SHAPLEIGH, John II, of Exeter, Devon.

Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
Available from Boydell and Brewer

Constituency

Dates

Apr. 1414
1417
1419
1420
Dec. 1421
1423
1426
1427

Family and Education

s. of John Shaplegh I*. m. by 1424, Margaret, 1da.

Offices Held

Constable of the Staple, Exeter Nov. 1429-30.2

Member of the council of 12, Exeter Mich. 1431-2.3

Biography

Shaplegh was admitted to the freedom of Exeter on 8 Jan. 1414, only shortly before his first election to Parliament. He was exonerated from the admission charge of 20s. by a special grant of the mayor and the council of 12, one of whom was his father. Unlike the latter and other members of the family, who were merchants, he chose to enter the legal profession. In 1415-16 the receiver of the city made payments to him for negotiating on the council’s behalf with the dean and chapter; from 1421 he received an annual retainder of £1, and in June 1440 the city paid for wine consumed at his house by the mayor and other dignitaries ‘ibidem existentibus cum eodem Johanne pro suo consilio habendo pro materia tangente feodum domini Edmundi Episcopi Exoniensis precepto Maioris et sociorum suarum’. Shaplegh’s professional advice was evidently much in demand during this period of conflict between the civic and cathedral authorities. By the time of his return to Parliament in 1427 he had risen to the rank of apprentice-at-law, being described as such when he submitted the electoral returns for Devon to the clerk of the Parliaments. His fellow citizen-elect on that occasion was his uncle, Roger Shaplegh†. John attended the parliamentary elections held at Exeter castle in 1425, 1429 and 1431;4 but only once did he take part in those for the civic officials: in 1431 when he himself was chosen as a councillor.

In 1424 the Devonshire manor of Brenton had been settled on Shaplegh, his wife and their heirs, by John Batyn. His substantial holdings in Exeter included shops and cellars in the parishes of St. Olave and St. Pancras and houses in High Street, ‘Waterberestrete’ and ‘Smethenstrete’. ‘One shopp of John Shaplegh w t halffe a streete’ was included in the area claimed by Bishop Lacy as his fee. It was the same bishop who in 1429 had granted him a licence to celebrate mass privately at his home in Exeter.5 Shaplegh’s daughter Elizabeth (d.1451) married John Gambon of Moreston in Halberton, who by 1462 was acting as executor of the lawyer’s will. The date of Shaplegh’s death is not known, but it was in accordance with his wishes that four closes in Duryard and property in Exeter eventually came into the possession of the cathedral chapter.6

Ref Volumes: 1386-1421

Author: L. S. Woodger

Notes

  • 1. As John Shaplegh ‘junior’: CCR, 1413-19, p. 185.
  • 2. C67/25; C267/6/49.
  • 3. Exeter City RO, mayor’s ct. roll 10-11 Hen. VI.
  • 4. Mayor’s ct. roll 1-2 Hen. V m. 15; M.E. Curtis, City v. Cathedral Authorities (Hist. Exeter Research Group Mono. v), 63, 71; receivers’ accts. 9-10 Hen. V; C219/13/3, 5, 14/1, 2.
  • 5. Exeter Cathedral Lib. Vicars Choral mss, 3111, 3152, 3171; CP25(1)45/79/20; J. Hooker, Descripcion Excester (Devon and Cornw. Rec. Soc. 1947), iii. 651; Feudal Aids, i. 482; Add. Ch. 27620; G. Oliver, Monasticon Dioecesis Exoniensis, 143, 403; Reg. Lacy (Canterbury and York Soc. lx), 220; Exeter mayors’ ct. rolls 5-6 Hen. VI m. 52, 8-9 Hen. VI m. 30, 10-11 Hen. VI m. 4.
  • 6. CFR, xviii. 178; Vicars Choral mss, 3391, 3395.