John Habington or Abington (1515-1581) was an English courtier and administrator.
A son of Richard Habington and his wife Eleanor Hanley of Hanley William, John Habington's parental home was at Brockhampton near Bromyard in Herefordshire.[1] He was born at Hanley William in Worcestershire, where his parents took refuge from the plague in Bromyard.[2]
Berwick-upon-Tweed
Habington served the royal court in various administrative and financial roles. In October 1557 he was stationed at Berwick-upon-Tweed, involved in the supply of rations for the garrison and army.[3] He was made Surveyor-General of the Victuals at Berwick.[4] The Earl of Northumberland was pleased by the provisions for his house, but Habington discussed his resignation with the Privy Council in April 1559.[5] This role of victualler at Berwick officially ended in November 1560, and Habington was instructed to give his accounts and the custody of storehouses at Berwick and Lindisfarne to Valentine Browne the new Surveyor General of Berwick. Browne had not arrived by 23 February 1561, when Habington wrote to William Cecil from Berwick about the supplies.[6]
Hindlip Hall
Habington bought and rebuilt Hindlip Hall near Worcester, where a fireplace was dated 1572. His portrait wearing a fur-edged robe survives.[10] Elizabeth I came to Worcestershire in 1575. She stayed at the Bishop's Palace in Worcester and visited Hindlip on 16 August.[11] Habington attended the queen when she hunted at Hallow Park near Worcester on 18 August. He was keeper of the park (the manor of Hallow belonged to his sister, Dorothy Habington),[12] and Elizabeth discussed with him making a gift of the two buck deer she had killed to the town's bailiffs.[13] Elizabeth lost a gold button that day. She gave his wife Dorothy Habington a French kirtle of russet during her visit in 1575.[14]
In October 1576, Elizabeth I gave John and Dorothy Habington a lease of the royal manors of Hallow and Blockley in return for flour to make the queen's manchet bread when she was in Worcestershire. Dorothy signed a sealed a document connected with the gift using a seal ring stone engraved with a portrait of Henry VIII. The ring is now held by the Victoria and Albert Museum.[15]
John Habington died in 1581 and was buried at Hindlip. His eldest son Thomas and daughter-in-law Mary Habington placed a memorial tablet in the church.[16] The brewery at Syon was not a success, as it was claimed London water made better beer, and it closed soon after his death.[17]
John Habington's first wife was Catharine Wykes, daughter of John Wykes, whose family was from Moreton Jeffries in Herefordshire.[18] Catharine Wykes was John Habington's cousin.[19]
His second wife was Dorothy Bradbelt, a chamberer to Elizabeth I. They married in 1567. As a wedding gift, Elizabeth gave Dorothy a Flanders gown of black velvet with satin made by her tailor Walter Fyshe.[20] Elizabeth gave them property, including a lease of the rectory of Utterby in Lincolnshire, confirmed in June 1570.[21]
There is some doubt over details of the family tree.[22] John Habington's children included:
- Thomas Habington (1560–1647), born at Thorpe Park near Chertsey,[23] who married Mary Parker, a daughter of Edward Parker, 12th Baron Morley, their children included the poet William Habington. Mary Habington used to be considered as the author of the letter alerting her brother William Parker, 4th Baron Monteagle to the Gunpowder Plot. She signed her letters "Mary Abington".[24] A portrait at Hindlip said to be hers was engraved for Treadway Russell Nash's Collections for the history of Worcestershire.[25]
- Edward Habington
- Richard Habington, who married (1) Bridget Drury (2) Constance Edmonson.[26] His children included a Dorothy Habington (said by Nash to have been brought up at court and a zealous Protestant).[27]
- A daughter who was the subject of a marriage negotiation in 1582 for Matthew Browne a son of Thomas Browne of Betchworth Castle.[28]
- Dorothy Habington,[29] said to be a sister of Thomas Habington and brought up at court, later a recusant who sheltered Thomas Butler alias Lyster and Edward Oldcorne at Hindlip.[30] Her conversion by Oldcorne was described by John Gerard.[31] Dorothy Habington, her sister-in-law Mary Habington,[32] and Anne Vaux[33] are sometimes identified as those who sustained Oldcorne and Henry Garnet with drinks and caudle through a quill or straw from a "gentlewoman's chamber" while they hid in a priest's hole built into a chimney at Hindlip in 1606.[34][35][36] Garnet was supplied with sweetmeats and with marmalade, which might have served to make invisible ink.[37]
Edward and Thomas Abington were involved in the Babington Plot to replace Elizabeth with Mary, Queen of Scots.[38] In 1590, Thomas and Richard Abington were allowed to keep lands pledged for debts incurred by their father John Habington as cofferer.[39] Hindlip Hall was entirely rebuilt and later passed to the brewer Henry Allsopp, 1st Baron Hindlip and is now a headquarters building used by West Mercia Police.
