John de Farondell c1352 to c1425
Henry Farendon and William Faryndon
John Farndale, and his brothers Henry
and William, were archers and men at arms called to fight in Scotland in 1389
John became a butcher made freeman of
York in 1408
The webpage
of Johannes
Fernedill includes a chronology and reference to source material. You can
also visit the webpages of John de
Farondell, Henry
Farendon and William
Faryndon.
The
Medieval Soldiers
John, Henry
and William Farndale were probably brothers, the sons of Johannes de
Farndall, freeman of York.
John
Farondell, John Farnham, John Farendon and John Farodell was an archer and in
one muster roll a man at arms in expeditions and standing forces in Scotland
between 1383 and 1385 and again in June 1389. He appears in lists of medieval soldiers
at this time. He served variously under Sir William Fulthorpe, Sir Henry
Percy (1364 to 1403) Earl of Northumberland known
as Harry Hotspur, John of Gaunt (1340 to 1399) Duke
of Lancaster and Thomas Mowbray
(1366 to 1399) Duke of Norfolk.
Also serving
in the June 1389 campaign were Henry Farendon and William Faryndon or Farnham,
who were almost certainly John’s brothers. Henry was a man at arms and William
was an archer.
John served
under the overall command of John of Gaunt on 1 February 1384, and the
captaincy of Henry Percy. John of Gaunt was the
Lancastrian patriarch, whose son Henry Bolingbroke seized the throne from
Richard II in 1399 after landing with a small force at Spurn near Humber in
1399 and marching to his Pickering Castle, rallying supporters including the
Nevilles from Sheriff Hutton and
Kirkbymoorside. In the 1380s, he was still loyal to the Crown, the King’s
uncle, but with growing tension between John of Gaunt and the King.
John served
under the overall command of Henry Percy between 1383 and 1385 and directly
under his captaincy on 1 February 1384. Henry Percy,
Harry Hostpur was an English knight who fought in several campaigns against the
Scots in the northern border and against the French during the Hundred Years'
War. The nickname Haatspore or "Hotspur" was given to
him by the Scots as a tribute to his speed in advance and readiness to attack.
The heir to the leading Percy family in northern England (rivals to the Nevilles of Sheriff Hutton), Hotspur was one of the earliest
and primary movers behind the deposition of King Richard II in favour of Henry
Bolingbroke in 1399. He gave his nickname to Tottenham Hotspur FC.
The three brothers John, Henry and William served under
Thomas Mowbray in June 1389. The Mowbrays were still feudal overlords of the
lands of Kirkbymoorside and Farndale, John’s ancestral home, though effective
control of those lands had long passed to the House Stuteville. Thomas Mowbray was banished by
Richard II after his rivalry with Henry Bolingbroke, in 1399, but died soon
afterwards in Venice.
Tensions
between Richard II and John of Gaunt had been increasing over the approach to
the war in France. While the King and his court preferred negotiation, Gaunt
and Buckingham urged a large scale campaign to protect English possessions.
However Richard II chose to send a so-called crusade led by Henry le Despenser,
Bishop of Norwich, which failed miserably. Faced with this setback on the
continent, Richard turned his attention instead towards France's ally, the
Kingdom of Scotland.
As part of
an agreement that brought the Second War of Independence to an end in 1357, the
English had been allowed to occupy significant portions of southern Scotland,
known as the English 'pale'. However, during the 1370s, encouraged by Edward
III's deteriorating health and English military reverses in France, the Scots
had begun to gradually recover much of this territory, often through fairly
violent means. The Scottish government's standard diplomatic line was that this
was the work of 'over-mighty magnates' that were not under control of the
Scottish Crown. In reality the Scottish Crown were probably coordinating
attacks on English-held territory. By the early 1380s the 'over-mighty
magnates' excuse was wearing increasingly thin, and in 1384 the Scots, whose
confidence had been boosted by a decade and a half of military ascendancy,
finally dropped all pretence of peaceful intention and began open war with
England.
