[108.5] Afterwards Bishop of Durham, and finally Archbishop of York.
[108.6] Richard, Duke of York.
[108.7] Humphrey Stafford, Duke of Buckingham.
[108.8] The two Bourchiers, viz. Thomas Bourchier, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Henry, Viscount Bourchier, the former of whom had been Lord Chancellor and the latter Lord Treasurer (see Notes 1, 2, and 3 above), were the Duke of Buckingham’s half-brothers by the mother’s side.
[109.1] The Court had been staying at Coventry.
[349]
ABSTRACT[109.2]
Sir John Fastolf to John Paston.
1456
NOV. 10
Begs him in the end of the term to come home by Dedham, along with William Worcester and Barker, to see to the accounts of barley and such husbandry as is used there. As to Wighton in Yorkshire, Bokkyng reminds me you spoke to me that my son Scrope and his father-in-law[109.3] should have all the lyvelode of my wife’s in farm, to which I agreed, or else that Lord Vesey would have Wighton, as he once had, at a rent of £34—much more than I make it worth yearly. Do as you think best for me. I had rather my son Scrope had it with sufficient surety.
Castre, 10 Nov.