William Tylle (fl. 1390) was an English politician.
He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Dorchester in January 1390. Beyond this, nothing is known of him. [1]
John Fitzalan, 6th Earl of Arundel, 3rd Baron Maltravers was an English nobleman.
Earl of Carrick or Mormaer of Carrick is the title applied to the ruler of Carrick, subsequently part of the Peerage of Scotland. The position came to be strongly associated with the Scottish crown when Robert the Bruce, who had inherited it from his maternal kin, became King of the Scots in the early 14th century. Since the 15th century the title of Earl of Carrick has automatically been held by the heir apparent to the throne, meaning Prince Charles is the current Earl.
Sir James Pickering was Speaker of the House of Commons of England in 1378 and again from 1382 to 1383. The protestation which, as Speaker, he made for freedom of speech, and declaring the loyalty of the Commons, was the first recorded in the rolls.
Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford, also 6th Lord of Skipton was a Knight of The Chamber, hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland, Governor of Carlisle Castle, and Warden of the West Marches.
Nicholas Carew, of Beddington in Surrey, was an English lawyer, landowner, courtier, administrator and politician who served as Keeper of the Privy Seal during the reign of King Edward III.
Events from the 1390s in England.
Sir John Cheyne or Cheney was a Member of Parliament and briefly the initial Speaker of the House of Commons of England in the Parliament of October 1399, summoned by the newly acclaimed Henry IV.
Sir John Bussy of Hougham in Lincolnshire was a Member of Parliament representing Lincolnshire or Rutland eleven times from 1383 to 1398 as a Knight of the Shire. He was also Speaker of the House of Commons at the three Parliaments between 1393 and 1398, during which he supported the policies of king Richard II. He was most famous for orchestrating the abdication of parliament's power to an eighteen-man subcommittee in order to concentrate power in the hands of the king's supporters.
Sir William Oldhall (1390?–1460) was an English soldier and Yorkist supporter, who served as Speaker of the House of Commons of England between 1450 and 1451.
William Spicer was an English politician.
William Heyberer, of Gloucester, was an English politician.
William Plomer, of Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire, was an English politician.
William Combe was an English politician.
William Rous of Paynestwychene Lane, Bath, Somerset, was an English politician, craftsman and tax collector.
Events from the year 1463 in France
William Blankpayn was a butcher who was member of Parliament for Malmesbury for the parliaments of January 1390, 1393, 1394, January 1397, and September 1397.