William Hawte

Sir William Hawte (also Haute or Haut) (c. 1430 – 2 July 1497) was a prominent member of a Kentish gentry family of long standing in royal service, which, through its near connections to the Woodville family, became closely and dangerously embroiled in the last phases of the Wars of the Roses.

It is claimed that he is the same Sir William Hawte who was a composer of liturgical and devotional choral music (who flourished c. 1460–1470), represented in a number of manuscript choirbooks that survive to this day. Two settings of the Benedicamus Domino are found in the Pepys Manuscript,[1] and another work attributed to him, a Stella coeli, extirpavit (a Latin prayer to the Virgin, for protection from plague[2]) exists in the Ritson Manuscript.[3]

  1. ^ Magdalene College, Cambridge MS Pepys 1236.
  2. ^ G. Mursell, English Spirituality: From Earliest Times to 1700 (S.P.C.K., London 2001), pp. 161-62.
  3. ^ See 'William Hawte' brief biographical entry at HOASM.org.