A. T. Butler, Visitation of Worcestershire, 1634, p. 44: George Stanton, Rambles and researches among Worcestershire churches (London, 1886), p. 87.
John Amphlett, A Survey of Worcestershire, 2:2 (Oxford, 1897), p. 66.
J. R. Dasent, Acts of the Privy Council, 7 (London, 1893), p. x.
Joseph Stevenson, Calendar State Papers, Foreign, Elizabeth I, 1558–1559, (London, 1863), pp. 263 no. 709, 317 no. 850.
William Tighe, 'Familia reginae: the Privy Court', Susan Doran & Norman Jones, The Elizabethan World (Routledge, 2011), p. 80.
John Amphlett, A Survey of Worcestershire by Thomas Habington, 1 (Oxford: James Parker, 1895), p. 20 and frontispiece, the portrait passed to the More O'Ferrall family.
Elizabeth Goldring, John Nichols's The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth, 2 (Oxford, 2014), pp. 346–8.
Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, 38, p. 597.
John Amphlett, A Survey of Worcestershire by Thomas Habington, 1 (Oxford: James Parker, 1895), pp. 2–3: John Nichols, Progresses of Queen Elizabeth, vol. 1 (London, 1823), pp. 541-42.
Janet Arnold, Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd (Maney, 1988), p. 102: Janet Arnold, Lost from her Majestie's Back (Wisbech: Daedalus, 1980), pp. 46 no. 149, 52 nos. 194, 198.
Brett Usher, William Cecil and Episcopacy, 1559–1577 (Ashgate, 2003): Ann Morton, Calendar Patent Rolls, 1580–1582 (London: HMSO, 1982), p. 33 no. 151: Anna Somers Cocks, Princely Magnificence: Court Jewels of the Renaissance (London, 1980), p. 52.
George Stanton, Rambles and researches among Worcestershire churches (London, 1886), p. 87.
William Phillimore Watts Phillimore, Visitation of the County of Worcester Made in the Year 1569 (London, 1888) p. 63: A. T. Butler, Visitation of Worcestershire, 1634 (London, 1938), p. 45.
Frederic William Weaver, Visitation of Herefordshire Made by Robert Cooke, Clarencieux, in 1569 (Exeter, 1869), p. 79.
Janet Arnold, Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd (Maney, 1988), p. 102.
Calendar Patent Rolls, Elizabeth, 5 (London: HMSO, 1966), pp. 52, 373.
Kenneth Allott, Poems of William Habington (London, 1948), pp. xii–xiii.
Jan Broadway, "Thomas Habington: Recusancy and the Gentry of Early Stuart Worcestershire", Midland History, 29:1 (2004), p. 3. doi:10.1179/mdh.2004.29.1.1
Aileen M. Hodgson & Michael Hodgetts, Little Malvern Letters, 1 (Boydell, 2013), p. 124 no. 103.
Kenneth Allott, Poems of William Habington (London, 1948), p. xiii: HMC 7th Report: Molyneux (London, 1879), p. 637.
A. T. Butler, Visitation of Worcestershire, 1634 (London, 1938), p. 45.
Alice Hogge, God's secret agents : Queen Elizabeth's forbidden priests and the hatching of the Gunpowder plot (Harper perennial, 2005), p. 140: M. S. Giuseppi, HMC Salisbury Hatfield, 18 (London, 1940), p. 35.
John Morris, Condition of Catholics under James I (London, 1871), p. 283.
Jessie Childs, God's Traitors: Terror and Faith in Elizabethan England (Oxford, 2014), p. 326.
"Historical Particulars Regarding the Gunpowder Plot", The Gentleman's Magazine, (March 1835), p. 253.
John Amphlett, A Survey of Worcestershire by Thomas Habington, 1 (Oxford: James Parker, 1895), p. 11.
Jan Broadway, "Thomas Habington: Recusancy and the Gentry of Early Stuart Worcestershire", Midland History, 29:1 (2004), p. 6.
Glyn Redworth, David McGrath, Christopher J. Henstock, The Letters of Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza, 1 (Routledge, 2016), pp. xlii, 121.
Nadine Akkerman & Pete Langman, Spycraft: Tricks and Tools of the Dangerous Trade (Yale, 2024), pp. 175, 182.
Jan Broadway, "Thomas Habington: Recusancy and the Gentry of Early Stuart Worcestershire", Midland History, 29:1 (2004), p. 4.
Robert Lemon, Calendar State Papers Domestic Elizabeth, 1581–1590 (London, 1865), p. 668.