1 00:00:10,960 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 1: In the bows of Hampton Court Palace in the south 2 00:00:14,080 --> 00:00:19,200 Speaker 1: of England, In a sparsely furnished cell, a tall, wiry 3 00:00:19,320 --> 00:00:23,200 Speaker 1: man sat on a crude bed, resting his back against 4 00:00:23,280 --> 00:00:28,280 Speaker 1: the wall. His face was whiter than usual, his fair 5 00:00:28,320 --> 00:00:34,280 Speaker 1: hair and long wispy beard unkempt and bedraggled. To pass 6 00:00:34,320 --> 00:00:37,520 Speaker 1: the time, he gazed at the bricks on the opposite wall, 7 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:43,559 Speaker 1: running his eyes over their somewhat uneven arrangement. Whilst there 8 00:00:43,560 --> 00:00:47,519 Speaker 1: a pattern he could discern, there, some kind of formula 9 00:00:47,600 --> 00:00:53,440 Speaker 1: he could devise to replicate their unusual spacing. Eventually he 10 00:00:53,479 --> 00:00:57,800 Speaker 1: grew tired and ran sequences of prime numbers through his 11 00:00:57,920 --> 00:01:04,680 Speaker 1: head instead. The minute and hours stretched out interminably. Somewhere 12 00:01:04,720 --> 00:01:10,679 Speaker 1: off water dripped his only marker of time. The prisoner 13 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:15,679 Speaker 1: closed his eyes. Just four years earlier, he seemed to 14 00:01:15,720 --> 00:01:19,279 Speaker 1: have the whole continent of Europe at his feet. How 15 00:01:19,360 --> 00:01:23,520 Speaker 1: had it come to this? The sound of slow, heavy 16 00:01:23,560 --> 00:01:29,199 Speaker 1: footsteps approached, echoing on the flagstones of the passage outside. 17 00:01:29,840 --> 00:01:33,240 Speaker 1: Was this to be his release, some sort of reprieve? 18 00:01:34,200 --> 00:01:37,679 Speaker 1: Or were the footsteps a port end of something far, 19 00:01:38,280 --> 00:01:42,720 Speaker 1: far worse? After all, they were burning heretics at the 20 00:01:42,760 --> 00:01:46,480 Speaker 1: stake up and down the country. Was this to be 21 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:53,960 Speaker 1: his time? The man was John d famed mathematician, astrologer 22 00:01:54,840 --> 00:01:59,280 Speaker 1: and to some a true master of a cult magic. 23 00:02:00,480 --> 00:02:05,360 Speaker 1: You're listening to unexplained, and I'm Richard mc lean smith. 24 00:02:12,520 --> 00:02:16,880 Speaker 1: Back in the fifteen twenties in Tudor times, Rowland D 25 00:02:17,720 --> 00:02:21,400 Speaker 1: left Wales with his fifteen year old bride Jane, and 26 00:02:21,520 --> 00:02:26,360 Speaker 1: traveled to London, England, to make its fortune. At the time, 27 00:02:26,960 --> 00:02:31,000 Speaker 1: London was what was contained within the square mile walls 28 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:34,640 Speaker 1: of the City of London. It stretched along the north 29 00:02:34,720 --> 00:02:37,880 Speaker 1: bank of the River Thames, from the Fleet River in 30 00:02:37,919 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 1: the west, which is covered today by London's Farringdon Street, 31 00:02:42,760 --> 00:02:45,560 Speaker 1: all the way to the Tower of London in the east, 32 00:02:46,160 --> 00:02:50,800 Speaker 1: one of the many royal residences in the city. From 33 00:02:50,840 --> 00:02:54,880 Speaker 1: there the city stretched north up to the Church of 34 00:02:55,000 --> 00:02:59,760 Speaker 1: Saint Giles without Cripplegate, which still stands today in the 35 00:02:59,800 --> 00:03:04,800 Speaker 1: sh shadow of the Barbican Centre. Home to roughly fifty 36 00:03:04,840 --> 00:03:09,520 Speaker 1: thousand residents, The city was a vast rabbit warrant of narrow, 37 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:14,359 Speaker 1: muddy streets and tall timber framed buildings that blotted out 38 00:03:14,400 --> 00:03:20,040 Speaker 1: the sun while the Thames bustled with barges and sailing ships, 39 00:03:20,080 --> 00:03:23,960 Speaker 1: delivering all manner of wares, from fish to wine and 40 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:29,040 Speaker 1: textiles from all over the known world. When Roland and 41 00:03:29,160 --> 00:03:33,520 Speaker 1: Jane Dee arrived there, they found the city awash with 42 00:03:33,720 --> 00:03:38,440 Speaker 1: celebrations for the coronation of the new King, Henry the eighth. 