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John Paston (died 1466)

John Paston I (10 October 1421 – 21 or 22 May 1466) was an English country gentleman and landowner. He was the eldest son of the judge William Paston, Justice of the Common Pleas. After he succeeded his father in 1444, his life was marked by conflict occasioned by a power struggle in East Anglia between the dukes of Suffolk and Norfolk, and by his involvement in the affairs of his wife's kinsman, Sir John Fastolf. Between 1460–1466 he was Justice of the Peace for Norfolk, and was elected as a member of parliament in 1460 and again in 1461. A number of his letters survive among the Paston Letters, a rich source of historical information for the lives of the English gentry of the period.

John Paston
Born10 October 1421
Died21 or 22 May 1466 (aged 44)
London, England
Resting placeBromholm Priory, Norfolk, England
52°50′40″N 1°29′15″E / 52.844479°N 1.487463°E / 52.844479; 1.487463
EraLate Middle Ages
Known forPaston Letters
SpouseMargaret Mautby
Children7, including Sir John Paston and Sir John Paston
Parents

Family Edit

John Paston, born 10 October 1421,[1] was the eldest son and heir of William Paston, Justice of the Common Pleas, and Agnes Barry (d. 18 August 1479), daughter and coheir of Sir Edmund Barry (d. 1433) of Horwellbury, near Therfield and Royston, Hertfordshire. He had three younger brothers, two of whom, Edmund and Clement, died without issue. Another brother, William, married Anne Beaufort, third daughter of Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset. He also had a sister, Elizabeth Paston (1 July 1429 – 1 February 1488), who married firstly Sir Robert Poynings, slain at the Second Battle of St Albans on 17 February 1461, and secondly Sir George Browne of Betchworth Castle (beheaded on Tower Hill, 4 December 1483).[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]

Career Edit

 
Ruins of Bromholm Priory, Norfolk, where John Paston was buried

Paston was educated at Trinity Hall and Peterhouse at the University of Cambridge, and like his father, became a lawyer. He was admitted to the Inner Temple by 1440, and succeeded his father, when only 22 years of age, in 1444.[1][10]

Although Paston inherited a substantial estate, in the latter 1440s the family suffered 'a series of reverses', including the loss of the manor of East Beckham in 1445 .[1][10] The circumstances of these reverses are recounted in the Paston Letters, and the situation has given rise to conflicting views. On the one hand, it has been argued that through his influence with Henry VI, William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, became the dominant magnate in East Anglia, ousting John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, from his rightful position, and the Paston reverses have been held to 'demonstrate the extent to which gentry society in East Anglia suffered from the depredations of [Suffolk's] followers', two of whom, Sir Thomas Tuddenham and John Heydon of Baconsthorpe, are considered to have, with their armed posses, harassed local gentry, including the Pastons and their servants and tenants.[1]

On the other hand, Suffolk had already established himself in East Anglia during the 1430s, and it is possible to view Norfolk as the nobleman who was attempting to become the dominant magnate in the region in the 1440s, and the Paston family's difficulties during this period as a result of this power struggle, and perhaps as a result of personal animosity between John Heydon and the Pastons.[1]

In February 1448, "almost certainly on Heydon's initiative", Robert Hungerford, 3rd Baron Hungerford, asserted his wife's claim to Paston's manor of Gresham. Paston attempted to recover the manor through both negotiation and legal action, and when these proved fruitless, sent his wife, Margaret, to reside in a house in the town in October 1448. In the following January Hungerford's servants assaulted and damaged the house, forcing Margaret Paston to leave. Hungerford remained in possession of Gresham for the next three years.[1][10]

Among Paston's associates during this difficult period were the courtier Thomas Daniel, Margaret Paston's kinsman, Sir John Fastolf, and the Duke of Norfolk. However, none of these connections afforded Paston any practical support, and about May 1449 Paston's wife Margaret wrote to him advising that local opinion was of the view that he should try to reach a rapprochement with Suffolk.[1]

Suffolk fell from power at the beginning of 1450, and early in 1451 Paston regained possession of the manor of Gresham.[1][10] During the years 1450–51 he was involved in attempts by the Duke of Norfolk, John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford, and Sir John Fastolf to remove Suffolk's servants from positions of local power. These efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, and, by mid-1451, Suffolk's widow, Alice (d. 1475), and Thomas Scales, 7th Baron Scales, had assumed Suffolk's former position of power in East Anglia.[1][11]

