Thomas DE MULTON
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The Rest of the Story: The Ancestors of Sarah May Paddock Otstott

Sir Thomas DE MULTON ( -1240)

Name: Thomas DE MULTON 1
Sex: Male
Name Prefix: Sir
Father: -
Mother: -

Individual Events and Attributes

Title (1) frm 1205 to 1208 High Sheriff of Lincolnshire
Occupation (1) frm 1229 to 1236 Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
Title (2) frm 1233 to 1236 High Sheriff of Cumberland
Occupation (2) Constable of Carlisle Castle
Death 1240

Marriage (1)

Spouse Sarah DE FLETE ( - )
Children Lambert DE MULTON ( -bef1246)
Marriage bef 1200

Marriage (2)

Spouse Ada DE MORVILLE ( - )

Individual Note

Sir Thomas de Multon (Moulton) (died 1240), Lord of Multon, in Lincolnshire, was a British landowner and judge. He fought as a knight in Normandy in 1202-3, in Wales in 1211 and in Poitou in 1214. He was an unlucky speculator under King John, owing over £800 when the Exchequer reopened after the end of the First Barons' War. In 1205 he purchased the office of High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, which he held until 1208. Unable to pay his debts, he was imprisoned in Rochester Castle until he had discharged them. He regained royal favour, and in 1213 was appointed to investigate extortions by the High Sheriffs of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. As a northern lord and debtor Multon sided with the Barons during the civil war, and was one of the rebels who mustered at Stamford in 1215. As a consequence he was excommunicated in 1216, having previously been captured by the King in 1215. He was entrusted to Peter de Mauley and his lands were confiscated, being restored in 1217.

 

He first married Sara of Fleet before 1200. In 1214 he gave a 1,000 marks to the crown for the wardship of the daughters of Richard de Luci and married these ladies to his sons Lambert and Alan. After Luci's death in 1218 he married his widow, receiving the title of Forester of Cumberland. For marrying a widow without the kings licence, he had his lands seized and had to pay a fine of £100 to the king, and 1 palfry for the office of forester of Cumberland. Under Henry III Multon became an important royal agent in the north; between 1217 and 1218 he was an itinerant justice for Cumberland, Westmorland, Lancashire, Yorkshire, and Northumberland. In 1224 he sat as a justice at Westminster, a position he held until 1236. In 1229 he was made Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, a position he held until 1233 and again between 1234 and 1236. Between 1233 and 1236 he was High Sheriff of Cumberland and constable of Carlisle Castle. His last activity was in 1238, when he worked as a surveyor of the royal demesne in Cumberland, dying in 1240.

 

He married:

1. Sara de Fleet with whom they had:

a. Lambert de Multon, who married Annabel de Lucy.

b. Alan de Multon, who married Alice de Lucy.

 

 

2. Ada de Moreville with whom they had:

a. Julian de Multon, who married Robert de Vavasour.

b. Thomas de Multon (d.1270), who married Maud de Vaux.

 

SOURCES:

"Oxford DNB: Moulton, Sir Thomas". http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/19521?&docPos=5&backToResults=list=yes. Retrieved 2008-09-02.

A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Extinct, Dormant and in Abeyance, (1831). John Burke, Esq. page 3792

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 49, 40-26; 49, 40-27.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_de_Multon,_Lord.