their own skin had to work for the spy masters, or they
25
They usually operated among the Catholic cliques of conspirators, at English
colleges like Cambridge or Oxford and in Catholic seminaries like the ones in Rheims
and Douai. The anti-catholic agents infiltrated seminaries, plotted against them and
148). Among the catholic cliques of conspiracies they performed espionage work
offered new seductive options to the conspirators. They reported on plotters, or directed
their moves in the way the spy masters wanted or needed (Nicholl 135). They plotted
together with plotters and acted as if they were ones of them. Therefore, they had never
These agents were the most useful ones, but the least reliable, because the spy
masters could not really know whether their dealings were not double. Thus the spy
masters spied on these agents, although the agents usually had gone through the long
period of probation as prison agents, the task for them most useful as the cover (Nicholl
136).
One could become a prison agent when he was an ordinary spy, most often the
anti-catholic agent, and needed, or the spy masters needed him, to get more information
and more contacts. As the prison agent man could befriend arrested catholic priests,
supposed conspirators and others by offering them, for example, the help with sending
(see 7.3). Also, when the clique of conspirators knew the man had spent some time in
26
prison for crimes somehow connected to their conviction, they trusted him more easily.
Some of the proper agents turned to be double agents, were asked by the spy
masters to be double agents, or they were ones from the beginning of their service.
Sometimes, the spy masters knew about agents‟ double dealings and hired them in order
to use them, sometimes they found out later and used them anyway. Because they were
not easy to recognise there also must have been many of them the spy masters did not
know of.
The most usual motivation of such agents was religion, which is not surprising
concerning the religious situation in those times. Nevertheless the greed, the ambition or
ordinary fear were also common. One way or another, they could not be fully trusted,
but they needed to be used. Robert Beale, on the basis of observation of Walsingham,
advised: “Hear all reports but trust not all; observe them that deal on both hands lest you
be deceived” (qtd. in Budiansky 98). This advice shows that the spy masters had the
only option – to hope these agents would stay on their side long enough to be used for
the best. Indeed, hiring such people was the big lottery. Conducting the whole network
of them was even bigger one. However, “knowledge [was] never too dear5” (qtd. in
Nicholl 195) and the dependency on such men paid out, especially to Walsingham.
The first natural source from which spy masters could draw when searching for
informers and spies were their own contacts. Many of them the spy masters created
4
The prisons where prison agents mostly operated were prisons with Catholic prisoners –
Marschalsea, Tower, Wisbech Castle, Rye, Dover and Portsmouth (Nicholl 157). In Marschalsea the
number of agents was the greatest (Nicholl 157).
5
Walsingham‟s well known maxim
27
From these contacts the spy masters choose their agents themselves and such
agents worked for them for longer periods of time or repeatedly. They usually had some
kind of special talent or contact, which could be very well used in such a service.
Another reason the spy masters contacted them could be that these men were bound to
Their position usually offered the better access to specific kind of information needed
patronage. Everyone had some contacts and wanted to pull strings for someone. Even
among the agents of the Elizabethan secret service. Thus another way the spy masters
The recommended ones were often those who were chosen by established agents
for one time jobs, as their assistance – either because of their skills or contacts. Many of
these one-time employees left their respectable businesses and employments to take part
in secret service‟s operations, often under the false impression, as their tasks were
presented to them as the duty to their country (Haynes 5). Sometimes, when they did
their job well and later they happened to seem to be useful again, they could get another
colleges and Inns. At colleges were Catholics allowed to study, although being
watched, and there they tried to turn people to Catholicism or to recruit/gather their
hidden followers. Agents were of course among those. That is to say, that agents hired
28
the secret service and infiltrate the established Catholic seminaries. Besides, the
majority of students happily took a chance on boosting their carrier or on some extra
As was suggested at the beginning of this chapter, not all the people served
entirely voluntarily. Of course that some of the caught conspirators or Catholic priests
were forced to cooperate and spy on their former colleagues in order to save their own
skin. Those had to be watched closely, but often the risk of trusting them paid out.
The places where they were recruited were prisons. Usually the prison agents,
or freshly arrested defendants already persuaded to cooperate, “[trawl] the prisons for
potential agents” (Haynes 54). For that they could be pardoned or released. Defendants
themselves, often when tortured, offered cooperation and revealed information on their
accomplices. Then they either stayed in prison to spy on others of their kind right there,
To be the agent was neither easy nor lucrative task and only some of agents were
properly rewarded. The fact is, that “the spy masters ruthlessly exploited […] desire of
their employees to thrive” (Haynes 14). The payment of agents happened in many
different ways which depended on the nature of the service agents performed and on the
The long time agents, top secret agents, were paid unofficially by government‟s
clerks. Walsingham, for example, just said which men ought to receive certain amount
of money for their service he did not specify, and they got it (Nicholl 131). These
payments remained unrecorded as well as the activities and records of the employment
29
On the contrary messengers were paid fully officially. They were paid for their
errands directly “through the office of the Treasurer of the Queen‟s chamber […] on
presentation of a warrant” (Nicholl 131). Warrants were again “signed by [the spy
master] under such […] formulae as „carrying letters for Her Majesty‟s special and
Aside from the warrants there was one another way how agents could get their
deserved reward – in form of the permission to profit from their victims. Agents asked
money, for example, from Catholic prisoners and promised them the release. Then they
arranged the release with the spy masters. Of course this happened only with
unimportant prisoners who did not committed too high crimes and were not considered
to be further threat. In this way agents not only got the reward, but they also did not
reveal their covers as catholic sympathisers or accomplices of the prisoners and could
Nevertheless, the spy masters were not always so much obliging as in the case of
the long time employed agents. As was indicated at the beginning of this subchapter,
many of the men, especially those hired only for one operation, find out difficult to
persuade the spy masters to pay them, or adequately reimburse them, for the work done.
In these cases, it was the part of the spy masters‟ tactics, as they, as well as for example
William Cecil, “thought to use them again [,] and [the promise of payment] was [their]
way to keep them dependent” (Haynes 5). Such agents usually gained, if they gained
something, just very little (ibid), and they really kept waiting for every spy masters‟
30
6. Espionage Techniques
Hand in hand with specialized tasks of agents went specific techniques they used
to successfully carry out their duty. Intelligencers-spies could be and often needed to be
resourceful the same way their masters were, still they, as well as intelligencers-
As was already mentioned above, the informer relied on what he saw and heard.