43 00:03:40,080 --> 00:03:43,240 Speaker 1: Rowland was quick to secure work as a dealer in 44 00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: textiles and fine fabrics. He developed connections at the court 45 00:03:48,240 --> 00:03:51,880 Speaker 1: of King Henry, gaining a position as a courtier and 46 00:03:52,040 --> 00:03:57,960 Speaker 1: royal sewer making clothes for the king. In fifteen twenty seven, 47 00:03:58,480 --> 00:04:03,320 Speaker 1: Jane gave birth to a baby boy. She and Roland 48 00:04:03,680 --> 00:04:08,840 Speaker 1: christened him John. For what it's worth, the surname D 49 00:04:09,520 --> 00:04:14,120 Speaker 1: comes from the Welsh word do or black in English. 50 00:04:16,000 --> 00:04:19,680 Speaker 1: John D was born into a world that sat well 51 00:04:19,760 --> 00:04:24,080 Speaker 1: and truly at the center of the universe. Most people 52 00:04:24,160 --> 00:04:27,839 Speaker 1: back then, looking up at the sky saw a sun, 53 00:04:28,440 --> 00:04:32,599 Speaker 1: a moon, and planets that revolved around the Earth in 54 00:04:32,640 --> 00:04:38,599 Speaker 1: a series of concentric spheres. Beyond those celestial bodies were 55 00:04:38,640 --> 00:04:44,640 Speaker 1: the stars, and beyond that was heaven. It was also 56 00:04:44,680 --> 00:04:50,880 Speaker 1: a time when science saw no conflict between astronomical observations 57 00:04:51,320 --> 00:04:58,240 Speaker 1: and astrological forecasting. Many believed wholeheartedly that planetary motions and 58 00:04:58,320 --> 00:05:05,680 Speaker 1: positions could inflaruance human lives. An astrological birth chart or 59 00:05:05,839 --> 00:05:09,800 Speaker 1: natal chart, it is created by taking a record of 60 00:05:09,880 --> 00:05:14,200 Speaker 1: the position of the Moon, Sun, and known planets at 61 00:05:14,240 --> 00:05:18,559 Speaker 1: the exact date, time, and location of your birth, all 62 00:05:18,600 --> 00:05:22,839 Speaker 1: analyzed in relation to how they fall within the signs 63 00:05:22,880 --> 00:05:27,400 Speaker 1: of the zodiac. John D's own chart was one of 64 00:05:27,520 --> 00:05:32,159 Speaker 1: great contrasts. The Sun and the Moon were in what's 65 00:05:32,240 --> 00:05:38,080 Speaker 1: known as equal and opposite positions, suggesting a conflicted personality, 66 00:05:38,960 --> 00:05:42,720 Speaker 1: while the position of the planet Jupiter, together with the 67 00:05:42,760 --> 00:05:46,839 Speaker 1: Sun in the sign of cancer, portended that the young 68 00:05:46,960 --> 00:05:52,360 Speaker 1: de would become skilled in science, but it also foretold 69 00:05:52,680 --> 00:05:56,360 Speaker 1: that his life would be a difficult balance between joy 70 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:11,680 Speaker 1: and malevolence. John D was by all accounts precociously bright. 71 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:16,320 Speaker 1: After spending his early years at school in Chelmsford, Essex, 72 00:06:16,800 --> 00:06:20,320 Speaker 1: in the winter of fifteen forty two, he gained entry 73 00:06:20,360 --> 00:06:25,640 Speaker 1: into Saint John's College at Cambridge University. When he arrived 74 00:06:25,680 --> 00:06:30,320 Speaker 1: at the university, it was an especially febrile time for academia. 75 00:06:31,000 --> 00:06:35,680 Speaker 1: Long held medieval ideas were being loosened by teachings from 76 00:06:35,720 --> 00:06:41,880 Speaker 1: ancient Greece, along with Arabic mathematics. Then, in fifteen forty three, 77 00:06:42,240 --> 00:06:49,000 Speaker 1: Polish astronomer and mathematician Nicolaus Copernicus shook Western academia to 78 00:06:49,120 --> 00:06:55,919 Speaker 1: its core. Writing that year in his groundbreaking work The Revolutionibus, 79 00:06:56,480 --> 00:07:01,520 Speaker 1: Copernicus proposed the heretical theory that the Sun was actually 80 00:07:01,560 --> 00:07:05,320 Speaker 1: at the center of the universe, not the Earth, and 81 00:07:05,400 --> 00:07:09,240 Speaker 1: that it was the Earth that orbited it, not the 82 00:07:09,320 --> 00:07:14,200 Speaker 1: other way round, though many chose simply not to believe it, 83 00:07:14,800 --> 00:07:18,840 Speaker 1: whether they liked it or not, in that moment, many 84 00:07:19,000 --> 00:07:23,040 Speaker 1: of the founding principles of the known world had become 85 00:07:23,120 --> 00:07:29,560 Speaker 1: profoundly untethered. For someone as scientifically curious as John D. 86 00:07:30,400 --> 00:07:33,440 Speaker 1: It would no doubt have been an exciting but deeply 87 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:39,840 