Giles Thorndon

Giles Thorndon (c.1388–1477) was an official of the English Crown, who was noted for his long and loyal service to the House of Lancaster and for his troubled career as Lord Treasurer of Ireland.

Early career

He was born in Newcastle upon Tyne shortly before 1390.[1] Little is known of his family; there is no evidence that he was related to Roger Thornton, the long serving Mayor of Newcastle.

By his own account he entered the household of the future King Henry V in 1404, when he must still have been in his teens.[2] He continued to serve the Prince when he became King, and remained in the household of Henry VI. For several years he was the sewer, i.e. the senior household official with responsibility for overseeing the kitchens. From household duties he was promoted to senior Crown service; in 1434 he became constable of Dublin Castle and Wicklow Castle, and for a time was also entrusted with Cardigan Castle.[3] In 1437 he became Lord Treasurer of Ireland.

Ireland: the Butler–Talbot feud

Fifteenth-century Irish politics for almost thirty years was dominated by the feud between James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and Richard Talbot, Archbishop of Dublin and Lord Chancellor of Ireland, backed by his brother John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury. As the feud grew more bitter, almost all Irish Crown officials were forced to declare themselves as supporters of either the Butler or the Talbot faction.[4]

Thorndon in his early years in Ireland sought to act as a mediator between the rival factions. In 1442 he produced a memorandum on the state of Irish affairs, based, as he noted, on his thirty-eight years' experience of Crown service.[5] At this time he was making every effort to be impartial, stressing that there were faults on both sides. What really mattered, as he pointed out, were the dire results of the feud: namely that justice could not be obtained from the Courts if the interests of one faction or the other were involved, that Irish Exchequer officials were not collecting Crown debts, and that lavish grants of land had greatly depleted the Crown revenues.[6] He proposed a number of remedies, including the strengthening of his own office and ensuring that the Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer was a trained lawyer.[7]

In 1443 the Butler–Talbot feud seemed to be dying down, but in 1444 it flared up again.[8] The immediate cause was Thorndon's refusal to reappoint William Chevir, a key ally of Ormonde, as his deputy. Thorndon now abandoned any effort to mediate and declared himself firmly on the Talbot side. He produced a string of complaints against Ormonde and Chevir, covering a wide range of instances of corruption, bribery, maladministration, and disobedience to the Crown.[9] Ormonde responded by calling a meeting of the Council at Drogheda, where he declared that Thorndon was deemed to have vacated his office, and accused him of treasonable dealings with Thomas FitzGerald, Prior of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem at Kilmainham.[10]

Thorndon and Prior Fitzgerald fled to England where they charged Ormonde with treason, and (rather curiously) with necromancy, but the Privy Council, which was mainly concerned to end the feud, was unsympathetic to their pleas. No action was taken against Ormonde, and Thorndon, as far as is known, did not return to Ireland, although his later marriage to Jane d"Artois, widow of Lord Gormanston, suggests that he remained in contact with some of his former colleagues there.[11]

Last years

Despite his unhappy experiences in Ireland, it was clearly felt by the Crown that Thorndon had acquired useful knowledge of the country: in 1458 he was confirmed in office as Treasurer of Ireland.[12] Unsurprisingly he preferred to appoint a deputy to act in his place. He retired to Northumberland in 1460, shortly before the downfall of the Lancastrian dynasty which he had served so long and loyally. The new Yorkist regime, which was generally in favour of reconciliation with its former opponents, left him in peace: whether he maintained contacts with the exiled Henry VI or his Queen, Margaret of Anjou, is unknown. During the brief Readeption of Henry VI in 1470-1 he seems to have played no political role, probably because of his great age. He died in August 1477, aged almost ninety.[13]

Marriage

He married, after 1450, when they were both rather advanced in years, Jane d'Artois, dowager Lady Gormanston; she was the daughter of the prominent Gascony-born military commander and landowner Sir Jenico d'Artois, and widow of Christopher Preston, 3rd Baron Gormanston.[14]

References

  1. Curry, Anne E. and Matthews, Elizabeth Concepts and Patterns of Service in the Later Middle Ages Boydell and Brewer 2000 p.91
  2. Curry and Matthews p.91
  3. Curry and Matthews p.91
  4. Otway-Ruthven, A.J History of Medieval Ireland Barnes and Noble 1993 pp.371-6
  5. Griffiths, Ralph A. The reign of Henry VI- the Exercise of Royal Authority. University of California Press 1981 p.415 ISBN 9780520043725
  6. Otway-Ruthven pp.373-4
  7. Griffiths p.415
  8. Otway-Ruthven p.374
  9. Otway-Ruthven p.375
  10. Otway-Ruthven p.375
  11. Otway-Rithven p.376
  12. Curry and Matthews p.91
  13. Curry and Matthews p.91
  14. Journal of the Co. Kildare Archaeological Society 1902 Reprinted 2013 pp.355-6
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