Thomas Neville (died 1460)
Sir Thomas Neville, (c. 1429-1460) was the second son of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, a major magnate in the north of England during the fifteenth-century Wars of the Roses.[1]
Early career, knighthood and marriage
Neville's first mention in contemporary official records is in 1448 when he was appointed steward of the Bishopric of Durham by his uncle, Robert, the Bishop, receining £20 per annum ro the diocese's revenues.[2] He became Sheriff of Glamorgan, on 24 March 1450, in which capacity he witnessed a charter of his brother, Warwick the 'Kingmaker', 12 March the next year, during the latter's dispute over the Despenser inheritance.[3] Warwick also appointed Thomas to assist in the management of his Warwickshire estates, for which he received an annuity.[4] Thomas Neville was knighted by the king (Henry VI) alongside the king's two half-brothers, Edmund and Jasper Tudor on 5 January 1453[5] in the Tower of London, an occasion that Griffiths has called 'an attempt to retain a loyalty [of the Nevilles] that had recently been strained.'[6]
Thomas Neville was licensed by the king on 1 May 1453 to marry Maud Stanhope, the widow of Robert, Lord Willoughby and as such a wealthy heiress.[7] Ralph Griffiths has suggested that the announcement of Neville's marriage was the immediate cause of the feud with the Percies.[8] Not only, says Griffiths, was any further Neville aggrandisement anathema to the Percys, but the new Cromwell connection gave the Nevilles access to the ex-Percy manors of Wressle and Burwell, which doubtless they still hoped to reclaim.[9]
Feud with the Percy family
The Nevilles were one of four major landowners in the north, along with Richard, 3rd Duke of York, the crown (as Duke of Lancaster), and the Percy family, who were Earls of Northumberland. York and the king, however, were effectively absentee landlords so any tension would have existed solely between the Percies and the Nevilles.[10] By 1453, this tension seems to have spilled over into outright violence, with Thomas and his brother John actively seeking out the younger sons of the Earl of Northumberland (the hotheaded[11] Thomas, Lord Egremont and his younger brother Sir Richard Percy) and their retainers.[12] It was Thomas's wedding party that was attacked by Egremont at Heworth, York on 24 august 1453 as the Nevilles returned to Yorkshire with his new bride, by a Percy force of supposedly 5,000 men.[12] There were to be further encounters before the Percys were defeated at Stamford Bridge on 31 October 1454,[13] when thePercy brothers, Egremont and Sir Richard, were ambushed by Thomas and John Neville and subsequently imprisoned in Newgate.[14]
Final years
In 1457, Neville was appointed Chamberlain of the Exchequer, along with a co-heir of Ralph, Lord Cromwell,[15] and later that year he was deputized by his father and elder brother, who were jointly holding the office of Warden of the West March, for which he received a salary of 500 marks;[16] in which, as Storey points out, he was performing 'their duties for less than a quarter of their official salary.'[17] A few months later, he stood as surety for his uncle William, Lord Fauconberg's good behaviour (whom Michael Hicks speculates may have been involved in piracy at this time).[18] By 1459 the domestic political situation had descended into outright civil war; when the earl of Salisbury marched south from his castle at Middleham in September to join up with the duke of York at Ludlow, Thomas marched with him in an army of 5,000-strong. On 23 September 1459, they encountered a larger royal force at Blore Heath, which Salisbury defeated, killing its leader, James Tuchet, 5th Baron Audley. Thomas and John, though, were somehow captured near Tarporley, Cheshire,[19] the next day.[20] Hicks has suggested that this was due to their being wounded in battle and sent home;[19] Rosemary Horrox on the other hand posits that they ventured too far from the main army in pursuit of fleeing Lancastrians.[21] Attainted in the Parliament of Devils the next month,[22] they were imprisoned in Chester Castle and not released until their brother Warwick was victorious at the Battle of Northampton in June 1460.[21] Thomas Neville was appointed, jointly with his father, to Keeper of the Royal Mews[23] as part of the Nevilles' poicy of filling the positions of political importance with their own sympathisers[24] He was immediately, on his release, appointed to commisions to arrest and imprison any who disturbed the peace,[25] and received grants of Duchy of Lancaster estates at the same time.[26] When the duke of York joined them and claimed the throne in October 1460, the Nevilles were as against his claim as every other member of the nobility present for parliament was.