In February
1384, a Scottish force led by Archibald Douglas 'the Grim', Lord of Galloway,
and supported by his cousin William, Earl of Douglas, and George Dunbar, Earl
of March, captured Lochmaben Castle. The force was probably composed of men
from the south-west, which would make sense given the location of Lochmaben.
With Lochmaben, the English lost Annandale, the seat of the Scottish line of
the House Brus, their last remaining
possession in the west of Scotland. Thus they could no longer let Scottish
military activity go unanswered and John of Gaunt's expedition was hurriedly
organised.
On 3 April 1384, an English army entered into Scotland under the command of John of Gaunt, in direct response the fall of Lochmaben Castle.
John of
Gaunt's army moved up the east coast and reached Leith, which was burned along
with Haddington. However, the Scots had become adept at a scorched earth policy
whenever the English invaded, and Gaunt's men seem to have struggled to find
ways to overcome the Scots in any meaningful way. John of Gaunt himself seems
to have shown some reticence in causing damage. He is known to have spared the
abbeys of Melrose and Holyrood from destruction. In 1381 John of Gaunt had
briefly fled to Scotland to escape the Peasants' Revolt, and this might have
given him some sympathies within Scotland. During this time, John of Gaunt
seems to have resided mostly at Holyrood, hosted by John, Earl of Carrick, the
future Robert III of Scotland.
John of
Gaunt is also known to have extracted a hefty sum of money from the denizens of
Edinburgh to spare the town from harm, and this agreement may have included
Holyrood as well. John of Gaunt had also been considered as a possible
successor to David II of Scotland back in the 1360s, and in 1384 he may still
have harboured vain hopes of some day pressing his claim to be King of Scots.
In all, the
English spent less than three weeks in Scotland, and by 23 April 1384 Gaunt was
in Durham handing responsibility for the defence of the marches to his rival
Henry Percy, the Earl of Northumberland.
Later in
1384, the Scots resumed their aggressive policy towards England, this time with
the earl of Douglas bringing Teviotdale back under Scottish control.
In 1385, the King himself led a punitive expedition to the north. The English King had only recently come of age, and it was expected that he would play a martial role just as his father, Edward the Black Prince, and grandfather Edward III had done.
On 8 July 1385 a force of French knights had marched south from Edinburgh wearing black surcoats with white St Andrew's crosses sewn on, alongside 3,000 Scottish soldiers. However the Scots hosts were not so cooperative with the French and relations deteriorated between them. The threat was repulsed by a counterattack from Henry Hotspur.
On 11 August
1385 the English army entered Edinburgh, which was deserted by then. Three days
earlier Richard had received news from London that his mother, Joan, Countess of
Kent, his principal mentor, had died the previous day. Most of Edinburgh was
set alight, including St Giles' Kirk. According to the contemporary chronicler
Andrew of Wyntoun the English army was given free and uninterrupted play for
slaughter, rapine and fire-raising all along a six-mile front. The only
reason Holyrood Palace escaped similar treatment was that John of Gaunt himself
ordered it not to be touched. However there was indecision amongst the English military command
whether to proceed or withdraw and the campaign came to nothing. The army had
to return without ever engaging the Scots in battle.
Meantime the
French threatened an invasion of southern England.
John of
Gaunt remained in the north after the King returned to England to oversee the
new truce with Scotland, but the relationship between the Lancastrian John of
Gaunt and Richard II was worse than it had ever been.
The
relationship between Richard and his uncle John of Gaunt was at an all time low
after the military failure, and Gaunt left England to pursue his claim to the
throne of Castile in 1386.