Speaker 1: unsettling revelation. Were it true, what other secrets might the 88 00:07:39,960 --> 00:07:45,120 Speaker 1: universe be hiding from us? By the end of fifteen 89 00:07:45,280 --> 00:07:49,080 Speaker 1: forty six, John D had established himself as a star 90 00:07:49,240 --> 00:07:53,800 Speaker 1: pupil at the university, but some had begun to wander 91 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:58,600 Speaker 1: about the unusually gifted student who remained somewhat of an 92 00:07:58,720 --> 00:08:06,960 Speaker 1: enigma despite his burgeoning reputation. One afternoon, students and teachers 93 00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:11,440 Speaker 1: packed elbow to elbow into the Great Hall of Cambridge's 94 00:08:11,480 --> 00:08:16,680 Speaker 1: Trinity College to watch the play piece by Aristophanes, which 95 00:08:16,720 --> 00:08:20,920 Speaker 1: had been put on by D. At one point, a 96 00:08:21,040 --> 00:08:25,480 Speaker 1: character named Tira Gaius mounted a prop made to look 97 00:08:25,600 --> 00:08:30,000 Speaker 1: like a giant sca of beetle under the flickering of candlelight. 98 00:08:30,480 --> 00:08:35,320 Speaker 1: The audience watched their mouths wide open in astonishment as 99 00:08:35,400 --> 00:08:39,600 Speaker 1: Tira Gaius and his giant beetle proceeded to rise up 100 00:08:39,640 --> 00:08:44,640 Speaker 1: into the air and fly right off the stage. When 101 00:08:44,720 --> 00:08:48,679 Speaker 1: D was cornered by students later who demanded to know 102 00:08:48,800 --> 00:08:52,760 Speaker 1: exactly how he'd done it, he refused to divulge. The 103 00:08:53,400 --> 00:08:58,320 Speaker 1: sum thought he'd used a combination of pulleys, mirrors, and 104 00:08:58,440 --> 00:09:03,000 Speaker 1: springs to achieve the effort, but others were not so sure. 105 00:09:04,280 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 1: Soon word began to circulate that the strange feet of 106 00:09:08,800 --> 00:09:17,079 Speaker 1: apparent levitation had been created by something more than mere stagecraft. 107 00:09:22,200 --> 00:09:27,760 Speaker 1: On graduating from university, such was D's academic reputation that 108 00:09:27,880 --> 00:09:31,360 Speaker 1: he was offered a position at Trinity College and became 109 00:09:31,440 --> 00:09:35,600 Speaker 1: one of its founding fellows. But something else was calling 110 00:09:35,679 --> 00:09:41,880 Speaker 1: him a growing interest in astrology. Whenever the skies were 111 00:09:41,920 --> 00:09:45,920 Speaker 1: clear at night, he set up his homemade observing equipment 112 00:09:46,480 --> 00:09:51,320 Speaker 1: and gazed up at the sparkling firmament and wondered how 113 00:09:51,520 --> 00:09:54,640 Speaker 1: was it exactly he thought that the position of the 114 00:09:54,720 --> 00:09:58,560 Speaker 1: planets were able to exert an influence on our lives. 115 00:10:00,120 --> 00:10:04,200 Speaker 1: It then occurred to him that perhaps each celestial body 116 00:10:04,600 --> 00:10:08,400 Speaker 1: emitted rays of some kind of force that acted on 117 00:10:08,559 --> 00:10:15,000 Speaker 1: all other bodies, including our own. Over time, Dee became 118 00:10:15,120 --> 00:10:21,440 Speaker 1: dissatisfied with the stuffy conservative attitudes at Cambridge University. He 119 00:10:21,520 --> 00:10:24,920 Speaker 1: fixed his sights on the Low Countries, where a growing 120 00:10:24,960 --> 00:10:30,600 Speaker 1: galaxy of intellectual stars were beginning to emerge. Shortly after 121 00:10:30,679 --> 00:10:34,480 Speaker 1: the death of Henry the Eighth in January fifteen forty seven, 122 00:10:35,200 --> 00:10:39,440 Speaker 1: John d arrived in Louver, near Brussels, where the best 123 00:10:39,520 --> 00:10:43,520 Speaker 1: university in the region was to be found. There he 124 00:10:43,679 --> 00:10:48,720 Speaker 1: joined a lively group surrounding the esteemed Dutch physician, mathematician 125 00:10:48,840 --> 00:10:54,960 Speaker 1: and cartographer Herma Frisius. Among them was also Flemish cartographer 126 00:10:55,280 --> 00:11:00,920 Speaker 1: Gerardus Mercata. Makata had become famous our to creating a 127 00:11:01,000 --> 00:11:05,600 Speaker 1: new map of the world that effectively enabled movement across 128 00:11:05,640 --> 00:11:09,480 Speaker 1: a globe to be accurately recorded on a flat two 129 00:11:09,559 --> 00:11:13,120 Speaker 1: D surface with the use of what are known as 130 00:11:13,280 --> 00:11:17,720 Speaker 