Son of a distinguished Devon lawyer, Robert Bowring followed his father to the Middle Temple, where he became a barrister and bencher, and was early made a justice of the peace in his native county. In 1504 he succeeded to his inheritance near Kingsbridge and elsewhere in south Devon, and it was as of Wood House and Alvington, Devon, Bishopsworth, Somerset, and London that he sued out a pardon in 1510. The town of Plymouth paid him 10s. in 1508 for examining its charters and from the following year he received similar occasional payments as well as an annual fee of 26s.8d. as recorder. The accounts for 1513-14 record a payment of £5 to him ‘for his attendance at the Parliament’, and three years later a further 26s.4d. ‘paid to the recorder’s brother for his fee for the burgess-ship of the Parliament for our town’ probably represents a belated payment of arrears.4CPR, 1485-94, P. 474; LP Hen. VIII, i; CCR, 1500-9, p. 121; Plymouth receivers’ acct. bk. 1507-8, 1513-14, 1514-15, 1516-17.
Bowring had died on 3 May 1514, holding lands in Devon, Gloucestershire and Somerset. By his will, made on the day of his death and proved on the following 16 June, he made provision for his wife and left £40 each to his brother Ralph Bowring and his sister Alice Pyke and smaller sums to servants and others including James Horswell. He named six executors including his wife, his daughter Thomasin, his brother-in-law William Pyke and (Sir) William Courtenay I. His daughter survived him by less than four years, dying on 13 Jan. 1518, and the inheritance passed to Bowring’s brother.5C142/30/52, 33/19, 78/146; PCC 33 Fetiplace.