Survey

The composition of the Parliament of 1399

Of the 255 Members whose names are recorded, 110 (as much as 43% of the total) were apparently newcomers to the House of Commons, and only 27 (11%) had sat in the Parliament immediately preceding. It is perhaps not surprising that so few of those who had been party to the Acts of Richard II’s last Parliament had secured re-election, given that by September 1399 the news of the King’s imprisonment and imminent deposition by Henry of Bolingbroke must have reached even the most distant parts of the realm. The Commons were overwhelmingly predisposed to support Henry’s usurpation, not only because at least 23 of their number had been retained by him or his father and looked to the duchy of Lancaster to supplement their incomes and provide employment, but also because no fewer than 18 more had been closely attached to the leading Lords Appellant of 1387-8. The latter group was no doubt only too eager to witness the end of the old regime, the restoration to their birthright of the heirs of Gloucester and Arundel, and the rehabilitation of Warwick. In this context it may be of relevance to note that as many as 34 of the Members now entering the House (13% of the total) had sat in the Merciless Parliament of February 1388, when the Appellants had been triumphant. (No doubt they were behind the Commons’ petitions for the Merciless Parliament to be once more considered valid, and its acts enforced, while all that had been done in the Parliament of 1397-8 should be rescinded.)1RP, iii. 425. Only one Member of the Parliament of 1399 may be said to have ever been particularly close to Richard II: John Colshull I, a ‘King’s esquire’ and purveyor for the Household right up to the preceding midsummer. Otherwise, the local communities had unanimously withheld their votes from anyone associated with the Ricardian court party.

Naturally enough, Henry IV hastened to distribute largesse to his loyal supporters, and as the lists below make clear he was quick to issue letters patent in favour of Members of the Commons who showed by their acclamation where their allegiance lay. Even before he dissolved Parliament on 19 Nov. he handed out to them new, often very substantial, annuities, made grants in their names of land and wardships, confirmed awards authorized by previous kings and by his father and himself under seal of the duchy of Lancaster, and profferred a number of other concessions in response to their petitions. Altogether, 37 Members were thus favourably singled out and their continued support for the house of Lancaster encouraged. Furthermore, ten of this privileged group, along with 20 others, were given royal offices by the new King’s appointment, or else were permitted by virtue of formal letters of confirmation to stay on in posts they already occupied. Seven parliamentary representatives (including the Speaker, John Doreward) made such a commendable impression in the first few weeks of the new reign as to be considered worthy to be members of Henry’s Council, with salaries of up to 100 marks a year. When all these tangible perquisites are taken into account, it transpires that 22% of the Members benefited directly from Henry’s imperative need to be accepted as King. It was, therefore, somewhat hypocritical of the Commons to profess dismay at ‘les outrageous douns ’ made by Henry to ‘undeserving persons’.2Ibid. iii. 433. Twenty-one Members who were j.p.s at the time the elections were held were kept on as such when new commissions were issued just after the dissolution; while 14 more were then newly appointed to their local benches. That 43 of the Members were named on the commissions of array set up three weeks later suggests that there were no doubts of their reliability as upholders of the new regime, although only time would tell whether or not this trust was misplaced.

 

MEMBERS ASSOCIATED WITH JOHN OF GAUNT AND HENRY OF BOLINGBROKE BEFORE PARLIAMENT ASSEMBLED

Berney, Sir Robert                                              *M, R (‘knight bachelor’; £20 p.a. from either Gaunt or Bolingbroke)                                         
Beville, Robert                                                                     *R                                                                                                                                           
Bispham, William             *O, R (£5 p.a.)
Blount, John II *A
Blount, Sir Walter *E, M, O, R (c. £148 p.a.)
Cope, John                     M, R
Curson, John *A, M, R
Dabrichecourt, Sir Nicholas *R (£20 p.a.)
Hasilden, Richard *O
Hoghton, Sir Henry *O, R (ten marks p.a.); M, R (£20 p.a.)
Hulle, William I he and his fellow MP William Walters expressed the support of their city, Salisbury, to Bolingbroke in July 1399, donating £200 to his campaign
Lambourne, Sir William *M
Lucy, Sir William *M, O, R (£20 p.a. as ‘bachelor’)
Mandeville, Thomas *O, R (£6 13s.4d. p.a.)
Maureward, Sir Thomas did Bolingbroke ‘good service on his coming to England’
Neville, Sir Robert *M, O, R (£20 p.a.)
Pelham, John *O; A, R (100 marks p.a.)
Preston, John *O
Rochford, John *O
Skelton, Sir Thomas *E, O (chief steward south of Trent; £100 p.a.)
Urswyk, Sir Robert *O, R (c. £50 p.a.)
Walters, William              see Hulle, William I

