Q&A: Remember, remember the fifth of November. Who is Guy Fawkes anyway?

An anonymous letter tipped off authorities, who searched the building and found Fawkes — who had been left in the cellars to set off the fuse — and the explosives in the early morning hours of Nov. 5, 1605, according to the Telegraph. Fawkes and his 

An anonymous letter tipped off authorities, who searched the building and found Fawkes — who had been left in the cellars to set off the fuse — and the explosives in the early morning hours of Nov. 5, 1605, according to the Telegraph. Fawkes and his 

Every Guy Fawkes night of my English childhood, we burned someone. A fake person, a dummy, a scarecrow, a guy, a Guy. We made him out of our fathers' old clothes, or our own, or our elder brothers'; we stuffed him with 

IT WAS an explosive night at St Helen's as Swansea celebrated bonfire night in style. Thankfully the rain eased up enough to allow room in the night sky for a barrage of fireworks that entertained an expectant crowd of around 2,000 and brought back 

Remember, remember the fifth of November.” It's that time of year again, when eager Brits celebrate Guy Fawkes Night with extravagant fireworks displays and bonfires to burn the traitorous Fawkes in effigy. But a new study