His written legacy includes his Expositions of the Ten Commandments, which remains in print in the modern era.[when?]
Family
Hopkins married his first wife, Alicia Moore (d.1681), a niece of Sir Robert Viner, sometime Lord Mayor of London, to whom he dedicated his Vanity of the World. They had two sons, Charles (1664โ1700), poet and dramatist, and John (born 1675), the author of Amasia. In 1685, at Totteridge, Ezekiel Hopkins married his second wife, Lady Araminta Robartes, the eldest daughter of John Robartes, 1st Earl of Radnor, and his second wife, Isabella, daughter of Sir John Smith.[2] He and his second wife were the parents of Francis, who was the grandfather of Sir Francis Hopkins M.P., 1st Baronet of Athboy, County Meath.
However, according to National Library of Ireland (Registered Pedigrees Vol. 17), the great grandfather of Sir Francis Hopkins, MP, 1st Baronet of Athboy, County Meath, was James Hopkins. The pedigree for James Hopkins is cancelled on page 217, and with it a reference to Ezekiel Hopkins. The tree proper (without the reference to Ezekiel) follows on page 220.[4]