Sir John
Hotham VI, son and heir of Sir John de Hotham V and his unknown wife, was born
about 1386 as he was found to be 28 years old at the inquisition post mortem of
his father in 1414 [1].
He married about 1412 [2],
Maud, daughter of William Newsom of York, who after his death re-married John
Routh, esquire [3].
On 4 April
1414, the escheators in Yorkshire, Lancashire and Westmoreland were ordered to
give to John Hothome, son and heir of John Hothome, 'chivaler', full seisin of all the lands which his father held of
the king in chief or was seised of in his demesne as of fee on the day of his
death [4].
On 20 June
1414, by a deed dated at Scorborough, John de Hothom, esquire, enfeoffed John
Ellerker and Robert Constable, esquires, of the moiety of the manor of
Staveley, the hamlets of Hogyll, Respeton, Sadgyll, Girsemere and Langeden,
with the appurtenances in Westmorland, an acre of land in Carnford called
Salteracre, the advowson of the abbey of Cokersand and the advowson of the
church of Warton in Lancashire [5].
On 9 February 1415, John de Hothom, donsel, nobleman, of the diocese of York
had a papal indult to have a portable altar [6].
In June 1415,
John Hothome, going abroad, had letters of attorney and on 25 July 1415 John
Hothum, in the retinue of the king, had letters of protection [7].
He probably fought at the Battle of Agincourt on 25 October 1415 and was
knighted there. He was definitely knighted before 13 September 1416, when John
de Hothom, knight, of Yorkshire, is named in the Close Rolls as under captain
and one of the deputies of Henry earl of Northumberland. From the Close Roll entry,
it is clear that he fought at the Battle of the Seine in August 1416, in the
fleet of John Duke of Bedford, which ended the Franco-Genoese blockade of the
port of Harfleur [8].
By his
charter dated at Wassand on 10 May 1417, Sir John Godard granted to John Routh and
John Hothom, knights, and Roger Gudale, parson of Bainton, and John Raytheby of
Lincolnshire and their heirs for ever the manor of Wassand and ⅓ of the manor
of Atwick [9].
On 16 May 1417, John Hothom, knight, was appointed to a commission to enquire
into a petition by the church of St. Peter, York [10].
On 30 April 1419, Sir John Hothom, knight, was a party to a fine in which he,
Sir John Routh, William Ryman and John Ratheby purchased a third of the manor
of Southcotes, a ninth part of the manor and castle of Bransholme, and other
lands from Sir John Godard [11].
John Hotham
VI died on 3 October 1419, aged about 33. On 14 November 1419, the writ of diem clausit extremum for John Hotham 'chivaler' was issued to the escheators
of Yorkshire, Lancashire and Westmorland [12].
The
inquisition post mortem for Yorkshire was held at Howden, on 19 December 1419.
The jurors found that he died on Tuesday after Michaelmas last (3 October 1419)
and that John, his son and heir, is aged 8 years and more [13].
The proof of age inquisition for John Hotham VII in 1435 found that he was born
on 8 April 1414 [14],
so he was actually only 5½ years old at his father's death, and not 8 as stated
at his father's inquisitions. At the inquisition post mortem in Lancashire of
Johnnes de Hothom, held at Preston on 25 May 1421, the jurors found that he
died on 3 October 1419 and that John, his son, is his heir and aged 8 years and
upwards [15]. On
5 July 1420, the king ordered an additional inquisition into lands in Yorkshire
not included in the first inquisition [16].
This inquisition which was held at York Castle on 17 October 1420, found that
he also held of the king in chief by knight service ½ knight's fee in Whixley
and Garrowby [17].
These lands were part of his father’s inheritance from Thomas de Thwenge.
[1] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem,
vol. 20, Nos. 65 to 67 (C 138/3/35).
[2] Their
son and heir John Hotham VIII was born in April 1414.
[3] Skaife, Kirkby’s Inquest,
20n.
[4] Calendar of Fine Rolls, vol. 14, Henry
V, 1413-1422 (1934), 67.
[5] Farrer and Curwen, Records
Relating to the Barony of Kendale, Vol. 1, 317–42.
[6] Calendar of Papal Registers Relating to Great
Britain and Ireland, vol. 6: 1404-1415 (1904), 361.
[7] “Calendar of the French Rolls:
3 Henry 5”, Thomas Duffus Hardy, Forty-Fourth Annual Report of the Deputy
Keeper of the Public Records (London: HMSO, 1884), 569, 573.
[8] Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry V, vol.
1: 1413–1419 (1929), 317.
[9] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem,
vol. 21: Henry V: 1418–1422 (2002), No. 506.
[10] Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous
(Chancery), vol. 7: 1399-1422 (1968), 311.
[11] Feet of Fines, CP 25/1/291/64, number 78.
[12] Calendar of Fine Rolls, vol. 14, Henry V:
1413–1422 (1934), 275.
[13] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, vol.
21: Henry V: 1418–1422 (2002), 88, No. 302.
[14] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, vol.
24, No. 273.
[15] W. Langton, ed., Abstracts
of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Made by Christopher Townley and Roger Dodsworth,
Volume I, Chetham Society 95, 1875, 142.
[16] Calendar of Fine Rolls, vol. 14 Henry V:
1413-1422 (1934), 349.
[17] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem,
vol. 21, 6-10 Henry V: 1418-1422 (2010), No. 641.
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