assumed the surname of Hope-Scott. He retired from the bar in 1870 and died on the 29th of April 1873.
HOPFEN, HANS VON (1835–1904), German poet and novelist,
was born on the 3rd of January 1835, at Munich. He studied
law, and in 1858, having shown marked poetical promise, he
was received into the circle of young poets whom King Maximilian
II. had gathered round him, and thereafter devoted
himself to literature. In 1862 he made his debut as an author,
with Lieder und Balladen, which were published in the Münchener
Dichterbuch, edited by E. Geibel. After travelling in Italy (1862),
France (1863) and Austria (1864), he was appointed, in 1865,
general secretary of the “Schillerstiftung,” and in this capacity
settled at Vienna. The following year, however, he removed to
Berlin, in a suburb of which, Lichterfelde, he died on the 19th of
November 1904. Of Hopfen’s lyric poems, Gedichte (4th ed.,
Berlin, 1883), many are of considerable talent and originality;
but it is as a novelist that he is best known. The novels Peregretta
(1864); Verdorben zu Paris (1868, new ed. 1892); Arge
Sitten (1869); Der graue Freund (1874, 2nd ed., 1876); and
Verfehlte Liebe (1876, 2nd ed., 1879) are attractive, while
of his shorter stories Tiroler Geschichten (1884–1885) command
most favour.
An autobiographical sketch of Hopfen is contained in K. E. Franzos, Geschichte des Erstlingswerkes (1904).
HOPI, or Moki (Moquis), a tribe of North American Indians
of Shoshonean stock. They are Pueblo or town-building Indians
and occupy seven villages on three lofty plateaus of northern
Arizona. The first accounts of them date from the expedition
of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado in 1540. With the town-building
Indians of New Mexico they were then subdued.
They shared in the successful revolt of 1542, but again suffered
defeat in 1586. In 1680, however, they made a successful
revolt against the Spaniards. They weave very fine blankets,
make baskets and are expert potters and wood-carvers. Their
houses are built of stone set in mortar. Their ceremonies are
of an elaborate nature, and in the famous “snake-dance” the
performers carry live rattlesnakes in their mouths. They
number some 1600. (See also Pueblo Indians.)
For Hopi festivals, see 21st Ann. Report Bureau of Amer. Ethnology (1899–1900).
HÖPKEN, ANDERS JOHAN, Count von (1712–1789),
Swedish statesman, was the son of Daniel Niklas Höpken, one of
Arvid Horn’s most determined opponents and a founder of the
Hat party. When in 1738 the Hats came into power the younger
Höpken obtained a seat in the secret committee of the diet, and
during the Finnish war of 1741–42 was one of the two commissioners
appointed to negotiate with Russia. During the
diet of 1746–1747 Höpken’s influence was of the greatest importance.
It was chiefly through his efforts that the estates issued
a “national declaration” protesting against the arrogant
attitude of the Russian ambassador, who attempted to dominate
the crown prince Adolphus Frederick and the government.
This spirited policy restored the waning prestige of the Hat
party and firmly established their anti-Muscovite system. In
1746 Höpken was created a senator. In 1751 he succeeded
Gustaf Tessin as prime minister, and controlled the foreign policy
of Sweden for the next nine years. On the outbreak of the
Seven Years’ War, he contracted an armed neutrality treaty with
Denmark (1756); but in the following year acceded to the
league against Frederick II. of Prussia. During the crisis of
1760–1762, when the Hats were at last compelled to give an
account of their stewardship, Höpken was sacrificed to party
exigencies and retired from the senate as well as from the premiership.
On the 22nd of June 1762, however, he was created a
count. After the revolution of 1772 he re-entered the senate
at the particular request of Gustavus III., but no longer exercised
any political influence. His caustic criticism of many of the
royal measures, moreover, gave great offence, and in 1780 he
retired into private life. Höpken was a distinguished author.