In 1455 he was elected as one of the Knights of the Shire for Norfolk, but did not take a seat in Parliament as the Duke of Norfolk 'insisted on his own nominees being returned'.[10] In 1457 he paid a fine for declining a knighthood.[10] In 1458 Paston, his brother William and others were accused of 'riotous behaviour', and the Duke of Norfolk headed a commission charged with arresting them.[12] From 1460 to 1466 he was Justice of the Peace for Norfolk, and was elected as a member of parliament in 1460 and again in 1461.[12] In 1461, as a result of conflict with Sir John Howard, then Sheriff of Norfolk, he was briefly imprisoned in the Fleet.[12] In 1464, in connection with his involvement in the estate of the late Sir John Fastolf, he was accused of trespass, outlawed, and imprisoned in the Fleet.[12][1] In 1465 he was imprisoned in the Fleet for the third time, again in connection with Fastolf's estate.[12][1]

Much of Paston's time from the mid-1450s had in fact been taken up by his position as adviser to his wife's kinsman, 'the ageing, wealthy, and childless Sir John Fastolf'.[1][10] In 1456 he was appointed one of the feoffees of Fastolf's lands.[10] In June 1459 Fastolf made a will which provided that his ten executors found a college in Caister. However, after Fastolf died on 5 November 1459,[12] Paston claimed that on 3 November Fastolf had made a nuncupative will giving Paston exclusive authority over the foundation of the college, and providing that, after payment of 4000 marks, Paston was to have all Fastolf's lands in Norfolk and Suffolk.[1] Relying on the nuncupative will, Paston took possession of the Fastolf estates, and resided at times at Fastolf's manors of Caister and Hellesdon.[12]

Paston's claim to the Fastolf lands was challenged by the Duke of Norfolk, who seized Caister in 1461; by Sir William Yelverton and Gilbert Debenham, who claimed the manors of Cotton in Suffolk and Caldecott Hall near Fritton; by John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk, who claimed two Norfolk manors, Hellesdon and Drayton, in 1465; and by Lord Scales, who in January 1466 forced officials of the city of Norwich to seize Paston's property there in the king's name, alleging that Paston was a 'serf of the crown'. In 1464 a legal challenge to Paston's executorship under the nuncupative will was mounted by William Yelverton, one of the ten executors who had been appointed under Sir John Fastolf's written will;[12] however, the case was still undecided at the time of Paston's death.[1]

During the latter years of his life, Paston fell out with his eldest son and heir (despite his wife's unceasing attempts at reconciling her husband and son), John, who died in 1479. Father and son reconciled in May 1465. [12] The elder John Paston died at London on 21 or 22 May 1466, and was buried at Bromholm Priory, Norfolk.[12]

Several of John Paston's letters survive among the Paston Letters.[2]

Marriage and issue Edit

Paston married, between April and November 1440, Margaret Mautby (d.1484), the daughter and heir of John Mautby of Mautby, Norfolk, by whom he had five sons and two daughters:[1]