1: rum lines, a technique he invented that is still used 131 00:11:17,760 --> 00:11:22,200 Speaker 1: on nautical charts today. All of which is to say 132 00:11:22,720 --> 00:11:27,040 Speaker 1: John D's chosen social circle at the time included among 133 00:11:27,120 --> 00:11:30,760 Speaker 1: them some of the finest minds the world has ever known, 134 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:35,679 Speaker 1: and he was very much regarded as their equal. D 135 00:11:36,200 --> 00:11:40,760 Speaker 1: was greatly inspired by the Mall, especially Mercata, who was 136 00:11:40,880 --> 00:11:45,720 Speaker 1: very much at the forefront of human endeavor. D would watch, 137 00:11:46,080 --> 00:11:51,160 Speaker 1: wrapped with attention, over Mercata's shoulder, as he constructed maps 138 00:11:51,360 --> 00:11:56,280 Speaker 1: and globes of the world's emerging geography, supplemented by new 139 00:11:56,360 --> 00:12:02,080 Speaker 1: reports from explorers like Christopher Columbus. There was something so 140 00:12:02,360 --> 00:12:06,720 Speaker 1: undeniable and concrete about the maps he made. They were 141 00:12:06,760 --> 00:12:11,120 Speaker 1: the physical equivalent of light being shone into a dark space, 142 00:12:11,760 --> 00:12:16,360 Speaker 1: pushing back the borders of the known world. In many ways, 143 00:12:16,840 --> 00:12:21,000 Speaker 1: this was what D wanted to do himself, not with 144 00:12:21,120 --> 00:12:25,360 Speaker 1: the material world, but rather with the hidden truths of 145 00:12:25,520 --> 00:12:31,840 Speaker 1: all existence. In fifteen fifty D went to Paris and 146 00:12:32,000 --> 00:12:36,760 Speaker 1: lectured on Euclid's Elements to a sold out and enthusiastic crowd. 147 00:12:37,720 --> 00:12:41,360 Speaker 1: His talks were so well received that the following year 148 00:12:41,679 --> 00:12:45,720 Speaker 1: he was offered an appointment as professor of mathematics in Paris, 149 00:12:46,440 --> 00:12:54,480 Speaker 1: which he declined, feeling it was time to return to England. 150 00:12:58,040 --> 00:13:01,840 Speaker 1: John d arrived back in England in fifteen fifty one 151 00:13:02,240 --> 00:13:07,319 Speaker 1: to find a country he barely recognized. Twenty years previously, 152 00:13:07,800 --> 00:13:10,760 Speaker 1: Henry the Eighth had thrown the nation and the Catholic 153 00:13:10,840 --> 00:13:15,160 Speaker 1: world into turmoil when he secretly married Anne Boleyn while 154 00:13:15,280 --> 00:13:20,120 Speaker 1: still married to his first wife, Catherine of Arrogant. At 155 00:13:20,120 --> 00:13:24,160 Speaker 1: the time, the predominant religious power in the country was 156 00:13:24,200 --> 00:13:27,840 Speaker 1: the Catholic Church, who even the King of England was 157 00:13:27,920 --> 00:13:33,160 Speaker 1: ultimately answerable to. Henry asked the Pope to grant him 158 00:13:33,200 --> 00:13:36,400 Speaker 1: a divorce in order to marry Anne Boleyn, but the 159 00:13:36,480 --> 00:13:41,040 Speaker 1: Pope refused, so when Henry went ahead and did it anyway, 160 00:13:41,480 --> 00:13:48,199 Speaker 1: he was humiliatingly excommunicated. Not one to take such things lightly, 161 00:13:48,760 --> 00:13:52,680 Speaker 1: King Henry's response was to simply create a law that 162 00:13:52,840 --> 00:13:56,200 Speaker 1: made him the supreme head of the Church of England, 163 00:13:56,800 --> 00:14:01,400 Speaker 1: instantly removing the authority of the Pope and Catholicism over 164 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:06,920 Speaker 1: the country, and so began the English Reformation. For the 165 00:14:06,960 --> 00:14:11,280 Speaker 1: next few years, King Henry oversaw a violent and bloody 166 00:14:11,320 --> 00:14:17,560 Speaker 1: renunciation of all things Catholic in favor of Protestantism. Anyone 167 00:14:17,760 --> 00:14:24,120 Speaker 1: deemed too influential who didn't conform was simply executed. When 168 00:14:24,160 --> 00:14:27,800 Speaker 1: Henry the Eighth died in fifteen forty seven, his nine 169 00:14:27,840 --> 00:14:32,560 Speaker 1: year old son Edward ascended to the throne. Having been 170 00:14:32,640 --> 00:14:38,680 Speaker 1: raised a Protestant, Edward, or more precisely, his advisers, intensified 171 00:14:38,720 --> 00:14:42,920 Speaker 1: his father's campaign and destroyed all symbols of the Catholic 172 00:14:43,040 --> 00:14:47,440 Speaker 1: faith they could find. When John Dee arrived back in 173 00:14:47,560 --> 00:14:52,160 Speaker 1: