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John de Bothby


John de Bothby, or Boothby ( born c.1320-died after 1382 ) was an English-born cleric and judge who became Lord Chancellor of Ireland.

Boothby was born at Boothby Pagnall in Lincolnshire, second son of Thomas de Bothby and his wife Alicia; his family were Lords of the manor of Bourne. John himself later held the nearby manor of Cammeringham.

He is first heard of as a royal clerk, but he rose in the public service to hold a number of royal commissions, and was granted a licence to export corn in 1360. He came to Ireland as Lord Chancellor in 1371 and held the office until 1374. O'Flanagan remarks that nothing is known of his career as Chancellor other than the fact of his appointment. Elrington Ball however notes that he was entitled to a military guard while in Ireland, and was sufficiently knowledgeable about Irish affairs to be sent back to England to report on them in 1372.

Unlike many holders of the office of Irish Lord Chancellor, who could reasonably expect to be appointed to an English bishopric in due course, Boothby seems never to have been raised beyond the office of vicar: he held the living of Keyingham, and later Hound, Hampshire. He was finally appointed to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Northampton, and died there. He was still living in 1382 when he was asked to inquire into whether lands held by the Priory of Walton had been unlawfully acquired. His property passed to his nephew, also John de Bothby.



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