* Connected with Guant or employed in the duchy of Lancaster administration

 

Certain of the above-named were to receive payments from Bolingbroke in December 1399 specifically for having brought forces to him at Ravenspur or on his journey south, and for having provided him with a bodyguard at the time of the Parliament:

Bispham, William £6 13s.4d.
Blount, Sir Walter £233 6s.8d.
Curson, John £100
Neville, Sir Robert £20

 

The following were associates of Bolingbroke’s friend and companion-in-exile, Sir Thomas Erpingham:

Argentine, Sir William A, poss. O
Berney, Sir Robert A, Att., F, O
Gurney, John A, F
Heveningham, Sir John A, F

 

FORMER ADHERENTS OF THE PRINCIPAL APPELLANTS OF 1387-8

1. Gloucester                                                            
Braybrooke, Sir Gerard  II                                    A, F; E to Gloucester’s widow; C, E, O to his mother-in-law, the countess of Hereford
Cheyne, Sir John I O, prob. C; condemned to death Sept. 1397, but sentence commuted to imprisonment at the Lords’ request
Coggeshall, Thomas                                 A, Att., F; F, R to his mother-in-law
Doreward, John A, Att.; F for his widow; A of his mother-in-law
Heveningham, Sir John A
2. Arundel
Berney, Sir Robert F
Burley, John I F, M, O; A, Att., F, O to his heir
Doreward, John R; A of his brother, Archbishop Arundel
Fitznichol, Sir Thomas A, F, prob. R
Gurney, John O
Horde, Thomas ?O — if constable of Clun
Tiptoft, Sir Payn E, F, M, R
Young, Thomas I E, F, O; close to Earl Thomas
3. Warwick
Euer, Sir Ralph R (20 marks)
Ruding, William O, R
Spernore, William A, C, F, M, R
Trewythenick, Roger O
Trussell, Sir Alfred C, F, R (20 marks)

 

The following had received pardons from Richard II specifically for adhering to the Appellants in 1387-8. The Commons now successfully petitioned (RP, iii. 432) that the charters of pardon should remain valid.

Beauchamp, Sir Roger 18 May 1398
Braybrooke, Sir Gerard II 12 May 1398
Coggeshall, Thomas 7 Nov. 1397
Gurney, John 14 May 1398
Maidstone, Thomas 22 Feb. 1398
Spernore, William 1 May 1398
Terry, William II 15 June 1398
Tiptoft, Sir Payn 30 Apr. 1398
Walwyn, Thomas II 18 Nov. 1398

 

