William Paston (died 1444)

William Paston
Born 1378
Paston, Norfolk
Died 13 August 1444 (aged 6566)
London
Buried Norwich Cathedral
Spouse(s) Agnes Barry

Issue

  • John Paston
  • Edmund Paston
  • William Paston
  • Clement Paston
  • Elizabeth Paston
Father Clement Paston
Mother Beatrice Somerton
Paston arms: Argent, six fleurs-de-lys azure a chief indented or

William Paston (1378 – 13 August 1444), the only son of Clement Paston and Beatrice Somerton, had a distinguished career as a lawyer and Justice of the Common Pleas. He acquired considerable property, and is considered "the real founder of the Paston family fortunes".[1][2]

Family

William Paston was the only son of Clement Paston (d.1419) and Beatrice Somerton (d.1409). Two decades after William Paston's death it was alleged that the Paston family had descended from serfs.[2] However during the reign of Edward IV the Pastons were granted a declaration that they were "gentlemen discended lineally of worship blood sithen the conquest hither".[2]

Career

Norwich Cathedral, where William Paston was buried

By 1406 William Paston was an attorney in the Court of Common Pleas, and in the ensuing years occupied various legal posts in East Anglia, acting in 1411 as counsel to the city of Norwich and the cathedral priory, and as chief steward to Bishop Richard Courtenay (d.1415), chief steward of Bromholm Priory, and chief steward of Bishop's Lynn. In 1418 he was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Norfolk, and in 1420 was acting as counsel for the Duchy of Lancaster and for the Earl Marshal, John de Mowbray, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. He was executor and feoffee for several gentlemen in East Anglia, and was appointed to numerous Norfolk commissions.[2][3]

He became serjeant-at-law about 1418, and on 15 October 1429 was appointed a Justice of the Common Pleas, a position in which he served until shortly before his death.[2][4]

During his lifetime Paston "put together an imposing estate from the proceeds of office, carrying his family into the front rank of Norfolk landed families".[2] He purchased the manor of Snailwell in Cambridgeshire, but otherwise confined his property acquisitions to Norfolk. Before 1426 he had purchased the manor of Cromer, and in 1427 he purchased the manor of Gresham from Thomas Chaucer.[2][4] In 1418, he and his wife, Agnes, provided funds for the rebuilding of the parish church at Therfield, where they were formerly commemorated by an inscription in the east window of the north aisle.[5]

Paston died at London on 13 August 1444, and was buried at Norwich, in the Lady Chapel of Norwich Cathedral.[2][4] His widow, who was about twenty years of age at the time of her marriage, survived him by thirty-five years, but never remarried. She died on 18 August 1479, and was buried at the Whitefriars, Norwich, with her parents, grandparents, and youngest son, Clement, who had predeceased her.[2][6]

Marriage and issue

In 1420, at the age of forty-two, Paston married Agnes Barry or Berry (d. 18 August 1479), the daughter and coheir of Sir Edmund Barry (d.1433) of Horwellbury, near Therfield and Royston, Hertfordshire,[7] by whom he had four sons and one daughter:[8][2][9][5]

Letters

Many letters written by William Paston's family and their circle have survived, making the Paston Letters an exceptionally valuable collection of historical documents; the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography has called them "the richest source there is for every aspect of the lives of gentlemen and gentlewomen of the English middle ages".[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Richmond 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Richmond & Virgoe 2004.
  3. Davis 1971, pp. lii–liii.
  4. 1 2 3 Davis 1971, p. liii.
  5. 1 2 Jones 1993, p. 81.
  6. Davis 1971, pp. liii, liv.
  7. 'Parishes: Kelshall', A History of the County of Hertford: volume 3 (1912), pp. 240–244 Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  8. Richmond 1990, p. 117.
  9. 1 2 Richardson I 2011, p. 340.
  10. Davis 1971, pp. liv, lvii.
  11. Davis 1971, p. lvi.
  12. Davis 1971, p. lvii.
  13. Norman Davis and G. S. Ivy, "MS Walter Rye 38 and its French Grammar", Medium Ævum, 31 (1962), pp. 112–113.
  14. Davis 1971, p. lviii.
  15. Davis 1971, pp. lvi, lvii.
  16. West 2004, p. 39.

References

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