London four years later, hundreds of churches had been stripped bare. 174 00:14:52,840 --> 00:14:56,400 Speaker 1: Even the Great Crucifix from the altar of Saint Paul's 175 00:14:56,400 --> 00:15:03,360 Speaker 1: Cathedral was forcibly removed. When d whose own religious affiliations 176 00:15:03,480 --> 00:15:07,600 Speaker 1: were not entirely clear, requested an audience with the then 177 00:15:07,800 --> 00:15:11,800 Speaker 1: twelve year old King, he was understandably a little nervous, 178 00:15:12,600 --> 00:15:17,840 Speaker 1: but he needed cash to continue his academic ambitions. D 179 00:15:18,480 --> 00:15:21,440 Speaker 1: was duly invited to make his pitch to the king. 180 00:15:22,400 --> 00:15:26,400 Speaker 1: On his arrival, he handed the young Edward two books 181 00:15:26,440 --> 00:15:31,000 Speaker 1: on astronomy he'd written. It's easy to imagine the childish 182 00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:35,400 Speaker 1: Edward swinging his feet with boredom on his giant throne 183 00:15:35,720 --> 00:15:39,800 Speaker 1: as he leafed absent mindedly through the thick, heavy tomes, 184 00:15:40,360 --> 00:15:43,320 Speaker 1: while D did his best to impress on him the 185 00:15:43,360 --> 00:15:48,360 Speaker 1: importance of his work. Either it was the flowery dedication 186 00:15:48,680 --> 00:15:51,440 Speaker 1: to the young King at the front of each volume 187 00:15:51,520 --> 00:15:56,080 Speaker 1: that did the trick, or simply the boy's boredom. Either way, 188 00:15:56,600 --> 00:16:00,320 Speaker 1: thankfully for D, he agreed to grant him an annual 189 00:16:00,440 --> 00:16:06,720 Speaker 1: stipend of one hundred crowns, a hefty sum for the times. Overjoyed, 190 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:11,000 Speaker 1: D promptly bought a property in Upton, a small village 191 00:16:11,080 --> 00:16:15,240 Speaker 1: near London, where he also established himself as a local chaplain. 192 00:16:16,720 --> 00:16:21,920 Speaker 1: At some point word of D's academic abilities reached John Dudley, 193 00:16:22,320 --> 00:16:28,200 Speaker 1: the Duke of Northumberland, King Edward's official protector. Dudley hired 194 00:16:28,280 --> 00:16:31,720 Speaker 1: John D as an adviser for himself and as a 195 00:16:31,760 --> 00:16:36,040 Speaker 1: tutor to his children. By the end of fifteen fifty one, 196 00:16:36,520 --> 00:16:40,520 Speaker 1: D was firmly established as a man of the highest intellect, 197 00:16:41,040 --> 00:16:46,280 Speaker 1: well known as an expert astronomer and mathematician. But people 198 00:16:46,560 --> 00:16:50,480 Speaker 1: had begun talking. What exactly had he been up to 199 00:16:50,840 --> 00:16:55,360 Speaker 1: while he was abroad? They wondered, and just how, after 200 00:16:55,440 --> 00:16:59,720 Speaker 1: being away for so long had he so effortlessly found 201 00:16:59,760 --> 00:17:14,359 Speaker 1: himself at the heart of English government. In fifteen fifty two, 202 00:17:14,600 --> 00:17:19,520 Speaker 1: King Edward sixth fell Ill, the Duke of Northumberland, called 203 00:17:19,520 --> 00:17:24,560 Speaker 1: on the services of famed Italian physician and astrologer Gerlimo 204 00:17:24,720 --> 00:17:29,960 Speaker 1: Cardano to attend to the boy. A physical examination revealed 205 00:17:30,119 --> 00:17:34,399 Speaker 1: the king was suffering from what we know today as tuberculosis. 206 00:17:35,440 --> 00:17:39,520 Speaker 1: Later that day, when Cardano returned to his quarters, he 207 00:17:39,640 --> 00:17:43,359 Speaker 1: drew a horoscope for the king. It was a risky 208 00:17:43,400 --> 00:17:46,840 Speaker 1: thing to do, since reading the horoscope of a king 209 00:17:47,400 --> 00:17:53,200 Speaker 1: was considered espionage by means of magic, and so Cardano 210 00:17:53,200 --> 00:17:56,439 Speaker 1: did not share with any of the king's council the 211 00:17:56,560 --> 00:17:59,920 Speaker 1: dark omens that were revealed to him alone in his 212 00:18:00,320 --> 00:18:05,120 Speaker 1: room that night. Over the next few months, the king's 213 00:18:05,119 --> 00:18:11,679 Speaker 1: condition steadily deteriorated. Then, one violent stormy night, on the 214 00:18:11,760 --> 00:18:16,320 Speaker 1: sixth of July fifteen fifty three, the young king died 215 00:18:16,560 --> 00:18:20,879 Speaker 1: at the age of only fifteen. Because King Edward had 216 00:18:20,920 --> 00:18:24,440 Speaker 1: no heirs of his own, and his sister Mary was Catholic, 217 00:18:24,960 --> 00:18:29,400 Speaker 1: he nominated his close relation, Lady Jane Gray, to inherit 218 00:18:29,440 --> 00:18:33,320 Speaker 1: the crown, and so, with the support of the Duke 219 00:18:33,359 --> 00:18:38,200 Speaker 1: of Northumberland, whose fourth son had married Jane Gray only 220 00:18:38,280 --> 00:18:43,880 Speaker 1: months before, she was thrust onto the throne. Within days, 221 00:18:44,240 --> 00:18:48,160 Speaker 1: it became clear that Edward's sister had far more support 222 00:18:48,320 --> 00:18:53,280 Speaker 1: for the role. After only six days, Queen Lady Jane 223 00:18:53,320 --> 00:19:00,960 Speaker 1: Gray was unceremoniously deposed, with Mary taking her place. A 224 00:19:01,040 --> 00:19:05,840 Speaker 1: month later, John Dee's great supporter, the Duke of Northumberland, 225 00:19:06,440 --> 00:19:10,360 Speaker 1: was beheaded in front of a huge crowd just outside 226 00:19:10,480 --> 00:19:15,520 Speaker 1: the Tower of London. Lady Jane Gray was thrown into 227 00:19:15,560 --> 00:19:19,800 Speaker 1: the Tower of London Prison before also being beheaded in 228 00:19:19,920 --> 00:19:24,639 Speaker 1: February fifteen fifty four. She's thought to have been either 229 00:19:24,760 --> 00:19:30,520 Speaker 1: sixteen or seventeen at the time. The new Queen, who 230 00:19:30,520 --> 00:19:34,080 Speaker 1: had become known as Bloody Mary, began a purge of 231 00:19:34,160 --> 00:19:40,520 Speaker 1: Northumberland's friends and sympathizers, and yet somehow John Dee was 232 00:19:40,560 --> 00:19:46,160 Speaker 1: appointed as an adviser to the new queen. His father, Rowland, however, 233 00:19:46,600 --> 00:19:50,800 Speaker 1: was not so fortunate. Rowland, who had prospered greatly under 234 00:19:50,880 --> 00:19:53,840 Speaker 1: King Henry the Eighth and then his son, King Edward, 235 00:19:54,440 --> 00:20:03,000 Speaker 1: was arrested and accused of being one of Northumberland's conspirators. 236 00:20:07,080 --> 00:20:10,680 Speaker 1: There was every likelihood that the charges against Rowland d 237 00:20:10,960 --> 00:20:15,200 Speaker 1: were fabricated, and luckily for him, he was released fairly 238 00:20:15,320 --> 00:20:19,160 Speaker 1: soon after his arrest, but in punishment for his Protestant 239 00:20:19,240 --> 00:20:23,560 Speaker 1: sympathies and connections, Roland was stripped of his assets and 240 00:20:23,600 --> 00:20:29,639 Speaker 1: his royal appointment. Two years later, things got worse. Queen 241 00:20:29,720 --> 00:20:36,600 Speaker 1: Mary's supporters began burning heretics. The Catholic Queen had come 242 00:20:36,640 --> 00:20:40,160 Speaker 1: to the throne very much against the wishes of many 243 00:20:40,240 --> 00:20:44,160 Speaker 1: Protestants in England, who now all feared for their safety, 244 00:20:44,920 --> 00:20:48,439 Speaker 1: and they were right to be scared. Over the next 245 00:20:48,480 --> 00:20:52,480 Speaker 1: few years, although nowhere near as many as King Henry 246 00:20:52,520 --> 00:20:56,639 Speaker 1: the Eighth had executed, three hundred people were burned at 247 00:20:56,680 --> 00:21:02,360 Speaker 1: the stake. Anyone, regardless of birth or rank, was potentially 248 00:21:02,359 --> 00:21:06,439 Speaker 1: a target. It was perhaps not the best time to 249 00:21:06,520 --> 00:21:09,840 Speaker 1: be dabbling in anything that might seem at odds with 250 00:21:09,960 --> 00:21:15,840 Speaker 1: the Catholic faith, but John D couldn't help himself. One night, 251 00:21:15,920 --> 00:21:19,000 Speaker 1: at his home in Upton, he drew up a series 252 00:21:19,160 --> 00:21:24,280 Speaker 1: of strange looking squares within squares, and at each intersecting 253 00:21:24,400 --> 00:21:30,560 Speaker 1: line he placed various dates and occult looking symbols. There 254 00:21:30,640 --> 00:21:34,000 Speaker 1: was one for Queen Mary and one for her husband, 255 00:21:34,280 --> 00:21:38,400 Speaker 1: King Philip of Spain, and one two for her half 256 00:21:38,520 --> 00:21:44,719 Speaker 1: sister Elizabeth. D noted with relief that the exact moment 257 00:21:44,840 --> 00:21:48,639 Speaker 1: of Mary and Philip's wedding eleven a m on the 258 00:21:48,680 --> 00:21:53,480 Speaker 1: twenty fifth of July fifteen fifty four, coincided with the 259 00:21:53,600 --> 00:21:59,160 Speaker 1: rising sign of Libra, ruled by Venus. This d knew 260 00:21:59,160 --> 00:22:02,920 Speaker 1: well was a good omen for the partnership, but that 261 00:22:03,160 --> 00:22:07,880 Speaker 1: was where his relief ended. As Mary's sign came together, 262 00:22:08,480 --> 00:22:11,480 Speaker 1: he felt something shift in the pit of his stomach. 