Thomas Morley, 5th Baron Morley explained

Thomas Morley
Baron Morley
Predecessor:Thomas Morley, 4th Baron Morley
Successor:Robert Morley, 6th Baron Morley
Spouse:Isabel de la Pole
Issue:Anne Morley
Robert Morley, 6th Baron Morley
Hugh Morley
Elizabeth Morley
Father:Robert Morley
Mother:Isabel (Moleyns?)
Birth Date:about 1394
Birth Place:England
Death Date:6 December 1435
Burial Place:Hingham, Norfolk

Thomas Morley, 5th Baron Morley (1393–1435) was an English landowner, soldier, administrator and politician.[1]

Origins

Born about 1394, he was the son of Robert Morley (died before 1403) and his wife Isabel,[1] said to be the daughter of Sir William Moleyns (died 1381) and his wife Margaret Bacon (died 1399). His paternal grandparents were Thomas Morley, 4th Baron Morley, and his first wife Joan (died 1384).[1]

Career

Inheriting his grandfather's lands and title as Marshal of Ireland in 1416, he joined the English army of King Henry V that was fighting in France and took part in the battles at Rouen in 1418, Melun in 1420 and Meaux in 1421, commanding a force of ten men-at-arms and thirty archers. In that year he was appointed to the Privy Council and was with the king at his death in 1422, being one of the banner bearers at his funeral rites at Paris and then at Westminster. After inheriting the lands of his step-grandmother in 1427, he was summoned to sit as Baron Morley in Parliament for the rest of his life. Returning to the war in France in 1429, he died on 6 December 1435 and was buried at Hingham, Norfolk.[1]

Family

On or before 5 February 1403 he was married to Isabel de la Pole, daughter of Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk, and his wife Catherine Stafford, daughter of Hugh Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, and his wife Philippa Beauchamp.[1] Their children included:

His widow died on 8 February 1467 and her will was proved on 27 February 1467. In it she mentions her daughter Anne, married to John Hastings in whose house in Norwich she was living when she made her will on 3 May 1463. Her accounts for that year mention spending three pounds to have her husband's tomb at Hingham painted.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: GEC. H A Doubleday. Lord Howard de Walden. The Complete Peerage. London. 1936. IX. 218–9.