  • Sir John Paston (1442–1479), eldest son and heir, who never married, although he was long betrothed to Anne Haute, the daughter of Sir William Haute (d. 1464) of Bishopsbourne, Kent, and Joan Woodville, daughter of Richard Woodville.[13][14] Anne Haute's sister, Alice (born c. 1444), was the second wife of Sir John Fogge, and both Anne and Alice were first cousins of Elizabeth Woodville, wife of Edward IV. By a mistress, Constance Reynforth, Sir John Paston had an illegitimate daughter, Constance.[13][14][15][16][17]
  • Sir John Paston (1444–1504), who succeeded his brother, and married firstly Margery Brewes (d. 1495), daughter of Sir Thomas Brewes (d. 17 June 1482) of Topcroft, Norfolk, by his second wife Elizabeth Debenham, sister of Gilbert Debenham, by whom he had two sons, Christopher and William (father of Eleanor Paston, Countess of Rutland), and a daughter, Elizabeth. He married, secondly, to Agnes, the twice-widowed daughter of Nicholas Morley of Glynde, Sussex.[16][2][18][19][20]
  • Edmund Paston (d. before 8 February 1504), who married firstly, about 1480, Katherine Spelman (d. 18 April 1491), widow of William Clippesby, and daughter of John Spelman, by whom he had a son, Robert, and secondly, Margaret Monceaux (died circa 1505), widow successively of William Lomnor and Thomas Briggs. Between 1486 and 1489 John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford, appointed him receiver of lands which had formerly belonged to Thomas, Lord Scales.[2][20]
  • Walter Paston (c. 1456 – c. 18 August 1479), who died in Norwich on or after 18 August 1479, a few weeks after graduating from the University of Oxford, and was buried in the church of St Peter Hungate.[2][21]
  • William Paston (born c.1459). He was at Eton in 1478 and 1479, and in 1487 entered the service of John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford. In about 1503 or 1504 he was dismissed from the Earl's service, being 'so troubled with sickness and crazed in his mind'.[2][21]
  • Margery Paston (born c.1450), who in 1469 married her lover, Richard Calle, the Paston family's steward, by whom she had three sons, John, William and Richard.[2][22]
  • Anne Paston (d. 1494/5), who married, before June 1477, William Yelverton (d.1500), grandson of Sir William Yelverton, by whom she had a child who died young.[2][23][24][21]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Castor 2004.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Richmond & Virgoe 2004.
  3. ^ Richardson I 2011, p. 340.
  4. ^ Davis 1971, pp. lvi, lvii.
  5. ^ Watt 2004, p. 39.
  6. ^ Davis 1971, p. lvii.
  7. ^ 'Parishes: Kelshall', A History of the County of Hertford: volume 3 (1912), pp. 240–244 Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  8. ^ Richmond 1990, p. 117.
  9. ^ Jones 1993, p. 81.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Davis 1971, p. liv.
  11. ^ Castor 2004c.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Davis 1971, p. lv.
  13. ^ a b Adams 1986, p. 103.
  14. ^ a b Fleming 2004.
  15. ^ Horrox 2004.
  16. ^ a b Castor 2004b.
  17. ^ Tait 1895, pp. 2–5.
  18. ^ Davis 1971, pp. lx, lxiv.
  19. ^ Moreton 1992, p. 96.
  20. ^ a b Davis 1971, pp. lxi–lxii.
  21. ^ a b c Davis 1971, p. lxiii.
  22. ^ Davis 1971, p. lxii.
  23. ^ Pollard 1900, p. 318.
  24. ^ Ives 2004.

References Edit

  • Adams, Alison, ed. (1986). The Changing Face of Arthurian Romance. Cambridge: The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85991-227-3.
  • Castor, Helen (2004). "Paston, John (I) (1421–1466)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21511. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource: Tait, J. (1895). "Paston, John (1421–1466)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Castor, Helen (2004b). "Paston, Sir John (II) (1442–1479)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21512. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource: Tait, J. (1895). "Paston, Sir John (1442–1479)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Castor, Helen (2004c). "Vere, John de, twelfth earl of Oxford,(1408–1462), magnate". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28213. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Davis, Norman, ed. (1971). The Paston Letters and Papers of the Fifteenth Century, Part I. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780197224212.
  • Fleming, Peter (2004). "Haute family (per. c.1350–1530)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52786. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Horrox, Rosemary (2004). "Fogge, Sir John (b. in or before 1417, d. 1490)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/57617. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Ives, E.W. (2004). "Yelverton, Sir William (d. 1477?)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30215. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Jones, Arthur, ed. (1993). Hertfordshire 1731–1800 As Recorded in The Gentleman's Magazine. Hertford: Hertfordshire University Press. ISBN 0-901354-73-2.
  • Moreton, C.E. (1992). The Townshends and Their World: Gentry, Law and Land in Norfllk c.1450–1551. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Pollard, Albert Frederick (1900). "Yelverton, William (1400?–1472?)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 63. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 318.
  • Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Vol. I (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. p. 340. ISBN 978-1449966379.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Richmond, Colin; Virgoe, Roger (2004). "Paston, William (I) (1378–1444)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21514. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Richmond, Colin (2004). "Paston family (per. c.1420–1504)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52791. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Richmond, Colin (1990). The Paston family in the Fifteenth Century: The First Phase. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521520270.
  • Tait, James (1895). "Paston, John (1442–1579)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 2–5.
  • Watt, Diane (2004). The Paston Women. Woodbridge, Suffolk: D.S. Brewer. ISBN 9781843840244.

