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RICHARD WHITTINGTON (d. 1423)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 615 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RICHARD WHITTINGTON (d. 1423)  , mayor of
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London, described himself as son of William and
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Joan (Dugdale, Monasticon Anglicanum, vi . 740) . This enables him to be identified as the third son of
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Sir William Whittington of Pauntley in Gloucestershire, a knight of good
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family, who married after 1355 Joan, daughter of William Mansel, and widow of Thomas Berkeley of Cubberley . Consequently Richard was a very young man when he is mentioned in 1379 as subscribing five marks to a city loan . He was a mercer by trade, and clearly entered on his commercial career under favourable circumstances . He married Alice, daughter of Sir No Fitzwaryn, a Dorset knight of considerable
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property . Whittington sat in the
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common council as a representative of Coleman Street Ward, was elected alderman of Broad Street in March 1393, and served as
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sheriff in 1393-1394 . When Adam Bamme, the mayor, died in
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June 1397, Whittington was appointed by the king to succeed him, and in
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October was elected mayor for the ensuing
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year . He had acquired
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great
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wealth and much commercial importance, and was mayor of the
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staple at London and
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Calais . He made frequent large loans both to Henry IV. and Henry V., and according to the legend, when he gave a banquet to the latter king and his queen in 1421, completed the entertainment by burning bonds for 6o,000, which he had taken up and discharged . Henry V. employed him to superintend the
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expenditure of
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money on completing Westminster Abbey . But except as a London commercial magnate Whittington took no great
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part in public affairs .

He was mayor for a third

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term in 1406-1407, and for a
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fourth in 1419-1420 . He died in March 1423 . His wife had predeceased him leaving no children, and Whittington bequeathed the whole of his vast fortune to charitable and public purposes . In his lifetime he had joined in procuring Leadenhall for the city, and had borne nearly all the cost of
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building the Greyfriars Library . In his last year as mayor he had been shocked by the foul state of Newgate prison, and one of the first
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works undertaken by his executors was its rebuilding . His executors, chief of whom was John Carpenter, the famous
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town clerk. also contributed to the cost of
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glazing and paving the new
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Guildhall, and paid
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half the expense of building the library there; they repaired St Bartholomew's hospital, and provided bosses for
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water at Billingsgate and Cripplegate . But the chief of Whittington's
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foundations was his college at St Michael, Paternoster church, and the adjoining hospital . The college was dissolved at the Reformation, but the hospital or almshouses are still maintained by the Mercers'
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Company at
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Highgate . Whittington was buried at St Michael's church . Stow relates that his tomb was spoiled during the reign of
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Edward VI., but that under Mary the parishioners were compelled to restore it (Survey, i . 243) . Whittington had a house near St Michael's church; it is doubtful whether he had any connexion with the so-called Whittington Palace in Hart Street, Mark Lane .

There is no

proof that he was ever knighted; Stow does not call him Sir Richard . Much of Whittington's fame was probably due to the magnificence of his charities . But a writer of the next generation bears witness to his commercial success in A Libell of
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English Policy by styling him " the sunne of marchaundy, that lodestarre and chief-chosen flower." " Pen and paper may not me suffice Him to describe, so high he was of price." The Richard Whittington of
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history is thus very different from the Dick Whittington of popular legend, which makes him a poor
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orphan employed as a scullion by the rich merchant, Sir
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Hugh Fitzwarren, who ventures the cat, his only possession, on one of his master's
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ships . Distressed by
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ill-treatment he runs away, but turns back when he hears from Holloway the prophetic peal of Bow bells . He returns to find that his venture has brought him a fortune, marries his master's daughter, andsucceeds to his business . The legend is not referred to by Stow, whose love for exposing fables would assuredly have prompted him to
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notice it if it had been well established when he wrote . The first reference to the story comes with the licensing in 16o5 of a
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play, now lost, The History of Richard Whittington, of his lowe byrth, his great fortune . Thomas Heywood in 1606 makes one of the characters in If you know not me you know nobody, allude to the legend, to be rebuked by another because " they did more wrong to the gentleman." " The legend of Whittington," probably meaning the play of 16o5, is also mentioned by Beaumont and Fletcher in 1611 in The Knight of the Burning Pestle . The story was then no doubt popular . When a little later Robert Elstracke, the engraver, published a supposed portrait of Whittington with his hand resting on a
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skull, he had in deference to the public fancy to substitute a cat; copies in the first state are very rare . Attempts have been made to explain the story as possibly referring to vessels called " cats," which were employed in the North Sea trade, or to the French achat (
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purchase) . But Thomas Keightley traced the cat story in Persian, Danish and
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Italian folk-lore at least as far back as the r3th century .

The assertion that a carved figure of a cat existed on Newgate

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gaol before the great fire is an unsupported assumption .

End of Article: RICHARD WHITTINGTON (d. 1423)
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