GRANTS MADE TO MEMBERS BY HENRY IV DURING OR SHORTLY AFTER THE PARLIAMENTARY SESSION

1. New Annuities                                                                        
Bispham, William 1s. per diem                                                                                      
18 Nov.                               
Blount, Sir Walter 56 marks bef. Jan. 1400
Cheyne, Sir John I 100 marks 26 Nov.
Curson, John £20 19 Nov.
Doreward, John £35 10 Dec.
Durham, John £20 18 Feb. 1400
Eure, Sir Ralph £50 30 Nov.
Francis, Sir Robert £62 3 Nov.
Grey, Sir Thomas £16 13s.4d. 21 Nov.
Gyles, John £10 8 Nov.
Hasilden, Richard 40 marks 25 Nov.
Leek, William ten marks 20 Nov.
Lucy, Sir William 100 marks 8 Feb. 1400
Ludwick, John £20 18 Feb. 1400
Maidstone, Thomas ten marks 12 Oct.
Neville, Sir Robert 40 marks 5 Dec.
Shadworth, John £4 10 Nov.
2. Land, Wardships, etc.
Barbour alias Frye, Thomas Exchequer lease Feb. 1400, backdated to Oct. 1399
Blount, Sir Walter property forfeited by Despenser Jan. 1400
Cope, John excused payment of £40 for purchase of property 6 Oct.
Doreward, John lease of alien priory of West Mersea 24 Nov.
Durham, John lease of Mowbray property 23 Oct.
Grey, Sir Thomas wardship and marriage
farm of earl of March’s land
31 Oct.
17 Nov.
Hasilden, Richard lease of Mowbray property 27 Oct.
Ludwick, John lease of Mowbray property 23 Oct.
Pelham, John lordship of Bosham during Mowbray minority
land worth £25 p.a.
11 Dec.
Feb. 1400
Preston, John lease of estates of Wilmington priory 4 Nov.
Stafford, Sir Humphrey I land in Som. for life 28 Oct.
Walwyn, Thomas II lease of estates of Abergavenny priory 22 Oct.
3. Confirmation of grants made by Edward III and Richard II
Cheyne, Sir John I Beckford priory estates, worth 100 marks p.a. 20 Nov.
Colshull, John I Huish estates 20 Nov.
Courtenay, Sir Philip annuities of £200 and land worth £39 p.a. 8 Nov.
Gateford, John annuity of £20 3 Nov.
Grey, Sir Thomas annuity of £50 31 Oct.
Maidstone, Thomas annuity of £5 23 Oct.
Urswyk, Sir Robert annuity of £20 18 Oct.
4. Confirmation of grants made previously under seal of the duchy of Lancaster
Berney, Sir Robert annuity of £20  
Bispham, William duchy offices  
Blount, Sir Walter duchy offices and annuities  
Curson, John duchy offices  
Dabrichecourt, Sir Nicholas annuity of £20 18 Nov.
Hoghton, Sir Henry duchy offices  
Lucy, Sir William duchy offices  
Mandeville, Thomas land worth £8 p.a.  
Neville, Sir Robert annuity of £20 8 Dec.
Pelham, John duchy offices  
Preston, John duchy offices  
Rochford, John duchy offices  
Skelton, Sir Thomas duchy offices  
Urswyk, Sir Robert duchy fees, offices and leases  
5. Other concessions
Blickling, Roger confirmation of the duchess of Norfolk’s grants 17 Nov.
Brooke, Sir Thomas exemption from royal offices 13 Nov.
Eure, Sir Ralph exemption from royal offices 30 Nov.
Gyles John exemplification of ordinance of 1335 on behalf of his constituency, Dover  22 Oct.
Neville, Sir Robert exemption from royal offices
marriage of his gdda. to King’s half-brother                                          
5 Dec.
Shadworth, John privilege of having the tronage of wool in London at his own warehouse, for life 10 Nov.
Tanner, Thomas confirmation of letters patent of Bishop Erghum granting manumission to his wife                                                         3 Nov.
Wilcotes, John confirmation of his retaining fee from Despenser 15 Feb.
6. Knighthoods
Pelham, John on the eve of Henry’s coronation
Rochford, John bef. 12 Nov.

 

MEMBERS OCCUPYING OFFICES IN THE CROWN’s APPOINTMENT AT THE TIME OF ELECTION

1. Customs officials (kept on in their posts by Henry IV unless noted otherwise)
Arnold, John I collector, Ipswich (removed 15 Oct.); alnager, Suff. (removed 17 Oct.)
Cuttyng, Thomas alnager, Wilts.
Fenn, Hugh atte collector, Gt. Yarmouth; dep. butler, Gt. Yarmouth
Gateford, John alnager, Notts.
Godstone, Thomas collector, Ipswich; alnager, Essex and Herts.
Peyntour, Stephen collector, Sandwich
Pound, William dep. butler, Kingston-upon-Hull
2. Other
Braybrooke, Sir Gerard II keeper of Salcey forest, Northants.
Godstone, Thomas high bailiff of Guînes and victualler of Guînes castle
Roches, Sir John surveyor of forests in Wilts. and keeper of Marlborough castle
Sturmy, Sir William warden of Savernake forest
Walwyn, Thomas II escheator, Herefs. (removed 26 Nov.)

 

