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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HAN-HEG |
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HATTON, SIR CHRISTOPHER (15401591) ., lord chancellor of England and favourite of Queen Elizabeth, was a son of William Hatton (d. 1546) of Holdenhy, Northamptonshire, and was educated at St Mary Hall
House
Alencon, in 1581; was a member of the court which tried Anthony Babington in 1586; and was one of the commissioners who found Mary queen of Scots guilty. He besought Elizabeth not to marry the French prince; and according to one account repeatedly assured Mary that he would fetch her to London if the English queen died. Whether or no this story be true, Hatton's loyalty was not questioned; and he was the foremost figure in that striking scene in the House
secret marriage, Hatton appears to have remained single, and his large and valuable estates descended to his nephew, Sir William Newport, who took the name of Hatton. Sir Christopher was a knight of the Garter and chancellor of the university of Oxford. Elizabeth frequently showed her affection for her favourite in an extravagant and ostentatious manner. She called him her mouton, and forced the bishop of Ely to give him the freehold of Ely Place, Holborn, which became his residence, his name being perpetuated in the neighbouring Hatton Garden. Hatton is reported to have been a very mean man, but he patronized men of letters, and among his friends was Edmund Spenser. He wrote the fourth act of a tragedy, Tam-red and Gismund, and his death occasioned several panegyrics in both prose
When Hatton's nephew, Sir William Hatton, died without sons in 1597, his estates passed to a kinsman, another Sir Christopher Hatton (d. 161q), whose son and successor, Christopher (c. 16o5-167o), was elected a member of the Long Parliament in 1640, and (luring the Civil War was a partisan of Charles I. In 1643 he was created Baron Hatton of Kirby; and, acting as comptroller of the royal household, he represented the king during the negotiations at Uxbridge in 1645. Later he lived for some years in France, and after the Restoration was made a privy councillor and governor of Guernsey
governor of Guernsey
earl
See Sir N. H. Nicolas, Life and Times of Sir Christopher Halton (London, 1847); and Correspondence of the Family of Hatton, being chiefly Letters addressed to Christopher, first Viscount Hatton, 1601-1704, edited with introduction by E. M. Thompson (London, 1878). End of Article: HATTON, SIR CHRISTOPHER (15401591) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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