Richard Southwell (died 1514)

Richard Southwell (c. 1449 – 27 September 1514[1]) was a 15th-century British administrator from Norfolk.

Early life

Richard Southwell was the son of Robert Southwell of Barnham, Norfolk and his wife Isabel Boyes.

Career

During the second half of the fifteenth century, the Southwell name appears increasingly in government matters, with Richard being appointed to a number of commissions and administrative posts. Richard was the Member of Parliament for Yarmouth in 1455[2] and Escheator of Norfok in 1455–56, 1459–60 and 1474.[3] In 1461 he was granted an annuity of 20 marks until he was provided for life with an office with fees of that value.

In 1462 Richard was appointed to the office of Marshal of the Exchequer[4] with its accustomed fees during the minority of the son of the Duke of Norfolk. In 1475, with Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury and others, Richard was made responsible for the Duke's manors in Suffolk and Essex, while the Duke was across the sea with King Edward IV.

In 1477, he was again involved with the affairs of Yarmouth; this time as a member of a commission into a complaint by two Prussian merchants. At this time trade with Germany was an important part of the English economy, and any problems were taken seriously. Henry Faute and Hamo Barambroke had complained that a ship called la Mary of Danske, captained by Peter Eybryght, laden with goods and merchandise to the value of £600, while sailing off Yarmouth was driven ashore by evildoers who stole the cargo. This they claimed was contrary to the friendship between the King and Almain, and the offenders should be arrested and imprisoned and restitution made. In 1482, he was a commissioner examining Thomas and Margaret Brygge regarding certain felonies, murders, trespasses and offences committed by them. An unusual commission was one in 1491, when he had to determine whether Sir William Parker was a lunatic from birth or from what date and whether he alienated his lands when in that state. From 1496 to 1504 he was a commissioner of the peace for Norfolk.[5]

Marriage and family

In 1466 Richard married Amy, the coheir and eldest of the four daughters of Edmund Witchingham of Conningsby, Lincolnshire. Since she was an heiress, this marriage established the family at Wood Rising, Norfolk.

Richard and his wife Amy had two sons, Robert and Francis, and four daughters, Elizabeth, Katherine, Alice and Amy.

After his wife's death Richard married, in 1488, the widow Katherine Sturges, daughter of John Williams, and had four more daughters, Katherine, Ursula, Amy and Elizabeth.

The status of the Southwell family in East Anglian society is reflected in the marriages of Richard's daughters, who largely married members of the minor aristocracy of the region.

References

  1. http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/SOUTHWELL.htm
  2. Davis, Norman. The Paston Letters: A Selection in Modern Spelling.
  3. An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk: Volume X by Francis Blomefield, Charles Parkin
  4. Francis Blomefield, 'Mitford Hundred and Half: Wood Rysing', in An Essay Towards A Topographical History of the County of Norfolk: Volume 10 (London, 1809), pp. 273-281 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol10/pp273-281 [accessed 9 June 2015]
  5. The Southwells of Woodrising, Norfolk by Terry and Mary Miller


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