Henry of Bath
Henry of Bath | |
---|---|
4th High Sheriff of Yorkshire | |
In office 1242–1246 | |
Monarch | Henry III |
Chancellor | Ralph Neville (1242-1244) Silvester de Everdon (1244-1246) (as Lord Keeper of the Great Seal) |
Preceded by | Nicholas de Moels |
Succeeded by | Adam de Neirford |
Personal details | |
Born | Unknown |
Died | ca. 1260 |
Nationality | English |
Henry de Bada (or Henry de Bathonia; died November 1260) was an English judge and administrator.
Career
He began his career under his relative Hugh of Bath, who died in 1236, leaving his
Under-Sheriff of Berkshire from 1228 to 1229. This is the last record of his career under Hugh; from then on he was entirely independent. From 1229 to 1232 he served as Under-Sheriff for Hampshire and as High Sheriff of Gloucestershire from 1232 to 1234, a time when the county was the main base for the Marcher Wars of 1233–34. He served as High Sheriff as an agent of Peter de Rivaux
, and as such required a pardon after Peter's fall from grace in 1234, Peter and his close associates having been declared traitors.
Immediately after the pardon, however, he became
Sussex in 1236.[1] In 1238 he became a junior justice of the bench in Westminster, continuing to administer Northamptonshire through deputies. Between 1240 and 1241 he worked on the Eyre Circuit for William of York as the second most senior justice, holding an Eyre in Hampshire
in 1241 in which he was the senior judge.
In 1241 he went on a mission to
High Sheriff of Yorkshire, a position he held until 1248 (although it was administered by his deputies from 1245 onwards). In 1245 he became Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas. From 1247 to 1249 he acted as the senior justice for an Eyre circuit, during which period the Court of Common Pleas did not sit. In 1249 he was again promoted, leaving his position of Chief Justice, and received a salary of over £100 a year. Between 1250 and 1251 he was senior justice for another Eyre circuit, at which point he was accused of deliberately perverting the course of justice, for which his judicial position was taken, he was stripped of his position as Keeper of Gloucester Castle
and he was fined the huge amount of 2000 marks (£1333 6s 8d), part of which was still unpaid when he died.
Henry came back into royal favour in 1253, shortly before another of the king's journeys to Gascony, and was made Chief Justice of the Common Pleas yet again in 1256, serving until 1258. He died in November 1260.