Constituency Dates
Wiltshire [1421 (Dec.)]
Dorset [1423]
Wiltshire 1425, 1432
Family and Education
b. Stourton 19 May 1400, s. and h. of William Stourton† (d.1413) of Stourton by Elizabeth, da. and coh. of Sir John Moigne† of Owermoigne, Dorset. m. aft. 1413 and bef. 1425, Margery, da. of Sir John Wadham† j.c.p. of Merrifield, Som. by his 2nd w. Joan, 4s. inc. William*, 2da. Kntd. by Feb. 1431; cr. Baron Stourton of Stourton 13 May 1448; summ. -1461.
Offices Held

Attestor, parlty. elections, Wilts. 1422, 1426, 1433, 1435, 1442, 1447.

Commr. Cornw., Devon, Dorset, Essex, Hants, Kent, London, Mdx., Som., Surr., Wilts., Wales and marches June 1421 – Sept. 1462; of gaol delivery, Old Sarum castle Jan. 1433, Ilchester Aug. 1435, Old Sarum castle Feb. 1446, Nov. 1452, July, Dec. 1455, May 1457, May, Oct. 1458, Dorchester July 1461;1 C66/433, m. 14d; 437, m. 4d; 461, m. 8d; 476, m. 21d; 480, m. 13d; 481, m. 20d; 483, m. 17d; 484, m. 13d; 486, m. 20d; 492, m. 7d. to take assizes of novel dissseisin, Som. June 1436, Wilts. July 1437, Som. Nov. 1436, Wilts. Sept. 1442, Nov. 1443, Jan. 1444, Som. Feb. 1446;2 C66/438, m. 16d; 440, mm. 9d, 31d; 455, m. 35d; 457, m. 24d; 461, m. 9d. to treat for loans, Wilts. May 1442.

Sheriff, Wilts. 12 Dec. 1426 – 7 Nov. 1427, 5 Nov. 1433 – 3 Nov. 1434, 7 Nov. 1437 – 3 Nov. 1438, Som. and Dorset 4 Nov. 1428 – 10 Feb. 1430, Glos. 5 Nov. 1432–3, 5 Nov. 1439 – 4 Nov. 1441.

J.p. Wilts. 5 Dec. 1427 – d., Som. 27 Mar. 1453 – d., Dorset 14 July 1461 – d.

Member of the King’s Council 13 Nov. 1437-c. Nov. 1460.

Ambassador to treat with France and Burgundy May-Oct. 1439, Burgundy Jan., Aug. 1451.

Dep. constable of Eng. July 1440.

Steward of the estates of Humphrey, duke of Buckingham, Wilts. Mich. 1446–7, Glos., Hants, Wilts. by Mich. 1448-aft. Mich. 1458.3 Add. Roll 27679; C. Rawcliffe, Staffords, 210.

Treasurer of the King’s household 15 Nov. 1446 – 27 Mar. 1453.

Surveyor of the royal parks, forests and chases, Wilts. 17 Mar. 1447 – d.

Jt. governor of Ivychurch priory, Wilts. 13 Nov. 1447-c.1452.

Lt. of Calais 2 Apr. 1450 – Sept. 1451; capt. of Rysbank Apr. 1450-c. Feb. 1455.

Parlty. proxy for Bp. Bekynton of Bath and Wells 1453, 1456.

Jt. keeper of the seas Mar. 1454 – July 1455.

Parlty. cttees. on Calais and Berwick-upon-Tweed July 1455, Calais 1461.

Trier of parlty. petitions 1461.

Address
Main residence: Stourton, Wilts.
biography text

More may be added to the earlier biography.4 The Commons 1386-1421, iv. 492-6.

It may well be the case that Stourton was more active militarily in the Yorkist cause in 1460 and 1461 than previously supposed. He took at least two prisoners in this period, who were given safe conducts by Edward IV so they might trade in a Breton ship to raise money for their ransoms.5 C76/146, mm. 9, 13. There can be no doubt about his commitment to the new regime, and his conviction that Edward was the ‘rightfull Kyng of Englond’, for so he described the monarch in his will made a year after Edward’s accession.6 E13/154, rot. 11. The pardon he acquired on 6 Feb. 1462, described as occupier of the castle of Old Sarum, can only have been a formality.7 C67/45, m. 34.

The earlier biography commented that it is remarkable that Lord Stourton used none of his wealth for the endowment of religious foundations; and unusual features of his will, since found recorded in an unlikely place (the plea rolls of the Exchequer), reveal his religious practices to have been essentially private ones, in which ecclesiastic buildings played little part. The will contained bequests amounting to just £10 to religious houses, although every monk at the priory at Christchurch Twynham was to receive 6s. 8d. In some of its phrases the will, though made in English rather than Latin, echoed that of Stourton’s father from half a century earlier,8 The Commons 1386-1421, iv. 499. for instance by referring to the testator’s ‘stynkyng corupt body’. Most unusual was Stourton’s heartfelt plea that at the ‘dredfull oure’ of death his ‘synfull sowle’ might be ‘socoryd, relevyd, confortyd and holpe’ by the Virgin Mary, the archangels Gabriel and Raphael, and ‘myn own goud angels’, specifically naming 14 male saints and 15 female ones who he prayed would be true friends to his soul. Lord John asked to be buried in the church at Stourton, and named as his executors his son and heir William, William Twyneho* and his wife Ankaret, Giles Dacre*, and his chaplain, John Casteleyn, and as overseer the chancellor George Neville, bishop of Exeter. Each of them was bequeathed the sum of £10. Rewards for his servants and payments for repairs to Stourton church were left to the executors’ discretion. The will was dated 20 Mar. 1462.9 E13/154, m. 11. Before journeying north with the King’s army, Stourton presided over sessions of oyer and terminer held at Salisbury and Dorchester at the end of May.10 KB9/21/28; 135/36. Just five days before his death on 25 Nov. he made the King a loan of 100 marks.11 E403/827A, m. 11.

Author
Notes
  • 1. C66/433, m. 14d; 437, m. 4d; 461, m. 8d; 476, m. 21d; 480, m. 13d; 481, m. 20d; 483, m. 17d; 484, m. 13d; 486, m. 20d; 492, m. 7d.
  • 2. C66/438, m. 16d; 440, mm. 9d, 31d; 455, m. 35d; 457, m. 24d; 461, m. 9d.
  • 3. Add. Roll 27679; C. Rawcliffe, Staffords, 210.
  • 4. The Commons 1386-1421, iv. 492-6.
  • 5. C76/146, mm. 9, 13.
  • 6. E13/154, rot. 11.
  • 7. C67/45, m. 34.
  • 8. The Commons 1386-1421, iv. 499.
  • 9. E13/154, m. 11.
  • 10. KB9/21/28; 135/36.
  • 11. E403/827A, m. 11.