First name | John |
Last name | Martyn |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Chaplain;Servant |
Domicile | Harkstead,Suffolk |
Source | TNA C 67/29 mm. 38-25 |
Comments | late servant of Thomas Sampson of Herkestede chaplain; pardon dated: 10.5.1382 |
ID | Summary | Description | Location | Role | Charges | Comments on role | View incident |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2901 | Rebellion of John Batisford, Thomas Sampson and John Martyn | The jurors present that John Batisford, parson of the church of Bucklesham, Thomas Sampson and John Martyn, chaplain, on Sunday 16th June 1381 at the time of the rising were chief congregators and supporters from village to village of various men in the hundreds of Samford, Ipswich, Colneis, Bosmere and Claydon, falsely and fraudulently and against the peace and dignity of the crown. | Colneis Hundred,Suffolk; Ipswich,Suffolk; Bosmere and Claydon Hundred,Suffolk; Samford Hundred,Suffolk | Accused | View Incident page | ||
3246 | John de Batisford and John Martyn plunder Roger Wolferston | [The jurors] also say that John de Batisford, parson of the church of Bucklesham, and John Martyn, chaplain, chief supporters and congregators at the time of the rising came to the villages of Stutton and Woolverstone in a warlike manner and against the dignity of the crown, namely, on Sunday 16th June 1381, and there they feloniously and fraudulently entered the close and houses of Roger Wolferston' with many others unknown, and there feloniously plundered and carried away grain, malt, sheep, cows, horses and other goods and chattels of the said Roger, worth £40, at Stutton and Woolverstone. | Stutton,Suffolk; Woolverstone,Suffolk | Accused | View Incident page | ||
3496 | Pardon for the rebels | Pardon for the rebels, granted under the terms sanctioned by parliament in November 1381 | Pardoned | View Incident page | |||
3496 | Pardon for the rebels | Pardon for the rebels, granted under the terms sanctioned by parliament in November 1381 | Pardoned | View Incident page | |||
3498 | Pardon to the 'good and loyal commons' | Pardon to the 'good and loyal commons', granted under the terms sanctioned by parliament in November 1381: | Pardoned | View Incident page |