[Dugdale's Chron. Series, 25, 26, 28, 29; Madox's History of the Exch. ii. 7; Rot. Parl, i. 84; Wikes's Chronicon, ed. Gale, 118-121; Holinshed, ii. 491; Parl. Writs, ii. (Index); Orig. Jurid. 44; Lysons's Britannia, ii. part i. 91.]
BECKINGTON or BEKYNTON , THOMAS (1390?–1465), bishop of Bath and Wells and lord privy seal, was a native
of the Somersetshire village from which he
derived his surname. His parentage is unknown, and there is no record of the date of
his birth, but from the dates of his admission,
first at Winchester (1404) and afterwards at
New College, Oxford (1406), it is presumed
to have been about 1390. He was admitted
a fellow of New College in 1408, and retained
his fellowship twelve years. He took the
degree of LL.D. In 1420, when he resigned
his fellowship, he entered the service of
Humphrey, duke of Gloucester; from which
time, apparently, church preferments began j
to flow in upon him. The rectory of St. |
Leonard's, near Hastings, and the vicarage
of Sutton Courtney, in Berks, were perhaps
not among the first. Indeed, there are grounds
for supposing the former to have been given
him in 1439. He had become archdeacon of
Buckinghamshire, it appears, before the death
of Henry V in 1422, though a later date is
given in Le Neve; and in April next year we
find him collated to the prebend of Bilton in
York, which he exchanged for that of Warthill
in the same cathedral four months later. He
was appointed to a canonry in Wells in 1439,
and was also master of St. Katherine's Hospital, near the Tower of London. But early
in 1423 he was already dean of the Arches,
in which capacity he assisted at the trial of
the heretic William Tailor; and in Nov. 1428
he was appointed, along with the celebrated
canonist, William Lyndewood, receiver of the
subsidy granted by the lower house of convocation for the expenses of the prosecution
of William Russell, another suspected heretic.
He was prolocutor of convocation at least as
early as 1433, and so continued till May 1438.
During the session of 1434 he was commissioned by Archbishop Chichele to draw up,
along with others, certain comminatory articles to be proclaimed by the clergy in their
parishes four times a year. Meanwhile he
had been engaged in several public capacities.
In February 1432 he had been nominated to
go on embassy to France with Langdon,
bishop of Rochester, and Sir Henry Bromflete, to negotiate a peace; but the envoys do
not appear to have left till December following, when Sir John Fastolf was substituted
for Sir Henry Bromflete. It has been erroneously stated that he was also sent to the
congress at Arras in 1435; but it is certain
that he was a member of the great embassy
sent to Calais in 1439 to treat with the
French ambassadors. Of this embassy he
has left a journal, in which he styles himself
the king's secretary — an office probably conferred upon him just before, though he appears
to have acted in that capacity, at least occasionally, for about two years previously.
After his return from this embassy he was
for three or four years in close attendance
upon the king, and speaks of himself at one
time as being his reader nearly every day.
In the spring of 1442 an embassy was sent to England by John IV, count of Armagnac, who desired to offer one of his daughters in marriage to young King Henry VI. They were well received, and three officers of the royal household, of whom Beckington was one, were immediately despatched in return to the court of Armagnac fully empowered to contract the proposed alliance. Their commission bore date 28 May 1442, and on 5 June they set out from Windsor. An interesting diary, written by one of Beckington's suite, describes their progress to the west coast, where they took shipping at Plymouth, the letters and messages that overtook them on the road, the voyage and arrival at Bordeaux, where they received alarming news of the progress of the enemy and the capture of Sir Thomas Rempstone, seneschal of Bordeaux. They nevertheless continued for some time to prosecute the object of their mission; but the state of the country and the severity of the season interposed such difficulties in the way that they thought it best to return in the beginning of the following year. Beckington landed again at Falmouth on 10 Feb., met the king ten days later at Maidenhead, and on the 21st arrived in London, where he supped with the lord mayor. Next day he visited Greenwich with Humphrey, duke of Gloucester. On the 23rd he heard mass at his own hospital of St. Katherine's, dined with the lord treasurer, and supped again with the lord mayor. On Sunday the 26th he rejoined the king at Shene, and resumed his duties as secretary; soon after which he was appointed lord privy seal.
The chief effect of this embassy and of its return was to impress upon the government at home the necessity of taking more active steps to avert — as they succeeded in doing for a few years — the threatened loss of Guienne. The marriage negotiation was a failure. Even the artist employed, according to their instructions, to take likenesses of the count of Armagnac's three daughters, that the king might choose which of them he preferred, was