Roger de Bankwell
Roger de Bankwell | |
---|---|
Born | <1333[1] |
Died | >1340[1] |
Occupation | Judge |
Roger de Bankwell (c. 1340), judge,[2] perhaps of the same family as John de Bankwell, was one of three commissioners entrusted with the assessment of the tallage in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire in 1333, and a member of another commission directed to inquire into the circumstances connected with a fire which had recently occurred at Spondon in Derbyshire, the sufferers by which prayed temporary exemption from taxation on account of their losses. He appears as a counsel in the Year book for 1340, in 1341 was appointed to a justiceship of the king's bench, and was one of those assigned to try petitions from Gascony, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, and 'other foreign parts ' between the years 1341 and 1347.
References
- 1 2 Dictionary of National Biography now in the public domain
- ↑ The origins of the English gentry By Peter R. Coss p.193 2003. Accessed 30 November 2007
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