First name | John |
Last name | Cavendish |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Justice |
Source | TNA KB 27/486 rex mm. 8-8d |
Role in source | Victim |
ID | Summary | Description | Location | Role | Charges | Comments on role | View incident |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3243 | Those named in Indictments for St Edmunds liberty - re. death of John Cavendish | Those named in Indictments for St Edmunds liberty - re. death of John Cavendish (see m. 1d) | Suffolk | Victim | View Incident page | ||
3244 | Those who despoiled goods of John Cavendish | All those likewise mentioned despoiled Lord John de Cavendyssh of his goods and chattels at Cavendish | Cavendish,Suffolk | Victim | View Incident page | ||
4147 | Thomas Payntour rises up at St Albans | It was presented that Thomas Payntour of St Albans on 14 June 1381 painted a banner with the king's arms and went with various traitors to St Albans and threw down the houses of Richard Stryveyn, John Clerk and Robert atte Chaumbre. Thomas Payntour is led from the Marshalsea and produces a pardon, along with Richard Walyngford of St Albans; they are released and mainprised. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4148 | William Berewyk and Richard Walyngford rise up at St Albans | It was presented that William Berewyk and Richard Walyngford on Friday 14 and Saturday 15 June 1381 came from London with a banner and rose up at St Albans with the community of that town. They are brought before the king's bench from the Marshalsea by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbot of St Albans and produce the king's pardon. They are released and mainprised. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4149 | John Wayt rises up at St Albans | John Wayt rose up at St Albans with the community of that town on Friday 14 June 1381, and threw down the manor houses of the abbey of St Albans. He was led from the Marshalsea by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbey and brought before the king's bench. He produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is released and mainprised. | St Albans,Hertfordshire; Abbey of St Albans,St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4150 | Gilbert Taillour rises up St Albans | Gilbert Taillour rose up at St Albans with a wicked company on Friday 14 June 1381, and said that if one man was killed then the manors of the abbot of St Albans would be burnt and the abbey thrown down. He was led from the Marshalsea by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbey and brought before the king's bench. He produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is released and mainprised. | Abbey of St Albans,St Albans,Hertfordshire; St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4151 | John Tyler rises up at St Albans | John Tyler and others rose up on Friday 21 June 1381 and threw down a house belonging to the abbot of St Albans called 'le Thwerthonerhous', and on Saturday 22 June 1381 they threw down the houses of Robert atte Chaumbre, Richard Screvayne and John Clerk at St Albans, and broke the prison of the abbot of St Albans and led out the prisoners. John Tyler is led from the Marshalsea before the king's bench and produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is mainprised and released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire; Abbey of St Albans,St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4152 | Thomas Bynorthen rises up at St Albans | Thomas Bynorthen was arrested at St Albans on suspicion of treasonable insurrection and was committed to the custody of the bailiffs of the abbot of St Albans. He is led from the Marshalsea before the king's bench and produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is mainprised and released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4153 | Edmund Cook rises up at St Albans | Edmund Cook of Berkhamsted with about 40 others of the same village on Saturday 15 June 1381 went to St Albans and rode to the house of Robert atte Chaumbre and stayed on their horses while the house was thrown down. Edmund Cook was led from the Marshalsea before the king's bench by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbot of St Albans and produced a pardon under the general amnesty; he is mainprised and released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4154 | John Garlek rises up at St Albans | John Garlek and others on Friday 14 June 1381 came from London to St Albans with a banner raised against the king. John Garlek is led from the Marshalsea by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbot of St Albans and produces a pardon under the genera amnesty; he is mainprised and released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mainpernor | View Incident page | ||
4156 | Stephen atte Hethe rises up at St Albans | Stephen atte Hethe was arrested on suspicion of treasonable insurrection against the king at St Albans. He is led from the Marshalsea by the bailiffs of the liberty of the abbot of St Albans and produces a pardon under the general amnesty. He is mainprised and released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4157 | John Smyth takes part in burning of the Savoy and the manor of the Prior of Clerkenwell | It was presented that John Smyth of Lewisham together with other traitors on Thursday 13 June 1381 rose up and burnt the Duke of Lancaster's manor of the Savoy and the manor of the Prior of Clerkenwell. John Smyth is led from the Marshalsea before the king's bench and produces a pardon by request of Queen Anne; he is mainprised and released. | Hospital of St John,Clerkenwell,Middlesex; Savoy Palace,Middlesex | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4158 | John son of William Clerk, chaplain - no crimes specified | John son of William Clerk, chaplain, captured and detained in the Tower of London - no crimes specified. He is committed to the Marshalsea; he appears and produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is mainprised and released. | Mentioned | View Incident page | |||
4163 | John Porel rises up at St Albans | John Porel with other malefactors on Sunday 16 June 1381 treasonably threw down the houses of John Clerk, Richard Stryveyn and Robert atte Chambre in St Albans, and on Saturday 15 June helped John Baron break the prison, and they took away an unknown man in the prison there and beheaded him. John Porel is led from the Marshalsea before the king's bench and produces a pardon under the general amnesty; he is released. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4213 | Peter Bolom rises up at St Albans | Peter Bolom and others treasonably and feloniously rose up at St Albans on Saturday 15 June 1381. He appears and produces a pardon. | St Albans,Hertfordshire | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4214 | William Plomer burns the Savoy and the Hospital of St John | William Plomer of Greenwich, at the same time with other traitors of the lord king, feloniously and traitorously made an insurrection against the lord king and his faithful subjects on Thursday 13 June 1381, and set fire to the houses of John, duke of Lancaster, at the Savoy in the county of Middlesex, and the houses and church of St John of Jerusalem in England at Smithfield, and was the principal actor in the aforesaid insurrection. He produces a pardon, is mainprised and goes free. | Savoy Palace,Middlesex; Hospital of St John,Clerkenwell,Middlesex | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4247 | William Osebarn and others rise up at Kingston | William Osebarn, Robert Sutton, John Surpyton and William Crisp, were those who firstly made an insurrection with diverse other wrongdoers, whose names they do not know, traitorously against the lord king and his people in the vill of Kingston upon Thames, aforesaid, and the adjacent places in the county of Surrey, aforesaid, and were leaders of others so insurging with them. They produce pardons and go free. | Kingston Upon Thames,Surrey | Mentioned | View Incident page | ||
4286 | John Wrawe and others plunder houses in Bury St Edmunds | John Wrawe, chaplain, entered the vill of Bury St Edmunds on Friday 14 June 1381, against the peace of the lord king in the absence of the people of the said vill of Bury, and broke into the houses of John de Bury, [and] lord John Cavendisshe, the gaol of Bury, the houses of the prior, John Smyth, Nicholas de Fornham, Edmund Heryng and others, with other conspirators and unknown men from his company, and feloniously took and carried away their goods. | Bury St Edmunds,Suffolk | Victim | View Incident page | ||
4364 | John Forbour attends the death of John Cavendish | The jury say that on Friday 14 June 1381 John Forbour rode into the country, and was at the death of the Lord John Cavendish. | Victim | View Incident page | |||
4456 | Rebels break into Cavendish church and seize goods of John Cavendish stored there, 13 June 1381 | Rebels led by John Wrawe break into the church at Cavendish and take and carry off goods belonging to John Cavendish, lately justice of the king, and shared the goods, 13 June 1381 | Cavendish,Suffolk | Victim | View Incident page | ||
4466 | Rebels break into Cavendish church and seize goods of John Cavendish, 13 June 1381 | Rebels break into Cavendish church and seize goods of John Cavendish stored there | Cavendish,Suffolk | Victim | View Incident page |