93:'s statute regulating trials for treason. But on the confession of other prisoners, and on the fragments of a confession written and subsequently torn up by himself while in prison, he was found guilty and condemned to death. On 20 September 1586 he was
177:
182:
74:. Habington not only joined Babington's conspiracy with other young frequenters of the court, but was named one of the six conspirators charged with the contemplated murder of Elizabeth.
108:, Edward Habington was the last of the first group of seven convicted conspirators to be executed. He made a defiant speech declaring a forthcoming "effusion of blood in England".
89:. Brought with six others to trial on 15 September, he resolutely denied his guilt, and claimed to be confronted with two witnesses to his complicity, according to
125:
98:
192:
39:
187:
58:, where he took his bachelor's degree in 1574. On leaving the university he spent much time at court. He there made the acquaintance of
162:
66:, a plan for a general rising of the Catholics which should accomplish the murder of the queen and the liberation of
145:
139:
202:
47:
197:
55:
81:'s spies. Habington, found at the end of August in hiding near the residence of his family in
167:
172:
94:
67:
8:
138:
78:
105:
59:
43:
86:
71:
82:
62:, a Catholic courtier, who early in 1586 was maturing, at the instigation of a
31:
24:
156:
51:
46:
was a younger brother. His father held the office of under-treasurer or '
101:. In a speech from the scaffold he vehemently maintained his innocence.
90:
178:
People executed under
Elizabeth I by hanging, drawing and quartering
35:
63:
183:
People executed under the Tudors for treason against
England
38:, Worcestershire, by his wife Catherine, daughter of
23:(1553?–1586), was one of the conspirators in the
154:
149:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
54:. Born about 1553, Edward was educated at
77:In July 1586 the plot was discovered by
155:
193:Executed people from Worcestershire
13:
188:16th-century executions by England
14:
214:
163:Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
146:Dictionary of National Biography
30:Habington was the eldest son of
118:
1:
129:(London, 1587), pp. 1573–1574
111:
70:, at that time imprisoned at
7:
10:
219:
17:Edward Habington, Abington
140:"Habington, Edward"
127:The Chronicles of England
85:, was thrown into the
56:Exeter College, Oxford
95:hanged and quartered
124:Raphael Holinshed,
99:St. Giles's Fields
79:Francis Walsingham
106:Raphael Holinshed
60:Anthony Babington
210:
203:Habington family
150:
142:
131:
122:
44:Thomas Habington
218:
217:
213:
212:
211:
209:
208:
207:
153:
152:
137:
135:
134:
123:
119:
114:
87:Tower of London
52:Queen Elizabeth
12:
11:
5:
216:
206:
205:
200:
198:Babington Plot
195:
190:
185:
180:
175:
170:
165:
133:
132:
116:
115:
113:
110:
83:Worcestershire
32:John Habington
25:Babington Plot
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
215:
204:
201:
199:
196:
194:
191:
189:
186:
184:
181:
179:
176:
174:
171:
169:
166:
164:
161:
160:
158:
151:
148:
147:
141:
130:
128:
121:
117:
109:
107:
104:According to
102:
100:
96:
92:
88:
84:
80:
75:
73:
69:
65:
61:
57:
53:
49:
45:
41:
37:
33:
28:
26:
22:
18:
168:1550s births
144:
136:
126:
120:
103:
76:
29:
20:
16:
15:
173:1586 deaths
68:Mary Stuart
157:Categories
112:References
40:John Wykes
91:Edward VI
72:Chartley
48:cofferer
21:Abingdon
36:Hindlip
64:Jesuit
50:' to
19:, or
97:in
34:of
159::
143:.
42:.
27:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.