Mirror mirror on the wall, who really killed Thomas Overbury? We’re getting deep into what might just be the weirdest trial we’ve ever covered on this show, with accusations flying about witchcraft, a poisoned enema, Spanish treachery, and a cameo from Sir Francis Bacon.
Featured image: An engraving of Sir Thomas Overbury from around 1615 or 1616, along with a poem praising the dead man’s good character. (Image source)
Sir Edward Coke in 1615. (Image source)
Sir Francis Bacon, painted in 1617. (Image source)
A playbill for a dramatization of the death of Sir Thomas Overbury from 1777. So over a century later, this story was still in circulation. (Image source)
Sources
- Unnatural Murder: Poison At the Court Of James l
From Basilikon Doron, King James I, part 2
Scandals of the Royal Palaces: An Intimate Memoir of Royals Behaving Badly
1st duke of Lennox, Esmé Stewart
Parliaments, 1604-1629
Overbury Story 500 Years in England and America
Did Henry FitzRoy and Edward VI Die of the Same Illness?