Therefore his greatest worry was how to pass on the information without the
else and without him being exposed. This he could influence by techniques of writing
The simplest way to hide what was written was to write in secret ink of alum,
of lemon juice and milk, or of urine with water (Hutchinson 98). The more complicated
way was to write in ciphers. The spy masters themselves usually did not create them.
They took them from books on codes, for example Giovanni Battista della Porta‟s De
Furitivis Litteratum (Nicholl 126); they were in contact with scholars making and
searching for new ciphers, for example William Cecil knew Girolamo Cardano, the
creator of cardan grille, or John Dee, the occultist and mathematician (Haynes 21-2); or
they employed the skilful decipherers and cipher-makers like Thomas Phelippes.
The ciphers used in the Elizabethan age were based on two principles:
substitution and transposition (Haynes 23). In the first case characters or words were
substituted by other letters, numbers or whimsical terms, and in the second case the
characters were shuffled (ibid). In order to make deciphering difficult for an unwanted
decipherer, sometimes “nil significantia” (Haynes24), symbols which did not substitute
anything, were used; or one character had more possible substitutes (Budiansky 140).
31
For a long time also cardan grille was used – the piece with numbered holes which was
laid down on the text and the letters, syllables or words visible in holes, sorted by the
numbers, gave the message (Haynes 22). In a similar way the message could be hidden
in the book – in form of specific words on specific pages, which were both marked in a
To further protect the message during the transport several various techniques
were used. “Multiple copies might be sent by different routes” (Haynes 21), the letters
might be send in diplomatic bags in order to avoid the search at ports, the dead letter
boxes could be used, and finally they might be hidden in various hiding places as “a
bound book‟s leather cover” or “high heels of ladies‟ shoes” (Hutchinson 98).
As these techniques were used not only by agents of the secret service, but also
by agents of Mary Queen of Scots, agents of the Spanish king, or French agents, the
counter-intelligence was necessary. Searchers, searching ships and people at ports and
boarders, or searching houses of suspects, were familiar with some of these techniques,
so, for example, a blank paper in documents they found suspicious. However, because
the spy masters often needed some evidence of mischievous activities done by sender or
correspondence was used. The spy masters, with help of double agents, used to
establish channels for correspondence of a suspect in order to have control over all
messages going in and out. Not only double agents, but also skilful decipherers and
forgers like Arthur Gregory, who could perfectly reseal the letter, were needed for this
task, since it was not desirable to reveal the correspondence had been read or altered by
or conveyed in letters, even the ciphered ones. Such information was conveyed orally
32
and was needed to be lured out from the source. Hence the truly simplest, but not honest
techniques were used by the secret service – bribery, blackmail and coercion.
However there were also more elaborate techniques, such as use of another identity,
use of pseudonyms and cross dressing, without agents could not do.
Pretence and cross dressing had always been essential parts of the profession of
agent. Especially prison agents (see 7.3) and messengers needed to cover their real
missions in this way. Elizabethan agents most often used “[t]he simple ruse of
anti-catholic agents as Charles Sledd infiltrated the catholic colleges. He, in this way,
got into the English College in Rome in 1579, stayed there with another spy of the same
sort, Solomon Aldred, and gave the description and the list of Catholic exiles and priests
pseudonyms and alter-egos were used in order not to be revealed as the spy through the
pseudonyms John Morice and Peter Halins (Haynes 14). To Morice senders wrote as to
the Catholic and to Halins as to the merchant (ibid). In a similar way the famous French
embassy spy Henry Fagot, who was in touch with Walsingham and played the key role
in revealing the Throckmorton plot (see 7.4), protected his precious identity. His
pseudonym is the most famous one, because his real identity had been questioned for a
The most extreme means to get information from someone was torture. It was
not executed by agents and in Elizabethan era it certainly was no secret matter7.
6
Nowadays it is settled that he was probably Giordano Bruno. Evidences for this statement are
gathered in Bossy‟s another work: Bossy, John. Giordano Bruno and the Embassy Affair. Yale, 1991.
7
The law did not allow use of torture as means to obtain confession and there were several protests
against it in the Elizabethan era (Haynes 58-9).
33
However, it often was the spy masters‟ last chance to make those, whom their agents
caught, speak. Two famous rack masters cooperating with the spy masters are known:
Thomas Norton, who made Francis Throckmorton to talk (see 7.4) (Hutchinson 73-4);
and Richard Topcliff, who tortured mainly Catholic prisoners, who was obsessed with
the power torture gave him and who was paid by Lord Burghley (Haynes 58). The most
used instrument of torture was the rack. Other methods were: pressing – placing heavy
objects on the prisoner‟s body, hanging by hands (in manacles), crushing hands in
gauntlets, Scavenger's daughter – the band pressing the head, Little Ease – the cell
where to stand properly or lie properly was impossible, and The Pit – the deep oubliette
(Hutchinson 72-3).
However, before getting someone to the torture or trial, it was needed to arrest
him and brought him to prison. With Catholic refugees it was difficult. Therefore
Robert Cecil liked to use method of “kidnapping someone abroad to bring them back
to England” (Haynes 183). It was difficult to prepare and execute such an operation
(ibid), but with skilful agents, like with the abduction of John Story, this technique
The technique of kidnapping was one of the more elaborate ones. Of the same
kind were other techniques, usually devised and practised by the spy masters –
propaganda and disinformation. Propaganda was most often spread in form of copied
public letters or pamphlets; as the pamphlet of 1568 spreading the knowledge of Duke
of Norfolk‟s intention to Mary Queen of Scots (see 7.1) (Hutchinson 39), or the
Declaration of the Causes Moving the Queen of England to give the aid to the Defence
of the People afflicted and oppressed in the Low Countries explaining why the Queen
offered the help to the Dutch Protestants against Spain (Budiansky 181). Both of these
34
Disinformation, on the contrary, was spread orally by agents who circulated
false information which the spy masters told them to pass. This technique was used
when the spy masters wanted to do harm to the Armada (see 7.6), or when they wanted
Elizabeth to sign warrant of Mary Queen of Scots‟ execution – they spread false
rumours about Philip preparing the fleet to invade England, and about Duke of Parma
being ready to execute the rescue operation from the Low Counties (Hutchinson 178).
