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211:, the sentence was commuted. From the eighteenth century it has been reported that Habington was confined to Worcestershire after his pardon, but this is not true. However, he did live largely retired from public life, working on a parish by parish history of Worcestershire. On his death in 1647 he was buried in the family vault at
148:. Thomas was noted in a list of prisoners as "a dangerous fellowe, but no dyrect proof against him for this cause, but a dealer with these seminarye priests". On his release he was held for a while in Worcester, but eventually allowed to reside at Hindlip. Around 1593 he married
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The
Epistle of Gildas the most ancient British Author: who flourished in the yeere of our Lord, 546. And who by his great erudition, sanctitie, and wisdome, acquired the name of
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on 21 March 1606 and were put on trial in April. Habington was condemned to death at
Worcester Lent Assizes on 4 April, but through the intervention of his brother-in-law,
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and was executed for treason. Thomas and their younger brother
Richard were arrested for suspected complicity and held for six years in the
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Broadway, Jan (2004). "'To equall their virtues':Thomas
Habington, Recusancy and the Gentry of Early Stuart Worcestershire".
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at
Hindlip in January 1606. Habington and the other prisoners were taken to London. He was put in the
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God's secret agents : Queen
Elizabeth's forbidden priests and the hatching of the Gunpowder plot
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The only work published by
Habington in his lifetime was the first English translation of
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266:(1781–82). In the nineteenth century his selections from his manuscripts were edited as
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Gilbert, C. Don (2001). "Thomas
Habington's Account of the 1606 Search at Hindlip".
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and it was anticipated that he would produce a history of
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during his imprisonment, which was completed and published in 1640 by his son
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C. Don
Gilbert, "Thomas Habington's Account of the 1606 Search at Hindlip",
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In the 1630s Habington began to correspond with the Warwickshire antiquary
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270:(2 volumes, 1895–99). His manuscripts are preserved in the library of the
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before being summoned home in 1581 on the death of his father. He entered
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Worcestershire's First Historian: Thomas Habington of Hindlip (1560–1647)
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From Tudor to Stewart: the regime change from Elizabeth I to James I
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203:. After questioning, Habington and the others left London for
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was published in 1717. His parish accounts were utilised by
233:, which he completed during his imprisonment in the Tower.
448:(Harper perennial, 2005), p. 387: Aileen M. Hodgson &
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Loomie, A. J. (2004). "Habington, Thomas (1560–1647)".
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and Catherine Wykes, the daughter of William Wykes of
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The Antiquities of the Cathedral Church of Worcester
544:. Faithfully translated out of the originall Latine
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318:"'Haak-Harman', in Alumni Oxonienses 1500–1714"
236:He was reputed to have also begun a history of
517:"Thomas Habington after the Gunpowder Plot".
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264:Collections for the History of Worcestershire
160:. They had five children, including the poet
342:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
121:shortly after. He spent a short time at the
61:. He is particularly remembered as an early
546:. London: T. Cotes for William Cooke, 1638.
575:. Manchester University Press. p. 43.
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456:, 1 (Boydell, 2013), p. 92: Henry Foley,
109:. In 1563 his father bought the manor of
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435:, 1 (Philadelphia, 1939), pp. 218, 225.
422:, 25:3 (May 2001), pp. 481, 422 fn. 24.
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339:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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113:, Worcestershire and built a new house
77:Thomas Habington was the second son of
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688:Alumni of the University of Oxford
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538:. Translated by Thomas Habington.
506:. F. Jefferies. 1825. p. 211.
230:De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae
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473:Dictionary of Christian Biography
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470:Michael Walsh, ed. (2001).
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558:Poems of William Habington
268:A Survey of Worcestershire
191:. They were discovered in
132:In 1586 his elder brother
123:English College in Rheims
519:Midland Catholic History
503:The Gentleman's Magazine
369:Allott, Kenneth (1948).
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167:In the aftermath of the
140:to effect the escape of
136:became embroiled in the
431:Norman Egbert McClure,
409:(Oxford, 2024), p. 368.
158:William, Lord Monteagle
119:Lincoln College, Oxford
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571:Broadway, Jan (2006).
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171:he gave asylum to the
129:the following summer.
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590:Gilbert, Don (2020).
476:. Continuum. p.
260:Treadway Russell Nash
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638:English antiquarians
573:No historie so meete
142:Mary, Queen of Scots
45:Sir Thomas Habington
617:The Ruin of Britain
594:. Malvern: Aspect.
154:Edward, Lord Morley
36:Thomas Habington's
27:English antiquarian
643:People from Surrey
152:, the daughter of
51:(1560–1647) was a
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38:funerary hatchment
354:(Subscription or
242:William Habington
162:William Habington
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358:required.)
278:References
127:Gray's Inn
703:Recusants
238:Edward IV
199:and then
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556:Allott.
262:for his
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83:cofferer
53:Catholic
49:Abington
542:Sapiens
306:: 1–24.
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201:Newgate
173:Jesuits
111:Hindlip
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