The noble style of his biographies and orations has earned
for him the title of the Swedish Tacitus. He helped to found
the Vetenskaps Akademi, and when Gustavus III. in 1786
established the Swedish Academy, he gave Höpken the first
place in it.
See L. G. de Geer, Minne af Grefve A. J. von Höpken (Stockholm, 1882); Carl Silfverstolpe, Grefve Höpkens Skrifter (Stockholm, 1890–1893). (R. N. B.)
HOPKINS, EDWARD WASHBURN (1857– ), American
Sanskrit scholar, was born in Northampton, Massachusetts,
on the 8th of September 1857. He graduated at Columbia
University in 1878, studied at Leipzig, where he received the
degree of Ph.D. in 1881, was an instructor at Columbia in 1881–1885,
and professor at Bryn Mawr in 1885–1895, and became
professor of Sanskrit and comparative philology in Yale University
in 1895. He became secretary of the American Oriental
Society and editor of its Journal, to which he contributed many
valuable papers, especially on numerical and temporal categories
in early Sanskrit literature. He wrote Caste in Ancient India
(1881); Manu’s Lawbook (1884); Religions of India (1895);
The Great Epic of India (1901); and India Old and New
(1901).
HOPKINS, ESEK (1718–1802), the first admiral of the
United States navy, was born at Scituate, Rhode Island, in
1718. He belonged to one of the most prominent Puritan
families of New England. At the age of twenty he went to sea,
and rapidly came to the front as a good sailor and skilful trader.
Marrying, three years later, into a prosperous family of Newport,
and thus increasing his influence in Rhode Island, he became
commodore of a fleet of seventeen merchantmen, the movements
of which he directed with skill and energy. In war as well as
peace, Hopkins was establishing his reputation as one of the
leading colonial seamen, for as captain of a privateer he made
more than one brilliant and successful venture during the Seven
Years’ War. In the interval between voyages, moreover, he
was engaged in Rhode Island politics, and rendered efficient
support to his brother Stephen against the Ward faction. At
the outbreak of the War of Independence, Hopkins was appointed
brigadier-general by Rhode Island, was commissioned, December
1775, by the Continental Congress, commander-in-chief of the
navy, and in January 1776 hoisted his flag as admiral of the eight
converted merchantmen which then constituted the navy of the
United States. His first cruise resulted in a great acquisition of
material of war and an indecisive fight with H.M.S. “Glasgow.”
At first this created great enthusiasm, but criticism soon made
itself heard. Hopkins and two of his captains were tried for
breach of orders, and, though ably defended by John Adams, were
censured by Congress. The commands, nevertheless, were not
interfered with, and a prize was soon afterwards named after the
admiral by their orders. But the difficulties and mutual distrust
continually increased, and in 1777 Congress summarily dismissed
Hopkins from his command, on the complaint of some of his
officers. Before the order arrived, the admiral had detected
the conspiracy against him, and had had the ringleaders tried
and degraded by court-martial. But the Congress followed
up its order by dismissing him from the navy. For the rest of
his life he lived in Rhode Island, playing a prominent part in
state politics, and he died at Providence in 1802.
See Edward Field, Life of Esek Hopkins (Providence, 1898); also an article by R. Grieve in the New England Magazine of November 1897.
HOPKINS, MARK (1802–1887), American educationist,
great-nephew of the theologian Samuel Hopkins, was born in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts, on the 4th of February 1802.
He graduated in 1824 at Williams College, where he was a tutor
in 1825–1827, and where in 1830, after having graduated in the
previous year at the Berkshire Medical College at Pittsfield,
he became professor of Moral Philosophy and Rhetoric. In
1833 he was licensed to preach in Congregational churches.
He was president of Williams College from 1836 until 1872.
He was one of the ablest and most successful of the old type
of college president. His volume of lectures on Evidences of
Christianity (1846) was long a favourite text-book. Of his other
writings, the chief were Lectures on Moral Science (1862), The
Law of Love and Love as a Law (1869), An Outline Study of Man