263 00:22:12,520 --> 00:22:17,199 Speaker 1: Her reign, it seemed, would not end well according to 264 00:22:17,280 --> 00:22:21,080 Speaker 1: the chart. In fact, she had only years left to live. 265 00:22:22,119 --> 00:22:27,840 Speaker 1: Her sister Elizabeth's horoscope foretold something far brighter by comparison. 266 00:22:28,920 --> 00:22:32,960 Speaker 1: Dee hurriedly hid the horoscopes away and went to bed. 267 00:22:34,200 --> 00:22:38,160 Speaker 1: Over the next few months, John d became increasingly nervous 268 00:22:38,520 --> 00:22:42,040 Speaker 1: as one by one his closest friends those that were 269 00:22:42,040 --> 00:22:46,280 Speaker 1: still alive, were either arrested or forced to flee abroad. 270 00:22:47,520 --> 00:22:51,760 Speaker 1: Then he received the disturbing news that the authorities were 271 00:22:51,800 --> 00:22:57,879 Speaker 1: after him. Somehow they'd found out about the horoscopes. He 272 00:22:57,960 --> 00:23:01,520 Speaker 1: managed to elude the authorities for two days, but in 273 00:23:01,600 --> 00:23:06,720 Speaker 1: May fifteen fifty five, the Queen's Sheriffs found and arrested him. 274 00:23:07,440 --> 00:23:10,440 Speaker 1: They took him to Hampden Court, where he was put 275 00:23:10,520 --> 00:23:15,600 Speaker 1: in solitary confinement. The charges against him were numerous, but 276 00:23:15,840 --> 00:23:20,120 Speaker 1: most serious were those that highlighted his skills in what 277 00:23:20,240 --> 00:23:24,560 Speaker 1: had come to be seen increasingly as the occult. D 278 00:23:24,880 --> 00:23:30,920 Speaker 1: was eventually charged with calculating, conjuring, and casting the Queen's Horoscope, 279 00:23:31,359 --> 00:23:36,600 Speaker 1: which was considered a treasonous act. The long standing rumor 280 00:23:36,640 --> 00:23:40,280 Speaker 1: that John D was some kind of magician had come 281 00:23:40,320 --> 00:23:50,840 Speaker 1: home to roost. As it turned out, John D had 282 00:23:50,880 --> 00:23:55,840 Speaker 1: been informed against by a lawyer named George Ferrers, who, 283 00:23:55,880 --> 00:24:01,040 Speaker 1: for reasons unknown, apparently bore a grudge against D. Though 284 00:24:01,080 --> 00:24:05,199 Speaker 1: it isn't known exactly what Ferrers knew about D and 285 00:24:05,320 --> 00:24:09,760 Speaker 1: his activities, he accused him of using spells to blind 286 00:24:09,840 --> 00:24:14,920 Speaker 1: one of his children and kill another. D was brought 287 00:24:15,000 --> 00:24:18,600 Speaker 1: in front of a hostile tribunal in the Star Chamber, 288 00:24:19,119 --> 00:24:23,320 Speaker 1: the main court at the Royal Palace of Westminster, better 289 00:24:23,400 --> 00:24:27,000 Speaker 1: known to day as the location of the UK's House 290 00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:31,160 Speaker 1: of Commons and House of Lords. The court was packed 291 00:24:31,359 --> 00:24:36,600 Speaker 1: with Queen Mary's most loyal supporters. Shortly after the hearing, 292 00:24:37,280 --> 00:24:39,960 Speaker 1: D was ordered to be taken back to his cell 293 00:24:40,359 --> 00:24:44,040 Speaker 1: to await sentencing, where we first found him at the 294 00:24:44,080 --> 00:24:48,520 Speaker 1: beginning of this episode. Many would no doubt have felt 295 00:24:48,520 --> 00:24:52,160 Speaker 1: it a foregone conclusion that D was about to get 296 00:24:52,240 --> 00:24:57,400 Speaker 1: his comeuppance. Perhaps D feared it too, or perhaps not, 297 00:24:58,520 --> 00:25:03,480 Speaker 1: Because despite the acttions, D was released and told that 298 00:25:03,600 --> 00:25:08,000 Speaker 1: he was free to go. In the subsequent months, D 299 00:25:08,320 --> 00:25:13,000 Speaker 1: was subjected to a series of scathing examinations for suspected 300 00:25:13,040 --> 00:25:18,040 Speaker 1: heresy and for harboring Protestant sympathies by the Catholic Bishop 301 00:25:18,080 --> 00:25:23,960 Speaker 1: of London, Edmund Bonner. Bonner, a stern and imposing man, 302 00:25:24,440 --> 00:25:28,040 Speaker 1: was hugely feared up and down the country as the 303 00:25:28,119 --> 00:25:32,560 Speaker 1: man tasked with rooting out heretics for the Queen. His 304 00:25:32,760 --> 00:25:38,439 Speaker 1: word was enough to ensure your doom. Surely there was 305 00:25:38,520 --> 00:25:42,120 Speaker 1: no way that D would come out of this alive too. 306 00:25:43,160 --> 00:25:46,840 Speaker 1: But not only did he escape any further punishment, he 307 00:25:46,960 --> 00:25:51,000 Speaker 1: was given a position in the Catholic Church, becoming Bonner's 308 00:25:51,040 --> 00:25:57,280 Speaker 1: personal chaplain. A year later, the Queen issued a full pardon. 