john, paston, died, 1466, john, paston, october, 1421, 1466, english, country, gentleman, landowner, eldest, judge, william, paston, justice, common, pleas, after, succeeded, father, 1444, life, marked, conflict, occasioned, power, struggle, east, anglia, betw. John Paston I 10 October 1421 21 or 22 May 1466 was an English country gentleman and landowner He was the eldest son of the judge William Paston Justice of the Common Pleas After he succeeded his father in 1444 his life was marked by conflict occasioned by a power struggle in East Anglia between the dukes of Suffolk and Norfolk and by his involvement in the affairs of his wife s kinsman Sir John Fastolf Between 1460 1466 he was Justice of the Peace for Norfolk and was elected as a member of parliament in 1460 and again in 1461 A number of his letters survive among the Paston Letters a rich source of historical information for the lives of the English gentry of the period John PastonBorn10 October 1421Died21 or 22 May 1466 aged 44 London EnglandResting placeBromholm Priory Norfolk England52 50 40 N 1 29 15 E 52 844479 N 1 487463 E 52 844479 1 487463EraLate Middle AgesKnown forPaston LettersSpouseMargaret MautbyChildren7 including Sir John Paston and Sir John PastonParentsWilliam Paston father Agnes Barry mother Contents 1 Family 2 Career 3 Marriage and issue 4 Notes 5 ReferencesFamily EditJohn Paston born 10 October 1421 1 was the eldest son and heir of William Paston Justice of the Common Pleas and Agnes Barry d 18 August 1479 daughter and coheir of Sir Edmund Barry d 1433 of Horwellbury near Therfield and Royston Hertfordshire He had three younger brothers two of whom Edmund and Clement died without issue Another brother William married Anne Beaufort third daughter of Edmund Beaufort 2nd Duke of Somerset He also had a sister Elizabeth Paston 1 July 1429 1 February 1488 who married firstly Sir Robert Poynings slain at the Second Battle of St Albans on 17 February 1461 and secondly Sir George Browne of Betchworth Castle beheaded on Tower Hill 4 December 1483 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Career Edit nbsp Ruins of Bromholm Priory Norfolk where John Paston was buriedPaston was educated at Trinity Hall and Peterhouse at the University of Cambridge and like his father became a lawyer He was admitted to the Inner Temple by 1440 and succeeded his father when only 22 years of age in 1444 1 10 Although Paston inherited a substantial estate in the latter 1440s the family suffered a series of reverses including the loss of the manor of East Beckham in 1445 1 10 The circumstances of these reverses are recounted in the Paston Letters and the situation has given rise to conflicting views On the one hand it has been argued that through his influence with Henry VI William de la Pole Duke of Suffolk became the dominant magnate in East Anglia ousting John Mowbray 3rd Duke of Norfolk from his rightful position and the Paston reverses have been held to demonstrate the extent to which gentry society in East Anglia suffered from the depredations of Suffolk s followers two of whom Sir Thomas Tuddenham and John Heydon of Baconsthorpe are considered to have with their armed posses harassed local gentry including the Pastons and their servants and tenants 1 On the other hand Suffolk had already established himself in East Anglia during the 1430s and it is possible to view Norfolk as the nobleman who was attempting to become the dominant magnate in the region in the 1440s and the Paston family s difficulties during this period as a result of this power struggle and perhaps as a result of personal animosity between John Heydon and the Pastons 1 In February 1448 almost certainly on Heydon s initiative Robert Hungerford 3rd Baron Hungerford asserted his wife s claim to Paston s manor of Gresham Paston attempted to recover the manor through both negotiation and legal action and when these proved fruitless sent his wife Margaret to reside in a house in the town in October 1448 In the following January Hungerford s servants assaulted and damaged the house forcing Margaret Paston to leave Hungerford remained in possession of Gresham for the next three years 1 10 Among Paston s associates during this difficult period were the courtier Thomas Daniel Margaret Paston s kinsman Sir John Fastolf and the Duke of Norfolk However none of these connections afforded Paston any practical support and about May 1449 Paston s wife Margaret wrote to him advising that local opinion was of the view that he should try to reach a rapprochement with Suffolk 1 Suffolk fell from power at the beginning of 1450 and early in 1451 Paston regained