Alan Buxhull


Sir Alan Buxhull K.G. was an English soldier and nobleman.

Biography

Alan was the son of Alan Buxhull and Maud. His father died in 1325, when Alan was only 2 years old.
Buxhill was chamberlain of the Royal household from around 1369 to 1370 and a knight of the chamber.
Buxhull was a deputy in Robert Knolles army during the Hundred Years War, although there is evidence to suggest that this was a shared command. He took command of the fortified abbey of St Maur in 1370 and fought in the Battle of Pontvallain the same year. He was sufficiently important among Knolles's captains that the historian Jonathan Sumption has suggested that Buxhill's departure was the spark that led to the disintegration of Knolles's army. He was later placed in command of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte in Normandy, where he later claimed to have expended a large sum—more than he could account for—on paying ransoms of English prisoners. He subsequently complained that he had to spend over 3,000 francs on "the payment of the ransoms of several bankrupt prisoners who had been captured by the French on different occasions". He was created a Knight of the Garter in 1372.
He took part in the naval expedition to France in 1474.
King Edward III became ill in his later years, and the historian G. L. Harriss has argued that it was men such as Buxhull—of the household and physically close to the King—who "manipulated his authority" by regulating who was allowed to see him, and thus controlled the royal patronage.

Marriage and issue

He married firstly a woman with the surname of Bigwood, they are known to had the following issue.
His second marriage was to Maud Francis, the widow of John Aubrey, she was a daughter of Adam Francis and Agnes Chaumpneys. A son Alan was born posthumously in 1382.

Citations