APPOINTMENTS MADE DURING OR SHORTLY AFTER THE PARLIAMENT

1. Sheriffs
Benstede, Sir Edward Essex and Herts. 3 Nov.                                                             
Cuddington, Ralph Surr. and Suss. 23 Jan. 1400
Gurney, John Norf. and Suff. 3 Nov.
Leigh, Sir William Cumb. 30 Sept.
2. Escheators
Cope, John Northants. and Rutland 26 Nov.
Gateford, John Notts. and Derbys. 28 Nov.
3. Customs officials
Doreward, John dep. butler, Colchester 15 Sept.-14 Oct.
Kymer, Eustace searcher and tronager, Melcombe Regis 10 Nov.
Pound, William collector, Kingston-upon-Hull 5 Oct.
4. Members of Henry IV’s Council
Brampton, William I 1 Nov.
Cheyne, Sir John I prob. by Feb. 1400
Coggeshall, Thomas 1 Nov. (100 marks p.a.)
Curson, John c. Nov.
Doreward, John 1 Nov. (100 marks p.a.)
Freningham, John 1 Nov. (100 marks p.a.)
Shadworth, John 1 Nov.
5. Others
Arnold, John I serjeant-at-arms 21 Nov.
Cope, John clerk and serjeant-marshal of the Marshalsea 11 Nov.
Curson, John keeper of Horston castle, Derbys. 18 Jan.
Freningham, John jt. keeper of temporalities abpric. Canterbury 5 Sept.-21 Oct.
Grey, Sir Thomas envoy to Scotland 10 Dec.
Nash, James coroner and King’s attorney in KB 1 Oct.
Pelham, (Sir) John knight of King’s chamber and royal swordbearer 24 Oct.
constableship Pevensey castle in tail-male Feb.
Rochford, (Sir) John steward, estates forfeited by earl of Kent Feb.
Tiptoft, Sir Payn knight of King’s chamber
6. new appointments
Stretch, John steward, Devon and Som. 18 Nov.
Urswyk, Sir Robert master forester, Lancs. c. Oct.
7. J.p.s appointed by Richard II but retained by Henry IV, 28 Nov.
Barantyn, Thomas Oxon.
Biere, Walter Dorset
Blickling, Roger Norwich
Blount, John II Worcs.
Brooke, Sir Thomas Som.
Burley, John I Salop
Curson, John Derbys.
Euer, Sir Ralph Northumb., Yorks.
Fenn, Hugh atte Gt. Yarmouth
Francis, Sir Robert Staffs.
Freningham, John Kent
Gateford, John Notts.
Grey, Sir Thomas Northumb.
Hampden, Edmund Bucks.
Hardyng, Sampson Northumb.
Preston, John Surr., Suss.
Rochford, (Sir) John Lincs.
Skelton, Sir Thomas Cambs., Hunts.
Stafford, Sir Humphrey I Dorset, Wilts.
Trewythenick, Roger Cornw.
Young, Thomas I Salop
8. J.p.s newly appointed on 28 Nov. (unless otherwise indicated)
Aston, Sir Thomas Staffs.
Belne, Thomas Worcs.
Bere, (Sir) Kynard de la Herefs.
Berney, Sir Robert Norf.
Botkesham, Robert Bishop’s Lynn Feb. 1400
Coggeshall, Thomas Essex
Doreward, John Essex
Frome, John Dorset
Ludwick, John Herts.
Musgrave, Sir Thomas Westmld.
Pelham, (Sir) John Suss. Feb. 1400
Sturmy, Sir William Wilts.
Tiptoft, Sir Payn Cambs. 9 Nov.
Walwyn, Thomas II Herefs.
9. Commissioners of array appointed Dec. 1399 (unless otherwise noted)
Argentine, Sir William Suff.
Barantyn, Thomas Oxon.
Bere, (Sir) Kynard de la Herefs.
Berney, Sir Robert Norf.
Blyton, William Lincoln (Jan. 1400)
Bonet, John Surr. (Jan. 1400)
Bonville, Sir William I Devon
Botkesham, Robert Bishop’s Lynn
Brockhill, Thomas Kent
Brooke, Sir Thomas Devon
Coggeshall, Thomas Essex
Colshull, John I Cornw.
Courtenay, Sir Philip Devon
Cuddington, Ralph Surr.
Curson, John Derbys.
Dayrell, Roger Bucks.
Doreward, John Essex
Euer, Sir Ralph Yorks.
Flore, Roger Rutland
Francis, Sir Robert Staffs.
Freningham, John Kent
Frome, John Dorset
Gateford, John Notts.
Hampden, Edmund Bucks.
Herlyngton, John Hunts.
Heveningham, Sir John Suff.
Lambourne, Sir William Cornw.
Lucy, Sir William Herefs.
Ludwick, John Herts.
Maureward, Sir Thomas Leics.
Musgrave, Sir Thomas Westmld.
Pelham, John Hants
Roches, Sir John Wilts.
Rochford, John Lincs.
Sparsholt, Edmund Berks.
Stafford, Sir Humphrey I Dorset
Stretch, John Devon
Sturmy, Sir William Wilts.
Tiptoft, Sir Payn Cambs.
Trussell, Sir Alfred Northants.
Walwyn, Thomas II Herefs.
Wilcotes, John Oxon.
Young, Thomas I Salop
Notes
  • 1. RP, iii. 425.
  • 2. Ibid. iii. 433.