Sir Geoffrey le Scrope, Justice of the Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the King's Bench

Sir Geoffrey le Scrope was born in 1285 to Sir William le Scrope and Constance de Newsham.

Sir Geoffrey le Scrope was an English lawyer, soldier, and Chief Justice of the King's Bench for four periods between 1324-1338. His father Sir William le Scrope was bailiff to the Earl of Richmond in Rishmondshire and Geoffrey's brother Henry was also a lawyer you served as Chief Justice of the King's Bench for two periods. Their mother Constance was daughter and heiress of Thomas, son of Gillo de Newsham.

From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_le_Scrope

Geoffrey Scrope certainly had an estate at Whalton, near Morpeth, a few miles south-east of which there is a Newsham, but it is not upon the Tyne.[1]

Like his brother, Scrope adopted the profession of the law, and by 1316 he was king's serjeant. He is also called 'valettus regis.' He was summoned to councils and parliaments, and occasionally sat on judicial commissions.[1] In the baronial conflicts of the reign of Edward II he was a loyal adherent of the crown. He was involved in the proceedings both against Thomas of Lancaster and Andrew Harclay. He was knighted in 1323, and became Chief Justice for the first time on 21 March 1324. He managed, however, to survive politically the overthrow both of Edward II in 1326 and of Roger Mortimer in 1330.

After retiring as a justice, he campaigned with Edward III in Flanders, and distinguished himself as a soldier. He was also one of the instigators behind the king's actions against Archbishop Stratford in 1340. The small estate he held as early as 1312 in Coverdale, south of Wensleydale, he augmented before 1318, by the acquisition of the manor of Clifton on Ure at the entrance of the latter dale, where he obtained a license to build a castle in that year. Early in the next reign he purchased the neighbouring manor of Masham from the representatives of its old lords, the Wautons, who held it from the Mowbrays by the service of an annual barbed arrow. Eltham Mandeville and other Vesci lands in Kent had passed into his hands by 1318. One of Edward II's last acts was to invest him with the great castle and honour of Skipton in Craven forfeited by Roger, lord Clifford. So closely was he identified with the court party that Mortimer was alleged to have projected the same fate for him as for the Despensers. But though Edward's deposition was followed by Scrope's removal from office, he received a pardon in February 1328, and was reinstated as chief justice.[1]

He was a soldier and diplomatist as well as a lawyer, and his services in the former capacities were in such request that his place had frequently to be supplied by substitutes, one of whom was his brother Henry, and for a time (1334–7) he seems to have exchanged his post for the (nominal) second justiceship of the common pleas. Again chief justice in 1338, he finally resigned the office before October in that year on the outbreak of the French war.[1]

In the tournaments of the previous reign, at one of which he was knighted, Scrope had not disgraced the azure bend or of his family, which he bore with a silver label for difference, and in the first months of Edward III's rule he was with the army which nearly joined battle with the Scots at Stanhope Park in Weardale. But it was in diplomatic business that Edward III found Scrope most useful. He took him to France in 1329. In 1331 and 1333, he was entrusted with important foreign missions. He had only just been designated (1334) one of the deputies to keep a watch over John Baliol when he was sent on an embassy to Brittany and France. In 1335 and again in 1337, Scottish affairs engaged his attention.[1]

Just before crossing to Flanders in 1338 Edward III sent Scrope with the Earl of Northampton to his ally the emperor, and later in the year he was employed in the negotiations opened at the eleventh hour with Philip VI. He had at least six knights in his train, and took the field in the campaign which ended bloodlessly at Buironfosse (1339). Galfrid le Baker (p. 65) relates the well-known anecdote of Scrope's punishing Cardinal Bernard de Montfavence's boasts of the inviolability of France by taking him up a high tower and showing him her frontiers all in flames.[1]

He now appears with the formal title of king's secretary, and spent the winter of 1339–40 in negotiating a marriage between the heir of Flanders and Edward's daughter Isabella. Returning to England with the King in February, he was granted two hundred marks a year to support his new dignity of banneret. Going back to Flanders in June, he took part in the siege of Tournay, and about Christmas died at Ghent. His body was carried to Coverham Abbey, to which he had given the church of Sadberge. Jervaulx and other monasteries had also experienced his liberality. Besides his Yorkshire and Northumberland estates, he left manors in five other counties. Scrope was the more distinguished of the two notable brothers whose unusual fortune it was to found two great baronial families within the limits of a single Yorkshire dale.[1]

Family[edit]

Geoffrey and his wife Ivette (de Ros) had five sons. Their eldest son, Henry (whose daughter Joan married Henry Fitzhugh), became the first Baron Scrope of Masham.[1]

Scrope married Ivetta, in all probability daughter of Sir William de Roos of Ingmanthorpe, near Wetherby. A second marriage with Lora, daughter of Gerard de Furnival of Hertfordshire and Yorkshire, and widow of Sir John Ufflete or Usflete, has been inferred from a gift of her son, Gerard Ufflete, to Scrope and his mother jointly in 1331; but Ivetta is named as Scrope's wife in 1332.[1]

By the latter he had five sons and three daughters. The sons were:

    • Henry, first baron Scrope of Masham;
    • Thomas, who predeceased his father;
    • William (1325?–1367), who fought at the Battle of Crécy, Poitiers, and Najara, and died in Spain;
    • Stephen, who was at the Battle of Crécy and the siege of Berwick (1356);
    • Geoffrey (died 1383), LL.B. (probably of Oxford), prebendary of Lincoln, London, and York.

The daughters were Beatrice and Constance, who married respectively Sir Andrew and Sir Geoffrey Luttrell of Lincolnshire; and Ivetta, the wife of John de Hothom

From https://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p529.htm#i15878

Sir Geoffrey le Scrope, Justice of the Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the King's Bench1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

M, #15878, b. circa 1280, d. 2 December 1340

Last Edited

Father

Mother

7 Mar 2014

Sir Geoffrey le Scrope, Justice of the Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the King's Bench was born circa 1280 at of Masham, Bellerby, & Clifton-upon-Ure in Thornton-Watlass, Yorkshire, England.2,6,7 He married Juetta de Roos, daughter of Sir William de Roos and Eustache FitzHugh, before 1312; They had 5 sons (Sir Henry, 1st Lord Scrope of Masham; Sir Thomas; Sir William; Sir Stephen; & Geoffrey, Canon of Lincoln) and 3 daughters (Beatrice, wife of Sir Andrew Luttrell; Constance, wife of Sir Geoffrey Luttrell; & Ivette, wife of Sir John de Hotham).2,3,5,6Sir Geoffrey le Scrope, Justice of the Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the King's Bench married Loretta de Furnival, daughter of Sir Gerard Furnival and Isabel, before 1331; No issue.6,7Sir Geoffrey le Scrope, Justice of the Common Pleas, Chief Justice of the King's Bench died on 2 December 1340 at Ghent, Belgium; Buried at Coverham Abbey, Yorkshire.9,2,6,7

Family 1

Children

Family 2

Juetta de Roos b. c 1280, d. b 1331

Loretta de Furnival b. c 1260, d. a 1340

Citations

    1. [S4412] Unknown author, The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. XI, p. 554-561.
    2. [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 6-7.
    3. [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 192.
    4. [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 298.
    5. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 385.
    6. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 598-599.
    7. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 228.
    8. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 325.
    9. [S11568] The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. XI, p. 560, notes.
    10. [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 399.
    11. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 311.