309 00:25:58,720 --> 00:26:03,520 Speaker 1: In John Fox's famous book Acts and Monuments, a History 310 00:26:03,560 --> 00:26:08,840 Speaker 1: of Protestant Martyrdom, published in fifteen sixty three, D was 311 00:26:08,920 --> 00:26:13,440 Speaker 1: described as the great conjurer who drifted in and out 312 00:26:13,480 --> 00:26:19,080 Speaker 1: of interrogations of suspected heretics at will, so well had 313 00:26:19,080 --> 00:26:22,879 Speaker 1: he ingratiated himself with the new Court and their Queen. 314 00:26:23,840 --> 00:26:27,520 Speaker 1: John D was even said to be living at Bonnard's 315 00:26:27,680 --> 00:26:33,600 Speaker 1: temside residence, Fulham Palace. For a while. Did John D 316 00:26:34,359 --> 00:26:37,920 Speaker 1: secretly profess himself to be an adherent of the Catholic 317 00:26:38,040 --> 00:26:43,000 Speaker 1: faith under the fear of being pronounced a heretic? Or 318 00:26:43,040 --> 00:26:47,159 Speaker 1: had something else a little more magical been at play. 319 00:26:49,160 --> 00:26:54,239 Speaker 1: Early in fifteen fifty six, D approached Queen Mary with 320 00:26:54,320 --> 00:26:58,400 Speaker 1: a request to help fund a national library, an idea 321 00:26:58,520 --> 00:27:01,840 Speaker 1: he'd been mulling over for some time. It would be 322 00:27:01,880 --> 00:27:05,919 Speaker 1: a place where all the most important academic and religious 323 00:27:05,960 --> 00:27:11,560 Speaker 1: texts could be stored together. However, the Queen declined the request, 324 00:27:12,119 --> 00:27:15,520 Speaker 1: prompting D to move to his mother's house in Mortlake 325 00:27:15,840 --> 00:27:20,679 Speaker 1: in Richmond upon Thames. There he set about constructing his 326 00:27:20,800 --> 00:27:25,480 Speaker 1: own library and a base for his future scientific endeavors. 327 00:27:26,280 --> 00:27:30,639 Speaker 1: Among those academic and religious texts, he added a few 328 00:27:30,720 --> 00:27:40,160 Speaker 1: more esoteric manuscripts, and then, two years later, in fifteen 329 00:27:40,280 --> 00:27:47,720 Speaker 1: fifty eight, just as D's horoscope had predicted, Queen Mary died. Suddenly, 330 00:27:49,080 --> 00:27:53,040 Speaker 1: the wheels of D's world were about to turn again, 331 00:27:54,000 --> 00:28:04,520 Speaker 1: and he was just getting started. You've been listening to 332 00:28:04,680 --> 00:28:10,879 Speaker 1: Unexplained Season seven, episode eighteen, A Dance with Mister d 333 00:28:12,040 --> 00:28:16,840 Speaker 1: Part one of four, Part two will be released next Friday, 334 00:28:17,480 --> 00:28:22,760 Speaker 1: March twenty ninth. This episode was written by Diane Hope 335 00:28:23,240 --> 00:28:28,640 Speaker 1: and Richard McLain Smith. Unexplained as an Avy Club Productions 336 00:28:28,680 --> 00:28:33,240 Speaker 1: podcast created by Richard mclin Smith. All other elements of 337 00:28:33,280 --> 00:28:36,679 Speaker 1: the podcast, including the music, are also produced by me 338 00:28:36,960 --> 00:28:42,040 Speaker 1: Richard McLain Smith Unexplained. The book and audiobook, with stories 339 00:28:42,120 --> 00:28:45,040 Speaker 1: never before featured on the show, is now available to 340 00:28:45,080 --> 00:28:50,400 Speaker 1: buy worldwide. You can purchase from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Waterstones, 341 00:28:50,480 --> 00:28:54,280 Speaker 1: and other bookstores. Please subscribe to and rate the show 342 00:28:54,600 --> 00:28:57,520 Speaker 1: wherever you get your podcasts, and feel free to get 343 00:28:57,520 --> 00:29:00,960 Speaker 1: in touch with any thoughts or ideas regarding the stories 344 00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:03,760 Speaker 1: you've heard on the show. Perhaps you have an explanation 345 00:29:03,840 --> 00:29:06,440 Speaker 1: of your own you'd like to share. You can find 346 00:29:06,480 --> 00:29:10,000 Speaker 1: out more at Unexplained podcast dot com and reach us 347 00:29:10,040 --> 00:29:14,840 Speaker 1: online through Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at Facebook 348 00:29:14,880 --> 00:29:18,040 Speaker 1: dot com, Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast