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  1. Christopher Hatton

    Christopher Hatton

    English politician born 1540

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  1. Sir Christopher Hatton KG (12 December 1540 – 20 November 1591) was an English politician, Lord Chancellor of England and a favourite of Elizabeth I of England. He was one of the judges who found Mary, Queen of Scots guilty of treason.

  2. Sir Christopher Hatton was a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I and lord chancellor of England from 1587 to 1591. After spending several years in halfhearted study of the law, Hatton enrolled as one of the queen’s bodyguards in 1564. Handsome and accomplished, he impressed the queen with his talent for.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • It is said he caught Elizabeth’s attention when dancing. In 1561/2, while in residence at the Inns of Court in London, Hatton was participating in a dance – one of the many revels that Inns held between October and February every year to which the queen was invited.
    • Being a favourite earned Hatton positions of authority. In 1564, Elizabeth gave Hatton the position of Gentlemen Pensioner – an elite bodyguard to the monarch, and a royal warrant was issued commissioning a new suit of armour for Hatton’s use.
    • He was also a man of talent. Although Hatton did not complete his education at the University of Oxford, he was a learned, intelligent man. He patronised writers and men training in the law, and counted playwrights such as Edmund Spenser among his friends.
    • He received many gifts from Elizabeth. In 1568 Hatton was rewarded with Sulby Abbey in Northamptonshire and was given Holdenby House on a 40 year lease.
  3. Nov 20, 2010 · Sir Christopher Hatton died on the 20th November 1591 at Ely Palace in London. He had been ill for some time and Elizabeth I had visited him on the 11th November. He was given a state funeral on 16th December at the old St Paul’s Cathedral and a monument was erected at the high altar.

  4. Christopher Hatton. Writer: Battle of the Damned. Christopher grew up in the small town of Summerville in North Eastern Oregon. His movie "Sammyville" was loosely based on an actual back-woods 'outlaw' town that exists in the general area and was where the movie was shot.

    • Writer, Producer, Director
    • 2 min
  5. Christopher Hatton became one of The Queen's Men--even called him her mutton--knighted, titled, and showered splendid gifts upon him. Hatton gave Elizabeth an enduring trust and love, and built a castle for her at Holdenby and waited until his death for her visit.

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  7. May 29, 2018 · Hatton, Sir Christopher (1540–91). Lord chancellor. Of Northamptonshire gentry stock, and not wholly studious at the Inner Temple, his good looks and graceful dancing brought him to Queen Elizabeth's attention.

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