35
7. Plots and Operations in which the Elizabethan Secret Service was Involved
Since Mary Queen of Scots crossed the border of England, she was an
inspiration of plotters and conspirators. She even weaved conspiracies herself and asked
foreign countries for aid. Reports from agents abroad came through Walsingham to
William Cecil concerning French and Spanish schemes to overthrow Elizabeth. All
One of such rumours came to William Cecil in 1568 when the complicity of
Mary in the murder of her husband was investigated. One of the commissioners,
Thomas Howard, Fourth Duke of Norfolk was said to be approached by Scottish lords
with the proposition that he should marry Mary and was said to be delighted at such an
Norfolk proceeded to get the Privy Council‟s decision that Mary would be free
when married to an English lord (ibid). It was a part of his plan for Mary‟s potential
succession. William Cecil did not dare to confront the Duke directly in this matter, so it
was him who, in 1569, asked most likely Walsingham to write a pamphlet Discourse
Touching the Pretended Match between the Duke of Norfolk and the Queen of Scots
(Hutchinson 39). Of course Norfolk denied rumours about the marriage at first.
However William Cecil did not give up and continued to fight with his special means.
He “repeatedly dropped just enough hints to Elizabeth to make it clear that the Duke
directly. Norfolk revealed his plan and she naturally considered it treasonous, burst in
anger and forbade the marriage (Hutchinson 38). Norfolk then departed from the court
hoping the Queen would calm down. Instead she issued two royal commands ordering
Norfolk to come to Windsor (Hutchinson 39). He was arrested and taken to the Tower
36
of London (ibid). It did not help though – in August 1570 he was released, but already
examination of the Florentine banker Roberto Ridolfi8 who was observed to deliver
sums of money from abroad to Norfolk and Bishop of Ross (Hutchinson 41). This
proved the Norfolk matter was really a broader conspiracy, which could be considered
(and by many historians is considered) as the beginning of so called Ridolfi Plot (see
7.3). Ridolfi admitted he delivered money, but during the search of his lodging no
(Hutchinson 42). The partial reason for his detention was to prevent him to contact the
Spanish Ambassador De Spes, known to be the ally of Mary, who would surely
undertake some further action to help Norfolk (Budiansky 75). So when this possibility
This conspiracy does not seem to threaten the life of the Queen directly and
probably was not the threat to the country at all. Only Walsingham‟s propagandist
pamphlet made it to appear so. As an example of activities in which the secret service
was involved it does not show any amazing espionage techniques and elaborate plans.
verification, even though only rumours were in question. In a similar way the use of
Walsingham‟s propaganda to bring the Queen to the realisation Norfolk was plotting
against her is a good example of the outstanding solution of the situation, with which
Walsingham and William Cecil usually came. On the other hand, the release of Ridolfi
is one of the few mistakes the great spy masters occasionally made and foretells
something about Ridolfi‟s skills of escaping the spy masters. Or, as Hutchinson
8
or Ridolphi (spelling can differ in various sources)
37
suggests, it shows Walsingham‟s skills to persuade people to work for him as double
agents, as he could be, when detained, released under the promise of performing
intelligence (54). Of the most importance is that this conspiracy shows the secret service
The abduction and later execution of John Story was “the first major spy
operation abroad under [William] Cecil‟s direction” (Haynes 1). It set the standard to
the operations of the secret service and laid the grounds for later successes of Sir
Walsingham. The matter involved John Story, once a Parliament member, who opposed
the Bill of Uniformity, who during the reign of Mary Tudor became zealot active in the
process of converting the country back to Catholicism, and who finally opposed even
the Act of Supremacy (Weinewright). Because of his uncontrollable tongue and these
oppositions he ended up in prison for several times. Finally he escaped from prison into
exile in Flanders where he became a Spanish citizen and in need of money and from a
desire to support anti-English stands he started to work for Duke of Alva (Haynes 2).
Among other jobs he was a searcher of smuggled Protestant literature (ibid). What is
more, together with John Prestall, he planned the plot of several royal murders and the
possible invasion of England (ibid). By this he appeared on the black list of William
Cecil. To catch John Story was desirable, so the operation was approved and started to
be prepared.
The plan was simple – to play on Story‟s zealousness as a searcher and persuade
him to board an unknown ship and transport him back to England (Haynes 3). As the
connection of the spy master and men executing the abduction served Cecil‟s long-time
agent, John Marsh, who was originally in Flanders to report on the work of John Prestall
(ibid). He contacted other intelligencers John Lee, John Taylor and John Bradley, who
38
had useful contacts and means to find and hire the actual kidnappers Roger Ramsden,
Martin Bragge and Simon Jewkes and the crew of the ship which should transport Story
(ibid). The key work was then executed by the searcher William Parker – he informed
Story about three seemingly good Catholics, supposedly knowing about religious
materials hidden at one ship (Haynes 4). Story met with them, spent some time with
them and eventually went in search for the material in the ship at Bergen, where they
recaptured and deported to England (Haynes 4). There he ended up in Tower where he
was tortured on the rack for several times and held until the reasonable charge, which
would not discredit Cecil, as Story was actually the Spanish subject, was constructed
against him (Haynes 5). He was condemned at the end of May 1571 (Wainewright) and
even before that he became the legend and martyr among Catholics.
The secret service acted whenever something suspicious was happening, and in
this case Cecil‟s agents did their job properly. The plan of John Story could eventually
develop into a real threat to Elizabeth and they prevented that. This operation is an
example of secret service‟s technique of abduction. It shows both long-time agents‟ and
one-time hired men‟ typical utilization and cooperation as it was outlined in chapter 5.
