As a younger son of a senior member of the Jacobean judiciary, Nathaniel followed his father into the law. Granted licence to travel abroad for three years in 1620, he was admitted to the University of Padua in 1622, but presumably returned to London shortly afterwards, when he was called to the bar.
In 1633 Hobart and three of his 11 brothers contested a suit relating to the manor of Aylesham, parcel of their late father’s substantial estates, although he himself inherited no property in Norfolk, and resided mainly at the Highgate house that Sir Henry left ‘to such of my younger sons as I shall appoint’.
Hobart did subsequently return to England, and on the death of his brother John in 1647 received an annuity of £20.
