Thomas Banastre Explained

Sir Thomas Banastre KG (c. 1334 - 16 December 1379) was a Knight of the Garter from England.[1]

Lineage

He was the son of Sir Adam Banastre (of Bretherton) and his wife Joan Petronilla (of Claughton) andwas born at Bank Hall, Bretherton, Lancashire in 1334 and was the eldest of five children.[2] [3]

Career

In 1360, he was fighting in France in the campaign led by Edward III, who also knighted at Bourg-la-Reine. Thomas was in Prince Edward's Spanish campaign in 1367 and fought at the battle of Najera on 3 April 1367. During 1369, he was in Anjou and was captured by the French and was exchanged for Sire Caponnel de Caponnat, who was held by the English. During the same year, the Hamlet of Thorp was sold by the heirs of Thorp to Thomas, which became completely merged in his moiety of Bretherton, and ceased to be noticed. This added to his estate, which consisted of farms and land which provided him with his riches.He became Knight of the Garter in 1375, and became a member of the order of the garter after the death of Walter Paveley.[3]

Death

On 16 December 1379, Thomas Banastre was on board a fleet led by Sir John Arundel which encountered a storm in the Irish Sea, and his ship struck a rock; Thomas was drowned. Sir Hugh Calveley was aboard the same ship but survived.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Shaw . Wm. A. . The Knights of England: A Complete Record from the Earliest Time to the Present Day of the Knights of All the Orders of Chivalry in England, Scotland, and Ireland, and of the Knights Bachelors . 1971 . Genealogical Publishing Company . Baltimore . 1. 4. 247620448.
  2. Duchess of Cleaveland (1889) "The Battle Abbey Roll - with some account of the Norman Lineages", Vol 1, London.
  3. The Medieval Combat Society, (2003) "Thomas Banastre 1334-1379"