William Hunnis
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William Hunnis (died 6 June 1597) was an English Protestant poet, dramatist, and composer.


Biography

Hunnis was as early as 1549 in the service of William Herbert, afterwards Earl of Pembroke. His friend
Thomas Newton Thomas Newton (1 January 1704 – 14 February 1782) was an English cleric, biblical scholar and author. He served as the Bishop of Bristol from 1761 to 1782. Biography Newton was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and was subsequently elect ...
, in a poem prefixed to ''The Hive of Hunnye'' (1578), says: "In prime of youth thy pleasant Penne depaincted Sonets sweete", and mentions his interludes, gallant lays, rondelets and songs, explaining that it was in the winter of his age that he turned to sacred lore and high philosophy. In 1550 he published ''Certayne Psalms ... in Englishe metre'', and shortly afterwards was made a gentleman of the Chapel Royal to
Edward VI Edward VI (12 October 1537 – 6 July 1553) was King of England and Ireland from 28 January 1547 until his death in 1553. He was crowned on 20 February 1547 at the age of nine. Edward was the son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour and the first E ...
. At Mary I's accession he retained his appointment, but in 1555 he is said to have been one of a party of twelve conspirators who had determined to take Mary's life. Although nothing came of the first plot, shortly afterwards he was party to the
Dudley conspiracy Dudley is a large market town and administrative centre in the county of West Midlands, England, southeast of Wolverhampton and northwest of Birmingham. Historically an exclave of Worcestershire, the town is the administrative centre of the ...
to dethrone Mary in favour of her sister
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. Hunnis, having some knowledge of alchemy, was to go abroad to coin the necessary gold, but this doubtful mission was exchanged for the task of making false keys to the treasury in London, which he was able to do because of his friendship with Nicholas Brigham, the receiver of the exchequer. The conspirators were, however, betrayed by one of their number, Thomas Whyte. Some of them were executed, but Hunnis escaped with imprisonment. The death of Mary made him a free man, and in 1559 he married Margaret, Brigham's widow, but she died within the year, and Hunnis married in 1560 the widow of a grocer. He himself became a grocer and freeman of the City of London, and supervisor of the Queen's Gardens at Greenwich. In 1566 he was made
Master of the Children Master of the Children is a title awarded to an adult musician who is put in charge of the musical training, and in some cases the general education (which sometimes gets offered as a priceless perk to recruit the best singers) of choir boy (or si ...
of the Chapel Royal. No complete piece of his is extant, perhaps because of the rule that the plays acted by the Children should not have been previously printed. In his later years he purchased land at Barking, Essex. If the lines above his signature on a 1557 edition of Sir Thomas More's works are genuine, he remained a poor man, for he refuses to make a will on the ground that "the good that I shall leave, will not pay all I owe". In British Library Harley MS 6403 is a story that one of his sons, in the capacity of page, drank the remainder of the poisoned cup supposed to have been provided by Leicester for
Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex, KG (16 September 1541 – 22 September 1576), was an English nobleman and general. From 1573 until his death he fought in Ireland in connection with the Plantations of Ireland, most notably the Rathlin Isl ...
, but escaped with no injury beyond the loss of his hair.


Works

Hunnis's extant works include: *''Certayne Psalms'' (1549), *''A Hive full of Hunnye'' (1578), *''Seven Sobbes of a sorrowful Soule for Sinne'' (1583), *''Hunnies Recreations'' (1588), *sixteen poems in the ''Paradise of Dainty Devices''(1576), *and two in ''England's Helicon'' (1600). His most famous musical compositions are found in a compilation, ''Seven Sobs of a Sorrowfull Soule for Sinne'', which includes ''A Handful of Honisuckles''. Those parts of the compilation which are musical are in a devotional style, and all his music in that collection consists of single-line tunes. Some of his work is for solo voice and
viol The viol (), viola da gamba (), or informally gamba, is any one of a family of bowed, fretted, and stringed instruments with hollow wooden bodies and pegboxes where the tension on the strings can be increased or decreased to adjust the pitc ...
s, for example a setting of his own poem "In terrors trapp'd".


Notes


References

* Michael Smith: "William Hunnis", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed January 6, 2006)
(subscription access)
* Attribution: * Endnotes: **See Mrs C. Carmichael Stopes's tract on William Hunnis, reprinted (1892) from the ''Jahrbuch der deutschen Shakespeare Gesellschaft''.


Further reading

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hunnis, William 1597 deaths 16th-century English poets Renaissance composers English classical composers Gentlemen of the Chapel Royal 16th-century English composers 16th-century Protestants English Protestants Year of birth unknown English male poets English male classical composers Masters of the Children of the Chapel Royal