Miles Sindercombe, born in Kent and apprenticed …

Years: 1657 - 1657
February

Miles Sindercombe, born in Kent and apprenticed to a surgeon, had become a Roundhead and a Leveller during the English Civil War and in 1649 had taken part in the mutiny of his regiment, fleeing when it failed.

Reappearing in 1655 as a member of a cavalry regiment in Scotland, he had taken part in a plot to take control of the local army, which had failed; Sindercombe had fled to the Netherlands.

He had met another Leveller, Edward Sexby, in Flanders, and joined his plot to assassinate Cromwell in hope of restoring the Puritan republic as they see it.

Supplied by Sexby with money and weapons, Sindercome had returned to England in 1656 and gathered a group of co-conspirators, including renegade soldier John Cecil, apparent conman William Boyes and John Toope, a member of Cromwell's Life-Guards, who supplies the plotters with information about Cromwell's movements.

After a series of botched attempts, Cromwell's spymaster John Thurloe, who had already heard about the plot from his spies on the continent, had noticed the would-be-assassins, whose next idea is to burn down Whitehall Palace and the Lord Protector with it.

Boyes makes an explosive device out of gunpowder, tar and pitch and the group on January 8, 1657, plants it in the palace chapel.

However, Toope, who had had a change of heart, had revealed the plan to authorities.

When the plotters left, guards had disarmed the bomb.

Thurloe then ordered the arrest the plotters.

Cecil had been easily captured but Boyes had escaped; Sindercombe had fought the guards until one guard cut off part of his nose.

Cecil and Sindercombe have been sent to the Tower.

After Cecil decides to tell all, Thurloe, with Toope's aid, is able to reveal also Sexby's part in the plot and present his findings to the Parliament.

Sindercombe remains uncooperative.

He is on February 9, 1657, found guilty of treason when both Cecil and Toope testify against him.

Unwilling to face the humiliation of execution, Sindercombe commits suicide by poison in the Tower on February 13, 1657. (Sexby will die in the Tower in January 1658.)

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