What is more, the detention of Story and his reputation was used to uncover another
In the April 1571 the use of agents-searchers in ports proved to be useful, when
Charles Baillie9, a man of Scottish descent was detained because of the suspicious
them some letters, even ciphered ones, reputedly dictated by Roberto Ridolfi and
9
or Bailly (spelling can differ in various sources)
39
dispatched to John Leslie, Bishop of Ross (Hutchinson 54). According to Budiansky,
before the Warden of the Cinque Ports, Lord Cobham, sent these materials to William
Cecil, Leslie convinced him to replace some letters for the older ones and send them
and Beauchamp Tower in Tower of London10 where he was tortured on the rack,
In order to get Baillie talk about the key to the ciphers the secret service agents
were of use again. Not only was Baillie tortured in prison, but also an agent was placed
in his cell to gain his trust and get the information. His name was William Herle, but he
succeeded only partially, he just made it possible to intercept letters sent by the
imprisoned Baillie to Bishop of Ross (Haynes 10). The next agent, who actually made
Baillie speak, was William Parker who entered the cell of Baillie pretending to be Dr.
John Story, the man Baillie admired. This tactic proved to be brilliant. Baillie gave
away the cipher key and confessed that the letters were really from Ridolfi, who on
behalf of Mary Queen of Scots tried to get the support of the Duke of Alva (and Philip
II) and the Pope for an invasion of England (Hutchinson 55). The plan was to
coordinate invasion with a Catholic uprising, to dethrone Elizabeth and replace her by
Mary married to Norfolk (Haynes 11). The problem was that Bishop of Ross, who was
put into the confinement, claimed otherwise. According to him Mary asked only for
assistance in Scotland (Haynes 10). He at least admitted meddling with letters and
destroying the original ones (Budiansky 77). Still he would not tell more.
Although Walsingham confirmed from France that Ridolfi really met with Alva,
carrying letters from the Spanish Ambassador in London, and with the Pope and the
King as well, he was not able to find out why Ridolfi did that. Luckily again agents did
10
Haynes asserts Baillie was firstly in Marshalsea where being spied on by Herle, and then in the
Tower where he was tortured and where he met Parker. Hutchinson reverses the order – according to him
was Baillie firstly tortured in the Tower and then in Marshalsea with Herle (Hutchinson 54-6).
40
their work properly and William Cecil was informed that the Duke of Norfolk sent
money and letters to North, probably to Scotland and to Mary‟s supporters (Haynes 11).
Norfolk‟s house was searched and his secretaries interrogated, the ciphered letter was
found and Norfolk‟s contact with Mary confirmed (Budiansky 78). Bishop of Ross was
called once more from his custody to clarify all the information. This time Bishop
Norfolk was rearrested and in June 1572 executed for treachery (Hutchison 80).
Baillie and Ross were eventually released (ibid). Roberto Ridolfi, safely outside
England, wrote to Mary how disappointed he was with the situation which did not allow
him to return to England (ibid). He was never caught and brought to justice for his
conspiracy activities. It is possible that he could not be, because he was double agent or
agent provocateur, as was suggested in subchapter 7.1, whose task was to help to get
Yet it is sure that William Cecil‟s arrangements concerning his agents were
effective – searchers intercepted suspicious materials, prison agents managed to lure out
the information from prisoners and observers were able to verify information. All that
with use of techniques described above. Because of the watchfulness of Cecil‟s men
Mary‟s plans on the dethronement of Elizabeth failed and Norfolk was brought to
justice.
One of the most dangerous plots against the Queen, the Throckmorton plot, was
doomed to be uncovered from the moment the highly intelligent spy Henry Fagot
started to operate with the French embassy. He managed to corrupt the French
41
Ambassador‟s Mauvissière‟s11 secretary12 and persuade him to copy the correspondence
between the ambassador and Mary Queen of Scots and send it to Walsingham
(Budiansky124). The very fact the channel of correspondence with Mary was reopened
meant there was some kind of conspiracy in preparation again. Walsingham went
through the copied letters sent by this outstanding source and patiently waited for some
useful information.
His waiting had paid out in November 1583, when a copied note came,
containing information which would make it possible for Walsingham to catch Mary‟s
and Mauvissière‟s courier. This information, together with another one from Henry
Fagot, revealed to Walsingham who the courier was – Francis Throckmorton. He was
Mauvissière‟s letters he was called Sieur de la Tour (Bossy 79). Based on this
himself was caught in his London house in the middle of enciphering a letter to Mary
(Budiansky 129). This letter, the list of Catholic noblemen and gentlemen in England
including the notes on ports suitable for landing of invading fleet, and copies of Bishop
of Ross‟s pamphlet defending Mary‟s right to the English crown were confiscated
house by men searching it (Budiansky 130). Then he claimed he had never seen the
He admitted he and his brother were surveying ports suitable for the landing of
the invasion fleet led by Henri, Duke of Guise (Bossy 76). Guise then selected the port
11
Michel de Castelnau, seigneur de Mauvissière
12
Mauvissiére had at that time three secretaries. The question is, which one was the mole. The most
probable is Laurent Feron. Proves are discussed in Bossy, John. Under the Molehill: An Elizabethan Spy
Story. Yale: Yale University Press, 2002.
42
of Arundel and sent Charles Paget and Thomas Morgan (Mary‟s agents) to survey the
port in more detail. Throckmorton then served as the courier carrying letters between
Morgan and Mary and twice a week he met with the Spanish Ambassador Bernardino
de Mendoza, who suggested that the second invasion force from Spain should land in
Lancashire (Budiansky130-1).
