Thomas de Cottingham


Thomas de Cottingham was an English-born cleric and judge who held the office of Master of the [Rolls in Ireland].
He took his name from his birthplace, Cottingham, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Hugh de Cottingham, who was also a royal clerk may have been a relative. Thomas served as a clerk in the English Chancery for more than 30 years, and was Keeper of the Great Seal in 1349. He held the livings of several parishes, of which the names of three are known for certain: these are St. Mary the Great, Cambridge, St. Andrew, Holborn, Ashby St Mary, Norfolk and Plumstead, Kent, now part of the London Borough of Greenwich. An undated letter to Thomas in his capacity as vicar of Plumstead from the Archdeacon of Norfolk, possibly written in the early 1330s, concerning demands made by the Archdeacon and his officials, survives and is in the National Archives.
He was at Westminster, in attendance on the King, in February 1369: the Gascon Rolls note briefly that he "received the attorneys". He died in 1370.