possession of the manor of Gresham 1 10 During the years 1450 51 he was involved in attempts by the Duke of Norfolk John de Vere 12th Earl of Oxford and Sir John Fastolf to remove Suffolk s servants from positions of local power These efforts were ultimately unsuccessful and by mid 1451 Suffolk s widow Alice d 1475 and Thomas Scales 7th Baron Scales had assumed Suffolk s former position of power in East Anglia 1 11 In 1455 he was elected as one of the Knights of the Shire for Norfolk but did not take a seat in Parliament as the Duke of Norfolk insisted on his own nominees being returned 10 In 1457 he paid a fine for declining a knighthood 10 In 1458 Paston his brother William and others were accused of riotous behaviour and the Duke of Norfolk headed a commission charged with arresting them 12 From 1460 to 1466 he was Justice of the Peace for Norfolk and was elected as a member of parliament in 1460 and again in 1461 12 In 1461 as a result of conflict with Sir John Howard then Sheriff of Norfolk he was briefly imprisoned in the Fleet 12 In 1464 in connection with his involvement in the estate of the late Sir John Fastolf he was accused of trespass outlawed and imprisoned in the Fleet 12 1 In 1465 he was imprisoned in the Fleet for the third time again in connection with Fastolf s estate 12 1 Much of Paston s time from the mid 1450s had in fact been taken up by his position as adviser to his wife s kinsman the ageing wealthy and childless Sir John Fastolf 1 10 In 1456 he was appointed one of the feoffees of Fastolf s lands 10 In June 1459 Fastolf made a will which provided that his ten executors found a college in Caister However after Fastolf died on 5 November 1459 12 Paston claimed that on 3 November Fastolf had made a nuncupative will giving Paston exclusive authority over the foundation of the college and providing that after payment of 4000 marks Paston was to have all Fastolf s lands in Norfolk and Suffolk 1 Relying on the nuncupative will Paston took possession of the Fastolf estates and resided at times at Fastolf s manors of Caister and Hellesdon 12 Paston s claim to the Fastolf lands was challenged by the Duke of Norfolk who seized Caister in 1461 by Sir William Yelverton and Gilbert Debenham who claimed the manors of Cotton in Suffolk and Caldecott Hall near Fritton by John de la Pole 2nd Duke of Suffolk who claimed two Norfolk manors Hellesdon and Drayton in 1465 and by Lord Scales who in January 1466 forced officials of the city of Norwich to seize Paston s property there in the king s name alleging that Paston was a serf of the crown In 1464 a legal challenge to Paston s executorship under the nuncupative will was mounted by William Yelverton one of the ten executors who had been appointed under Sir John Fastolf s written will 12 however the case was still undecided at the time of Paston s death 1 During the latter years of his life Paston fell out with his eldest son and heir despite his wife s unceasing attempts at reconciling her husband and son John who died in 1479 Father and son reconciled in May 1465 12 The elder John Paston died at London on 21 or 22 May 1466 and was buried at Bromholm Priory Norfolk 12 Several of John Paston s letters survive among the Paston Letters 2 Marriage and issue EditPaston married between April and November 1440 Margaret Mautby d 1484 the daughter and heir of John Mautby of Mautby Norfolk by whom he had five sons and two daughters 1 Sir John Paston 1442 1479 eldest son and heir who never married although he was long betrothed to Anne Haute the daughter of Sir William Haute d 1464 of Bishopsbourne Kent and Joan Woodville daughter of Richard Woodville 13 14 Anne Haute s sister Alice born c 1444 was the second wife of Sir John Fogge and both Anne and Alice were first cousins of Elizabeth Woodville wife of Edward IV By a mistress Constance Reynforth Sir John Paston had an illegitimate daughter Constance 13 14 15 16 17 Sir John Paston 1444 1504 who succeeded his brother and married firstly Margery Brewes d 1495 daughter of Sir Thomas Brewes d 17 June 1482 of Topcroft Norfolk by his second wife Elizabeth Debenham sister of Gilbert Debenham by whom he had two sons Christopher and William father of Eleanor Paston Countess of Rutland and a daughter Elizabeth He married secondly to Agnes the twice widowed daughter of Nicholas Morley of Glynde Sussex 16 2 18 19 20 Edmund Paston d before 8 February 1504 who married firstly about 1480 Katherine Spelman d 18 April 1491 widow of William Clippesby and daughter of John Spelman by whom he had a son Robert and secondly Margaret Monceaux died circa 1505 widow successively of William Lomnor