Restoration England 1660-1685Topic Summary

Topic Summary: The Popish Plot, 1678-81

Part of The Popish PlotGCSE History

This topic summary covers Topic Summary: The Popish Plot, 1678-81 within The Popish Plot for GCSE History. Revise The Popish Plot in Restoration England 1660-1685 for GCSE History with 8 exam-style questions and 4 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 14 of 14 in this topic. Use this topic summary to connect the idea to the wider topic before moving on to questions and flashcards.

Topic position

Section 14 of 14

Practice

8 questions

Recall

4 flashcards

Topic Summary: The Popish Plot, 1678-81

Key Terms
  • Popish Plot: Fabricated Catholic conspiracy invented by Titus Oates (1678) — led to 35 executions and the Exclusion Crisis
  • Whigs: Political grouping wanting to exclude Catholic James from succession; supported parliamentary power; named after Scottish Presbyterian rebels
  • Tories: Political grouping defending hereditary succession; supported strong monarchy; named after Irish Catholic bandits
  • Second Test Act (1678): Excluded Catholics from Parliament — lasted until 1829 (151 years)
  • Coleman letters: Genuine letters from James's secretary to French Jesuits — misread as evidence of assassination plot
Key Dates
  • September 1678: Oates makes allegations to Privy Council
  • October 1678: Godfrey murdered — creates panic, seems to confirm plot
  • November 1678: Coleman letters discovered
  • 1678: Second Test Act — Catholics excluded from Parliament
  • 1678-81: 35 Catholics executed on perjured evidence
  • 1681: Hysteria fades; Charles reasserts control
  • 1685: Oates convicted of perjury under James II
Key People
  • Titus Oates: Fabricator of the plot — serial liar, expelled from multiple institutions, eventually convicted of perjury 1685
  • Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey: Magistrate who took Oates's deposition; found murdered October 1678 — cause never solved
  • Earl of Shaftesbury: Whig leader who exploited the Plot to push Exclusion Bills
  • Oliver Plunkett: Catholic Archbishop of Armagh; last Catholic martyr executed in England (1681); canonised 1975
  • Edward Coleman: James's secretary whose letters were misread as evidence of conspiracy
Must-Know Facts
  • Plot was almost entirely fabricated — 35 innocent Catholics executed
  • OATES: Old fears, Apparent evidence, Test Act fallout, Exploitation, Shaftesbury — why it was believed
  • Godfrey's murder (October 1678) transformed rumour into national panic
  • Second Test Act 1678 — Catholics excluded from Parliament until 1829
  • Birth of Whigs (exclude James) and Tories (defend hereditary right)
  • Chain: Plot (1678) → Exclusion Crisis (1679-81) → Whigs and Tories born
  • Oates convicted of perjury 1685 — but 35 people already dead
Cross-Topic Links
  • → Religious Settlement (Topic 51): The Test Act 1673 (from the religious settlement) exposed James as Catholic — this single revelation made the Popish Plot plausible and gave Oates his opportunity five years later.
  • → Catholics & Dissenters (Topic 60): The Popish Plot represents the peak of anti-Catholic hysteria that the Clarendon Code had stoked for 15 years — Topic 60 provides the background context that made the Plot believable.
  • → Exclusion Crisis (Topic 59): The Popish Plot is the direct trigger for the Exclusion Crisis — without Oates's fabrication causing panic about a Catholic succession, the Exclusion Bills would never have had parliamentary support.
  • → Great Fire (Topic 54): Robert Hubert's wrongful hanging for starting the Fire (1666) foreshadows the 35 wrongful executions during the Plot — both show how anti-Catholic hysteria led to judicial injustice.
  • → Charles's Court (Topic 50): Charles's Catholic mistress Louise de Kérouaille and the Secret Treaty of Dover gave the Plot an air of credibility — court scandals provided the fertile ground for conspiracy theories.

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in The Popish Plot. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for The Popish Plot

In which year did Titus Oates first make his allegations about the Popish Plot?

  • A. 1670
  • B. 1673
  • C. 1681
  • D. 1678
1 markfoundation

Why was the murder of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey in October 1678 significant to the Popish Plot?

  • A. He was the magistrate who had taken Oates's deposition, and his murder was blamed on Catholics, causing widespread panic
  • B. He was the Secretary to the Duke of York, and his murder revealed the Coleman letters
  • C. He was the judge at the first Catholic treason trial, and his murder prevented the prosecution
  • D. He was a leading Jesuit priest whose death sparked Protestant celebrations
1 markfoundation

Quick Recall Flashcards

What was the Popish Plot?
A fabricated Catholic conspiracy invented by Titus Oates in 1678 — claiming Jesuits planned to kill Charles II and put his Catholic brother James on the throne. Oates's claims were false but caused mass hysteria, leading to 35 executions and directly triggering the Exclusion Crisis (1679-81).
Who was Titus Oates?
The man who fabricated the Popish Plot in 1678 — claimed Catholics planned to kill Charles II and replace him with the Catholic James. A serial liar who had been expelled from multiple institutions. Later convicted of perjury in 1685; flogged and imprisoned.

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