In 1388,
Richard was aged 21 and starting to establish some authority when the north of
England fell victim to a Scottish incursion. The
Battle of Otterburn took place on 5 August 1388 as part of the continuing border
skirmishes between the Scots and English. A Scottish attack on Carlisle Castle
was timed to take advantage of divisions on the English side between Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland
and Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland who had just taken over defence of
the border and partly in revenge for King Richard II's invasion of Scotland
three years previously. Henry Percy sent his two sons Harry Hotspur and Sir
Ralph Percy to engage with the Scots, while he stayed at Alnwick to cut off the
Scottish retreat. Despite
Percy's force having an estimated three to one advantage over the Scots,
Froissart records 1,040 English were captured and 1,860 killed whereas 200
Scots were captured and 100 were killed. The Westminster Chronicle estimates
Scottish casualties at around 500. Hotspur's rashness and eagerness to engage
the Scots might have added to the tiredness of the English army after its long
march north.
The Scottish
ballad, the Battle of Otterburn rejoiced:
It fell
about the Lammas tide,
When the
muir-men win their hay,
The
doughty Earl of Douglas rode
Into
England, to catch a prey.
The English Ballad of
Chevy Chase told of Percy’s hunting party or Chase in the Cheviot hills, as
an allegory to his invasion of Scotland.
John of
Gaunt returned to England in 1389 and settled his differences with the King,
after which the old statesman acted as a moderating influence on English
politics. Richard
assumed full control of the government on 3 May 1389, claiming that the
difficulties of the past years had been due solely to bad councillors. He
promised to lessen the burden of taxation on the people significantly. Richard
ruled peacefully for the next eight years, having reconciled with his former
adversaries.
Thomas
Mowbray had been with
Richard II during the Scottish invasion of 1385, but his friendship with the
young King was waning. Richard had a new favourite, Robert de Vere, and Mowbray
became increasingly close to Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel. The King
already distrusted Arundel, and Mowbray's new circle included the equally
estranged Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester. Together they plotted
against the King's chancellor, the Duke of Suffolk who was impeached, and a
council was appointed to oversee the king. However Mowbray gradually became
disillusioned with his comrades and by 1389, he was back in the king's favour.
Mowbray
returned to the King’s favour in early 1389 when he had his estates restored to
him and was pardoned for having married without the King's licence.
In March
1389, Thomas Mowbray was appointed warden of the East March and castellan of
Berwick Castle, receiving wages of £6,000 in peacetime and twice that in time
of war. This was the context wherein John, Henry and William Farndale were part
of the standing force in the East March of Scotland.
However
Thomas Mowbray’s appointment was not a success and he fell out with the
traditional lord of the north, Henry Percy. Mowbray held no lands in the north
and had few contacts among the gentry, upon whom he needed to rely to raise his
army. Mowbray's tenure in the East March was effectively doomed from the start.
His
ineffectiveness became obvious in June 1389, when a Scottish incursion ravaged
the north of England and, with little opposition, went as far south as
Tynemouth. Mowbray, the Westminster Chronicle reports, refused the Scottish
offer of a pitched battle and retreated to Berwick Castle.
The
Butcher of York
Johannes
Fernedill was probably the grandson of Johannes de Farnedale who had arrived in
York in about 1340 to
set up a saddle making business.
It seems
likely that John, the soldier, veteran of Scottish campaigns, returned to York,
perhaps in about 1390.
Johannes
became a butcher and it is likely that he worked in the street of butchers,
known as the Shambles.
He probably worked at a butcher’s shop with a slaughterhouse at the back of the
property, to help provide fresh meat. With little regulation of sanitation, the
offal was washed out into the street where raised pavements helped to channel
to blood and gore down the street and away.
In 1408,
Johannes was made a freeman of York.
How do
John, Henry and William relate to the modern family? It is not
possible to be accurate about the early family tree,
before the recording of births, marriages and deaths in parish records, but
we do have a lot of medieval material including important clues on
relationships between individuals. The matrix of the family before about 1550
is the most probable structure based on the available evidence. If it is
accurate, John, Henry and William were related to the thirteenth century
ancestors of the modern Farndale family, and part of the York Line whose uncles settled in
Doncaster from where the
modern Farndales might descend. |
or
Go Straight to Act 10 – Medieval
Warfare