Based on this confession, in July 1584, Throckmorton was hanged, drawn and
quartered (Budiansky 134). Mendoza was summoned to the Privy Council where
Walsingham enumerated his intrigues and gave him fifteen days to depart from
England. Against Mauvissière the list of charges was secretly prepared as well, but the
matter was later dropped quietly for unknown reason. Nevertheless, his carrier was
ruined as rumours spread in France that it was him who betrayed Mary‟s cause. Both
Fagot and the secretary of the French Ambassador remained active and unrevealed and
from time to time they offered another piece of useful information. They both withdrew
from their jobs at these positions when the new ambassador, Guillaume de l‟Aubépine,
Activities of the secret service throughout these events mostly show the art of
the secret service in intercepting and copying the letters, and show how important was
the patience of the spy masters. The advantage of having the informers in the right
places is also very clearly visible from the description above. Thanks to two moles on
the French embassy and their art in copying the correspondence, one of the most serious
Dr William Parry13 used to be the spy for William Cecil spying on exiled
English Catholics (Haynes 37). He did the job because he was bound to Cecil who got
13
i.e ap Harry
43
him out of debtor‟s prison (ibid). He operated on behalf of William Cecil in Paris,
Venice, Lyon and Milan (Hutchinson 113). However, it seems he gradually started to
play the double agent, and what is more, started to side with Catholics. He lost the trust
plot, devised by the Pope Gregory XIII, Thomas Morgan and Charles Paget (Haynes
38). He supported it by a letter from the papal secretary Ptolemy Galli, Cardinal of
Como (ibid). By this he gained the trust again and was sent to Paris as an intelligencer
and a companion of Robert Cecil (ibid). When he returned, he got a seat in Parliament,
where he drew the attention by passionate opposition to the new legislation against
Catholics and was ordered to custody by the House of Commons (ibid). The Queen
helped him and ordered to release him the next day, but it was for the last time – he was
It did not take long and Parry was again in problems because of his debts. He
probably tried to regain the trust and “reveal” another plot. The plot he discussed with
Edmund Neville, a man already under suspicion (ibid). Neville gave Parry away and
they both ended up in the Tower of London (ibid). In prison Parry confessed the plot
was actually devised by Morgan and that they supposedly intended to shoot Elizabeth in
the Palace Garden in Westminster (ibid). Parry was executed in 1585, Neville was later
released and Morgan ended up, thanks to the request Elizabeth sent to Henri III, in
Bastille (ibid).
Elizabeth probably was not endangered directly by this plot, although several
interesting stories about Parry‟s intentions and preparations to kill her exist: he
supposedly waited in the gardens and did not assassinate the Queen only because he
was suddenly caught by the surprise by the royal appearance of Her Majesty; or, he
44
should gain the private audience with Elizabeth, bring the knife in the sleeve and change
the mind on the last minute again (Tudor Place). None of this is probably true and
Parry himself was a man willing to do almost anything, even change sides, to get
money. Even without such a profile it was really dangerous to be an anti-Catholic agent,
because one could easily get under suspicion of being double agent or being one
cooperating with Catholics. This was the case of Parry. It is not sure whether he really
was double agent and it makes little difference on the implications of the case. It
matters, that the spy masters wanted to get rid of him as he presented a complication
and a threat, and they could use Neville to achieve that. Thus this plot was either the
trap on Parry or a badly performed attempt of his to gain the trust of the Queen and of
Nevertheless, this plot, together with the Throckmorton plot and other reported
activities of Catholics in the country, caused that the Bond of Association was
formulated by Queen‟s councillors and issued in 1584 (Haynes 39). This bond
proclaimed that every person, who would take part in preparations to assassinate the
Queen, would be put to death (Hutchinson 117). It was signed by the Queen‟s loyal
subjects pledging in this way to revenge on anyone who would in this treacherous way
After the Throckmorton and the Parry plots, Mary Queen of Scots found herself
in a tighter surveillance of Sir Amyas Paulet in Tutbury Castle (Hutchinson 118). The
strict security measures there made all attempts to smuggle any secret correspondence
to her impossible (Hutchinson 19). Still her French spy and deviser of ciphers, Thomas
45
Morgan, sought for the channels through which he could communicate with her
(Haynes 65). Eventually he decided to use as letter carrier Gilbert Gifford (Haynes 64).
However, this man was convinced by Francis Walsingham to spy for him – either when
he was expelled from college in Rome (Haynes 63), or when he was caught with
Morgan‟s letters in Rye in 1585 (Hutchinson 121). Although Walsingham did not trust
Gifford completely (Haynes 65), agent represented the chance to establish the
communication network between Mary and her followers which could be completely
watched by Walsingham. For these purposes Mary was moved to Chartley (Hutchinson
121). To Chartley beer was delivered once a week in wooden casks, which were
suitable for smuggling the correspondence (ibid). Phelippes and Paulet arranged this
with brewer, whom they trusted and whom they bribed to perform the task of smuggling
a cork tube in and out of the casks (Haynes 66). Thus the ritual of intercepting
correspondence started: Gifford received letters from the French embassy and gave
them to Phelippes and Arthur Gregory to decipher, copy and seal; then he picked them
up again and gave to the brewer, who forwarded these letters to Paulet checking Gifford
in this way; from Paulet they were sent to Marry; and vice versa (Budiansky 155). This
was arrangement, which enabled to uncover Babington plot and to prove Mary guilty of
The plotting itself started in 1586 when John Ballard, supposedly Jesuit priest
zealous to get rid of Elizabeth‟s Protestantism, who was watched by his friend and
Walsingham‟s spy Bernard Maude, met in Paris with Paget, Morgan and Mendoza
(Haynes 71). He ensured them the English Catholics were prepared to get rid of
Elizabeth and introduced them the idea of combining English Catholics‟ forces with the
Spanish invasion (ibid). Mendoza assured him of some Spanish help and Ballard
46
The English Catholics, who were according to Ballard prepared to kill the
Queen, were friends of Anthony Babington whom Ballard met in London. What is to
say is, that among Babington‟s group were Walsingham spies as well. For example
Gilbert Gifford, who watched his friend John Savage (Budiansky 158), and Robert
Poley, who became Babington‟s trustee. However, the plot was endangered by
Babington himself, who tend to hesitate whether it is “lawful to murder the Queen of
England” (Budiansky 119) and whether he should not leave the country. He hesitated
even though Ballard ensured him there is no need for him to do the act of assassination
himself as it would be performed by John Savage (Haynes 72), who was encouraged to
159).
The correspondence between Mary and Babington had been opened – he asked
her for an approval of their doings and informed her on exact plan they intended to
execute (ibid). Mary gave the approval and some advice (Hutchinson 130-1). All
exchanged letters were intercepted and altered by Phelippes in order to get more
information on conspirators.
In the meantime Babington still considered leaving the country and because
Poley and Walsingham knew that, the former arranged the meeting. Walsingham
needed “to fix the young man firmly into the inchoate plot and he would then either be
arrested for plotting or forced to turn queen‟s evidence” (Haynes 78). Finally three
meetings of Walsingham and Babington took place, and at the third one Walsingham
asked Babington “to tell everything he might know” (Budiansky 162). Babington did
not speak (Budiansky 184). When he changed his mind and realised they were trapped,
47
it was too late (Haynes 88). Ballard was to be soon arrested, the order to arrest
Babington and other plotters was already in preparation and their lodgings were
When Ballard was arrested, Babington was alarmed and fled together with other
conspirator Gage and was joined by Barnawell and Dunne, other members of his party
(Haynes 91). Meanwhile the first group of conspirators, Savage, Tilney and Tichborne,
was arrested and their questioning began (ibid). Even though Babington‟s group used its
famous cover of staining the skin with walnut juice near Uxendon, and even though
Walsingham‟s men searching for them were not inconspicuous as even William Cecil
on his travel to London could see they are searching for someone, they were finally
Poley, as well as Maude, gave the report on their dealings with Babington
(Haynes 91). Gilbert Gifford left the country from fear of being arrested and tried with
other conspirators (ibid). Documents and letters from Chartley were seized and Mary‟s
secretaries Nau and Curll were questioned for details concerning Mary‟s
correspondence (ibid). After torture and interrogation Babington wrote two confessions
(Haynes 93), and Savage confessed even without the torture (Haynes 91). Only a few
plotters escaped the execution: Thomas Habington was placed in the Tower and Richard
Bellamy managed to escape from prison (later he was rearrested) (Haynes 95). The rest
of the plotters, concerning the high number of them, were executed on 20th and 21st
Tilney, Habington and Salusbury, Henry Dunne, Edward Jones, John Travers,
If any plot ever really endangered the Queen, it was the Babington plot.
48
the plot be if Walsingham would stop it at its beginning. The fact is that the secret
service knew of every aspect of the plot and it was this, what minimized the risk
Walsingham had taken when he waited to catch plotters. He had the right men as
Ballard or Morgan, who really proved to be dangerous, watched. What is more, agents
watching them not only proved to be skilful double agents capable to deceive even their
friends (in case of Maude), but also to successfully act as agents provocateurs (in case
of Gifford pressing on Savage to be assassin). The same craft showed Robert Poley,
when he manipulated with Babington to make him to stick to conspiracy plans and not
to run away. However, the most important part played Thomas Phelippes as the deviser
of the plan of correspondence smuggled through casks, and as the decipherer, who was
The most important consequence of these men‟s work was the trial and
execution of Mary. Activities of these agents led to the acquisition of the evidence, in
form of letters, against Mary. This operation and spy masters‟ political scheming
ensured that the greatest threat to Elizabeth was removed – the Catholics lost their
The Stafford Plot was most likely one of so called sham plots of Francis
Walsingham. William Stafford, brother of Sir Edward Stafford, the English ambassador
in Paris, seemed to be obliged somehow to Walsingham. He should tell him in 1585 that
he is “as ever at [his] command and there is no man living to whom [he is] so beholden”
behalf of Walsingham.
14
also in Read, Conyers. Mr Secretary Walsingham and the Policy of Queen Elizabeth. Vol 3.
Oxford: The Clarendon P, 1925.
49
In 1587 William Stafford allegedly presented to the French ambassador
Châteauneuf a plan to kill Queen Elizabeth (Haynes 96). The man who should carry out
the act was Michael Moody, at that time imprisoned in Newgate (ibid). It is also to say,
that Moody was once paid by Walsingham as a letter-carrier (ibid), so most likely he
was brought to the cause because of these connections. So Stafford and Châteauneuf‟s
secretary Leonard des Trappes visited Moody in prison to talk with him about the
details. However, by that they raised the suspicion and it was probably because of this
Des Trappes and Stafford were put in prison and Châteauneuf into house arrest
(Hutchinson 176). Stafford confessed and Moody supported the claims that Stafford
proposed the plan to Châteauneuf (ibid). He also confirmed that Châteauneuf supported
the plan and that their inspiration was Marry Queen of Scots, at that time waiting for an
him such a plan, but he claimed that he did not approve it. Nevertheless, he remained in
detention and the number of Queen‟s bodyguards had been raised (Hutchinson 17).
Châteauneuf was released from house arrest in 1587, after the execution of Mary
Queen of Scots. The government apologised and asserted the matter was a big
misunderstanding (Haynes 96). This, together with connections both Moody and
Stafford had to Walsingham, imply, that the plot was devised by Walsingham to prevent
Châteauneuf from contacting allies abroad willing to save Mary. There is also
possibility that it should serve as means to convince Elizabeth to sign Mary‟s death
warrant, as it is unlikely plotters would dare to devise another plot so soon after the
executions of Babington plotters, which must have scared them off. Likewise, a
discovery of another plot in such a short time after the previous one must have startle
50
Elizabeth. It is possible that after the Parry plot she was more willing to sign the warrant
rumours about foreign forces gathering in order to save Mary (see 6), and about
supposed escape of hers. In this way they spread panic among the people and at the
court. Subsequently people got the feeling that the execution of Mary is necessary. All
these activities reflect the spy masters‟ skilful use of the secret service for
At the beginning of the 1580s the relations between England and Spain were
strained. In 1580 Spain had seized Portugal. In 1584 the Dutch Protestant rebels could
not hold against Parma anymore, held only a few strongholds and were in need of help.
In 1585 Spaniards closed all ports to English trade ships. Sir Francis Walsingham and
few others started to be disturbed by the possibility of the Spanish attack on England.
However, the Queen and William Cecil hesitated to perform anything provocative.
Walsingham‟s main problem was that in Spain he had only a low number of reliable
informers who would obtain some information he could use to convince Queen and
To prevent a supposed attack, or at least delay it, Walsingham sent agents to the
unreliable spy with tendency to change sides, and he sent him to Paris (Haynes 100-1),
where Poyntz proved to be useless again. Not sooner than in 1587 had Walsingham
more information on the Spanish naval and military activities. His sources were mostly
merchants and from information they provided it was apparent that Spaniards were
51
gathering men and building ships. The need for preventive attack started to be discussed
in London.
