Richard Roose | |
---|---|
Died | April 5, 1531 Smithfield, England |
Nationality | English |
Occupation | Cook |
Criminal charge | High treason |
Criminal penalty | Death by boiling |
Richard Roose (or Rouse; died 1531) was a cook to John Fisher, bishop of Rochester, who was executed for attempting to poison Fisher. Roose was the first person in England executed by being boiled to death.
According to one of Fisher's earliest biographers, Richard Hall, Richard Roose came into the Bishop's kitchen and put poison into the gruel which was prepared for the Bishop's dinner. When the Bishop was called into his dinner, he had no appetite. Instead, his guests and servants ate the poisoned meal. "One gentleman, named Mr. Bennet Curwen and an old widow, died suddenly, and the rest never recovered their health till their dying day".
Roose was soon apprehended, and admitted to adding what he believed were laxatives to the meal as a "jest." No one believed him.
Ambassador Eustace Chapuys wrote a slightly different version of the story to his master, Charles V, the nephew of Catherine of Aragon: "They say that the cook, having been immediately arrested... confessed at once that he had actually put into the broth some powders, which he had been given to understand would only make his fellow servants very sick without endangering their lives or doing them any harm. I have not yet been able to understand who it was who gave the cook such advice, nor for what purpose."
Henry VIII decided that Roose should be condemned by attainder without a trial. This was an unusual measure, since attainder was used for criminals who were at large. Roose, however, had been already arrested. The Parliament of England passed "An Acte for Poysoning," making willful murder by means of poison high treason, even if the victim was not the head of the government of the land. Boiling to death became the punishment for this crime.
The new law was applied to Richard Roose (an example of ex post facto law). He was boiled to death at Smithfield on April 5, 1531. According to an eyewitness: "He roared mighty loud, and divers women who were big with child did feel sick at the sight of what they saw, and were carried away half dead; and other men and women did not seem frightened by the boiling alive, but would prefer to see the headsman at his work."