[27] Thomas Neville appears to have been fundamental to Salisbury's resistance to York's claims: possibly with Warwick, it was certainly Thomas who met York at Westminster Palace (where he had evicted the king from his lodgings), and informed the duke that his position was untenable 'to both lords and people';[28] According to P.A. Johnson, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Bourchier refused to confront the duke of York, so on two occasions 'Thomas Neville was sent instead.'[29] Two days later, on 13 October 1460, he again went to York: 'whatever was then said is unknown, but Neville's mandate must have been both blunt and bluntly delivered.'[30] York acquiesced to a compromise.[27]
In the meantime, Lancastrian forces were regrouping in Yorkshire[27] and attacking York's and Salisbury's estates and tenants.[31] Thomas Neville accompanied them when they marched out of London on 2 December 1460 to restore a semblance of order to the region; they arrived at York's Sandal Castle on 21 of the month. It is possible that a Christmas Truce was arranged; in any case, nine days later, York, his son Edmund, Earl of Rutland, Salisbury, Thomas, and many of their closest retainers led a sortie in strength to attack a Lancastrian army gathered near the castle. Here, at the Battle of Wakefield, they went down to a crushing defeat, and Thomas died in combat,[32] his father was subsequently executed,[33] and their heads were displayed above the gates of York.[34]
His remains were removed from the Micklegate Bar after the Yorkists' decisive victory at the Battle of Towton three months later, and buried at the Dominican Priory in York.[33] Along with his father, he was subsequently reinterred with his mother on her death in February 1463 in Bisham Priory.[35]
References
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 24.
- ↑ Pollard, A.J., The North-East of England during Wars of the Roses: Lay Society, War and Politics, 1450-1500 (Oxford, 1990), 251-2.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 49.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 62.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 82.
- ↑ Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of King Henry VI ((Berkeley, 1981), 698-9.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 88.
- ↑ Griffiths, R.A., 'Local Rivalries and National Politics: The Percies, the Nevilles and the Duke of Exeter, 1452–55', in King and Country: England and Wales in the Fifteenth Century (London, 1991), 322.
- ↑ Griffiths, R.A., 'Local Rivalries and National Politics: The Percies, the Nevilles and the Duke of Exeter, 1452–55', in King and Country: England and Wales in the Fifteenth Century (London, 1991), 325.
- ↑ Griffiths, R.A., 'Local Rivalries and National Politics: The Percies, the Nevilles and the Duke of Exeter, 1452–55', in King and Country: England and Wales in the Fifteenth Century (London, 1991), 321.
- ↑ Storey, R.L., The End of the House of Lancaster (London, 1966), 125.
- 1 2 Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 87.
- ↑ Storey, R.L., The End of the House of Lancaster (London, 1966), 148-9.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., The Wars of the Roses (Totton, 2010), 115.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 129.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 131.
- ↑ Storey, R.L., The End of the House of Lancaster (London, 1966), 116-7.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 150.
- 1 2 Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 163.
- ↑ Pollard, A.J., The North-East of England during Wars of the Roses: Lay Society, War and Politics, 1450-1500 (Oxford, 1990), 271.
- 1 2 "Oxford DNB article: Neville, John".
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 166.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 183.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 184; Hicks has called it 'decidedly a Neville dominated regime.'
- ↑ Pollard, A.J., The North-East of England during Wars of the Roses: Lay Society, War and Politics, 1450-1500 (Oxford, 1990), 279.
- ↑ Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of King Henry VI ((Berkeley, 1981), 865.
- 1 2 3 "Oxford DNB article: Richard of York".
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 189.
- ↑ Johnson, P.A., Duke Richard of York (Oxford, 1988), 214.
- ↑ Johnson, P.A., Duke Richard of York (Oxford, 1988), 215.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 213.
- ↑ Johnson, P.A., Duke Richard of York (Oxford, 1988), 222-4.
- 1 2 "Oxford DNB article: Neville, Richard".
- ↑ Cox, H., The Battle of Wakefield Revisted (York, 2010), 72.
- ↑ Hicks, M.A., Warwick the Kingmaker (Oxford, 1998), 228.