Francis Drake‟s plan to attack Spanish ports (Hutchinson 208). This plan was at first
rejected by the Queen, but then she changed her mind and approved it. Finally she
decided to alter it and forbade Drake to attack ships in ports. Fortunately the message
about alteration did not reach Drake in time (Hutchinson 210), so he successfully
attacked port of Cadiz and fort on Cape Sagres (Hutchinson 211) and by this he slowed
therefore Walsigham work out the plan to gather more precise information and the plan
on passing along this information more safely (Hutchinson 214). He redirected the
network of his agents in Italy, who were watching English Catholics, to inform him on
Spanish activities. He also managed to get several reliable agents in Spain – for example
Anthony Standen, a former Mary‟s supporter. Standen was able to use his contacts in
Italy and under the pseudonym Pompeo Pellegrini he sent intelligence to Walsingham.
at Phillip‟s court. Another his contact had a brother, who informed him about Spanish
admiral Santa Cruz‟s plan, preparations and forces of Armada (Haynes 101-2).
Despite of these information provided by the secret service, the Queen was still
reluctant to admit her realm is in danger and to give the funds for its defence
(Hutchinson 226). The plan for defence of England was drawn, but she did not allow
her Councillors to carry it out. They at least alarmed their own troops. In May 1588
Armada under the command of Medina Sidonia departed (Hutchinson 230), and gentry
was finally called to prepare their militias. When Armada departed for the first time,
52
ships were damaged by the storm; when it departed for the second time, they had bigger
success. Although English ships tried hard, only several of Spanish ships sank or were
taken. Still, for Spaniards the boarding of smaller and quicker English ships was
similarly impossible. The turn came when English used several old ships loaded with
gunpowder and oil to fire-attack. Spaniards counted with this tactics, but despite that,
their captains were too panicked to hold the formation. Scattered ships were pursued by
reinforced English ships and drifted to the Scottish waters. The rest of Armada was
finances in order to see whether Philip is capable of financing the creation of such an
army and he even used his influence and made several banking houses to deny Philip‟s
request for loan (Hutchinson 212-3). He also let his agents to spread disinformation
about the suitable landing sites and suitable ways to get into ports – one Richard Gibbes
for example told Spaniards that Thames is too shallow to bring the navy through it
(Hutchinson 224). To confuse Spaniards Walsingham also used the double agent paid
by Spaniards, the English ambassador in Paris Sir Edward Stafford, who unaware of the
Throughout the time Armada was being built and prepared, Walsingham was
able to establish the great network of agents. With its help he not only gained so needed
intelligence on the number, size and movement of the Spanish forces, but his agents
also informed him on the development of situation and of battles around the coast of
England. In addition, the efforts of Walsingham and his agents did not reside only in
gathering information about Armada, but they also tried to delay its departure and to
weaken it.
53
7.9 The Lopez Conspiracy
Dr. Lopez was a respected physician living in England from the beginning of the
Queen Elizabeth‟s reign and he gradually worked up the ladder until he not only
obtained patronage of Leicester and Walsingham, but he also became the physician of
In 1590 Lopez used his contacts to free Manuel de Andrade15 the spy, who was
intercepted (Haynes 138). In France then this spy interpreted to Mendoza what Lopez
said to him – that as he [Lopez] was once indirectly16 asked by Mendoza to poison
Portuguese pretender Dom Antonio, task he did not performed, and as he helped to free
some poor Spanish prisoners, survivors of Armada (Hume 119-20), he wants to let him
[Mendoza] know, that it is good time for him [Lopez] to arrange negotiation of the
Why he did it, it is not clear, but most likely it was instigated by Walsingham
(Hume 123) to ensure the English spies could freely pass the borders under the cover of
peace negotiations (Haynes 138-9). All the same, Spaniards had most likely the same
intention (Hume 124). In addition to that Spaniards followed other objectives by this –
to expulse, with help of Lopez, Dom Antonio from England or to have him killed by
died and the rest of the spy masters did not know about his involvement. Therefore,
when Andrade got back to England in order to carry out negotiations, William Cecil
arrested him and for some time did not want to use his services (Haynes 139).
15
also Andrada
16
Lopez was supposedly approached by Spanish spy Vega to perform such an act, but this was not of
Mendoza‟s instigation and Lopez did not have to agree with such a proposition. Mendoza also could
approach Lopez another time, but about that nothing is known.
54
The things got worse for Lopez when in 1593 Esteban Ferreira da Gama, who
had been from time to time housed in Lopez‟s house (Haynes 139), became suspected
of collaboration with Spaniards and got arrested by Essex (Haynes 142). The order was
issued to hold and read all correspondence sent to Portuguese (Hume 133). The
messenger Gomez d‟Avila was then detained with correspondence to Ferreira (Haynes
142). It contained the letter drafted by Tinoco written in confusing and suspicious
wording (ibid). To add to suspiciousness of their behaviour, Ferreira send from prison a
message to Lopez, where he asked him to prevent d‟Avila from returning to England
(Haynes 143). Neither he nor Lopez did know d‟Avila was already in prison. Lopez sent
the answer which was used against Ferreira to persuade him Lopez betrayed him (Hume
136). Under the pressure and this false assumption, he testified there was a plot to get
rid of Don Antonio and the letters were connected to it (Hume 137). D‟Avila confirmed
However, two months after the detainment of Ferreira and d‟Avila Tinoco came
to England and was detained (Haynes 143). Two letters were found by him (ibid). He
was asked to explain the content of the letters and the whole matter (Hume 130).
However, his testimonies contradicted (Hume 140-1). This all caused that Essex and
both Cecils felt there was something more behind. Therefore they arrested and
Cecils did not really believed Lopez is guilty of plotting against the Queen, but
Essex, driven by his obsessive hatred to Spaniards and by private antipathy towards
Lopez, was resolved to gain at least something from the affair (Haynes 144-5). And this
he managed – all prisoners were cleverly interrogated again and again until they started
to change their testimonies in order to save their own necks (Hume 144). Eventually the
evidences against Lopez were gathered and even some kind of confession was drawn
55
from him (Haynes 146). On 7th June 1594 Lopez was executed even though Elizabeth
the secret service. Probably there was no conspiracy – it was created by the secret
service. However, this time not intentionally, but by mistake. As usual, Walsingham
devised one of his genial plans to get intelligence from Spain, but his death and his
secrecy put men, who were involved in the matter, into great danger. Secrecy was
essential for spy masters, but this plot shows it could be also quite a complication, as the
spy masters sometimes did not know about activities and agents of one another.