and Thomas Briggs Between 1486 and 1489 John de Vere 13th Earl of Oxford appointed him receiver of lands which had formerly belonged to Thomas Lord Scales 2 20 Walter Paston c 1456 c 18 August 1479 who died in Norwich on or after 18 August 1479 a few weeks after graduating from the University of Oxford and was buried in the church of St Peter Hungate 2 21 William Paston born c 1459 He was at Eton in 1478 and 1479 and in 1487 entered the service of John de Vere 13th Earl of Oxford In about 1503 or 1504 he was dismissed from the Earl s service being so troubled with sickness and crazed in his mind 2 21 Margery Paston born c 1450 who in 1469 married her lover Richard Calle the Paston family s steward by whom she had three sons John William and Richard 2 22 Anne Paston d 1494 5 who married before June 1477 William Yelverton d 1500 grandson of Sir William Yelverton by whom she had a child who died young 2 23 24 21 Notes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Castor 2004 a b c d e f g h Richmond amp Virgoe 2004 Richardson I 2011 p 340 Davis 1971 pp lvi lvii Watt 2004 p 39 Davis 1971 p lvii Parishes Kelshall A History of the County of Hertford volume 3 1912 pp 240 244 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Richmond 1990 p 117 Jones 1993 p 81 a b c d e f g h Davis 1971 p liv Castor 2004c a b c d e f g h i j Davis 1971 p lv a b Adams 1986 p 103 a b Fleming 2004 Horrox 2004 a b Castor 2004b Tait 1895 pp 2 5 Davis 1971 pp lx lxiv Moreton 1992 p 96 a b Davis 1971 pp lxi lxii a b c Davis 1971 p lxiii Davis 1971 p lxii Pollard 1900 p 318 Ives 2004 References EditAdams Alison ed 1986 The Changing Face of Arthurian Romance Cambridge The Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85991 227 3 Castor Helen 2004 Paston John I 1421 1466 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21511 Subscription or UK public library membership required The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource Tait J 1895 Paston John 1421 1466 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 London Smith Elder amp Co Castor Helen 2004b Paston Sir John II 1442 1479 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21512 Subscription or UK public library membership required The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource Tait J 1895 Paston Sir John 1442 1479 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 London Smith Elder amp Co Castor Helen 2004c Vere John de twelfth earl of Oxford 1408 1462 magnate Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28213 Subscription or UK public library membership required Davis Norman ed 1971 The Paston Letters and Papers of the Fifteenth Century Part I Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780197224212 Fleming Peter 2004 Haute family per c 1350 1530 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 52786 Subscription or UK public library membership required Horrox Rosemary 2004 Fogge Sir John b in or before 1417 d 1490 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 57617 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ives E W 2004 Yelverton Sir William d 1477 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30215 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jones Arthur ed 1993 Hertfordshire 1731 1800 As Recorded in TheGentleman s Magazine Hertford Hertfordshire University Press ISBN 0 901354 73 2 Moreton C E 1992 The Townshends and Their World Gentry Law and Land in Norfllk c 1450 1551 Oxford Clarendon Press Pollard Albert Frederick 1900 Yelverton William 1400 1472 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 63 London Smith Elder amp Co p 318 Richardson Douglas 2011 Everingham Kimball G ed Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Vol I 2nd ed Salt Lake City p 340 ISBN 978 1449966379 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Richmond Colin Virgoe Roger 2004 Paston William I 1378 1444 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21514 Subscription or UK public library membership required Richmond Colin 2004 Paston family per c 1420 1504 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 52791 Subscription or UK public library membership required Richmond Colin 1990 The Paston family in the Fifteenth Century The First Phase Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521520270 Tait James 1895 Paston John 1442 1579 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 2 5 Watt Diane 2004 The Paston Women Woodbridge Suffolk D S Brewer ISBN 9781843840244 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Paston died 1466 amp oldid 1164089504, 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