Because of that they occasionally, in the common effort and good will, unconsciously
stood against themselves. This was also caused by the fact they used agents to pursue
their own agendas which often contradicted. The account of Lopez conspiracy shows
very well that Essex‟s personal problems and agendas influenced the investigation so
much it is not possible to decide whether there really was some threat to the Queen or
was not.
56
8. Conclusion
independently, in common effort, under the direction of the spy masters conveyed by
the correspondence. These spy masters were, at the same time, the Privy Councillors,
advisors and courtiers of the Queen. From the detailed description of mechanics of the
secret service, it is apparent that the spy masters were “the Alfas and the Omegas” of
the secret service. Without their masterminds any operation would not have happened.
The types of secret service agents employed were different – some were mere
informers, others spies. They were performing different tasks and using different
techniques. They were all hired and paid by the spy masters. Later with some payments
government funds helped. In accounts of plots and activities of the secret service one
can see the examples of these different activities of different types of agents and get
some idea of the system of hiring and employing of agents. This all shows that the
From descriptions of events and plots which happened during Queen Elizabeth‟s
reign it is apparent, that the formation and functions of the Elizabethan secret service
were defined by the time in which it operated. The religious discontents inside and
outside England caused by the restoration of Protestantism in the country had proven
that the secret service was needed as a protective group which would prevent and
suppress threats to the Queen and the country. Hast of events, the difficult
communication and complicated relations between countries had shown the need of the
flow of information which the secret service could provide. The participation of agents
in sham plots had shown the dangerous influence personal agendas of Queen‟s Privy
57
The role of the secret service in discoveries of conspiracies seems to be simple –
the secret service was the protector of the Queen. The Throckmorton, the Babington and
the Ridolfi plots show it really was so, as by the exposal of these plots the real threat to
the Queen and to the country was destroyed. On the contrary, the role of the secret
service in the Lopez conspiracy and in the Parry plot was the role of spy masters‟ tool
used to achieve their own goals. To add to that, in the Norfolk conspiracy, in the
Stafford plot and defeat of Armada, the secret service played the role of protector of
Nevertheless, from these accounts one can learn that the spy masters and their
agents had to be and were on guard day and night, at all posts, because any information
they could get to, or any suspicious man they could detain, could turn out to be useful
for them, or lead them to the discovery of a threatening conspiracy. Every suspicious
case was handled by the secret service, just to be sure to repress the potential threat and
discontent – sometimes sooner than any direct evidence was available. Thus, even
though the Elizabethan secret service was not as elaborate organisation as the nowadays
secret services are, it was very needed group of individuals which executed its functions
very well and really ensured the Queen and the country lived and prospered for so many
years.
58
9. Czech Resume
společným cílem pod vedením špionážních mistrů. Tito špionážní mistři sbírali a
další rozkazy.
sledující dění kolem sebe, jiní byli špioni získávající informace vydíráním, podplácením
prosté a základní, i mezi nimi byly takové, které již byly více sofistikované. Např.
mistry, kteří stáli za každou operací tajné služby a jak je vidno, byli alfou a omegou
tohoto uskupení.
několika funkcí, které tajná služba měla. Členové tajné služby totiž primárně fungovali
jako jacísi středověcí novináři sbírající informace a předávající je dál. Proto také
zahraničních zemích a na dvorech cizích panovníků. Nejen tímto pak chránili svou zemi
a svou královnu. Avšak tajná služba nebyla čistě vládním nástrojem, jak je tomu dnes.
Agenti sloužili svým pánům, špionážním mistrům, kteří, ačkoli byli důležití státníci a
šlo jim především o blaho země, měli i své soukromé zájmy a cíle k jejichž dosažení
59
Je tedy jasné, že se tajná služba musela velkou měrou podílet na odhalování a
potlačování konspirací proti královně, které byly tehdy velmi časté. V případech
spiknutí vévody z Norfolku, únosu Johna Storyho nebo Lopezova a Parryho spiknutí
tajná služba úspěšně zabránila rozvoji plánů konspirátorů a zavčasu zatrhla činnost
spiknutí byla obrovskými úspěchy tajné služby a prvotřídními ukázkami jejich umění.
Bezezbytku jimi tajná služba splnila svou roli ochránce královny. Další ukázkou umění
a plnění funkcí tajné služby byla její účast na poražení španělské Armady. Tajná služba
pomohla získat množství informací a podniknout několik akcí, které pomohly nejenom
odhadnout sílu Armady, ale také ji oslabit a porazit. Plnila tak svou roli ochránce
Všechny tyto popisy událostí a činností tajné služby ukazují, že přestože nebyla
dnešní tajné služby, nebyla uskupením zdaleka tak primitivním, jak se na první pohled
může zdát. Alžbětinská tajná služba byla organizací vytvořenou pod vlivem a potřebami
své doby a byla skupinou velmi užitečnou, která plnila své povinnosti s velkým
60
10. Works Cited and Consulted
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Dobson, Michael, and Nicola J. Watson. England's Elizabeth. Oxford: Oxford UP,
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“Essex, Robert Devereux, 2nd earl of.” A Dictionary of British History. Ed. John
Cannon. Oxford UP, 2009. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford UP. Masaryk U,
Golding, Brian. “Burghley, William Cecil, 1st Lord.” The Oxford Companion to British
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Hume, Martin. “The Lopez Conspiracy.” Treason and Plot: Struggles for Catholic
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Hutchinson, Robert. Elizabeth's Spymaster: Francis Walsingham and the Secret War
Lockyer, Roger. “Cecil, Sir Robert.” The Oxford Companion to British History. Ed.
Martin, Ged. “Leicester, Robert Dudley, 1st earl of.” The Oxford Companion to British
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