William Worcester

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File:Willelmus Worcestre Itinerarium p. 196.jpg
Itinerarium (MS. CCCC Parker 210), p. 196

William Worcester (c. 1415 – c. 1482) was an English antiquary, author, and historian known for his detailed writings on medieval England. He served as the secretary to Sir John Fastolf, a prominent military commander during the Hundred Years' War, and later compiled extensive notes on English history, geography, and heraldry.

Worcester’s most notable work includes his Itineraries, which provide valuable descriptions of English towns, castles, and estates in the 15th century. His writings, often fragmented, offer insight into medieval society, warfare, and administration. Though not widely recognized during his lifetime, his contributions have since been regarded as significant sources for historians studying late medieval England.

Life

He was a son of another William of Worcester, a Bristol whittawer (worker in white leather), and his wife Elizabeth, Template:Nee Botoner. His mother was a daughter of Thomas Botoner from Coventry, and he sometimes used the surname Botoner.Template:Sfn[1]

He was educated at Oxford and became secretary to Sir John Fastolf. When Fastolf died in 1459, Worcester discovered that he had bequeathed him nothing, despite his being one of Fastolf's executors, and, with one of his colleagues Sir William Yelverton, Worcester disputed the validity of the will. However, an amicable arrangement was made and Worcester obtained some lands near Norwich and in Southwark in London. He died about 1482.Template:Sfn

Writings

Worcester made several journeys through England, and his notes (now known as his "Itineraries") contain much information. His survey of Bristol, which he appears to have devised as a self-contained work, is particularly detailed, and of great value to historians and antiquaries. Portions of his notes were printed by James Nasmith in 1778; and his 1480 survey of Bristol was used by James Dallaway in William Wyrcestre Redivivus (William Worcester Reborn) in 1823.[2] In 1834 Dallaway published Worcester's full itinerary of Bristol in Antiquities of Bristowe.[3] Modern scholarly editions and translations have been published as the Itineraries of William Worcestre in 1969, edited by John Harvey; and as The Topography of Medieval Bristol in 2000, edited by Frances Neale.[4]

The Boke of Noblesse, written some time in the 1450s, was produced in the wake of disastrous English losses in France and was later revised with the apparent intention of encouraging King Edward IV to renew his claim on the French throne.[5]

Worcester was formerly thought to have written Annales rerum Anglicarum, a work of some value for the history of England under Henry VI. This was published by Thomas Hearne in 1728, and by Joseph Stevenson for the Rolls Series with his Letters and Papers illustrative of the Wars of the English in France during the Reign of Henry VI (1864). Stevenson also printed here collections of papers made by Worcester respecting the wars of the English in France and Normandy.Template:Sfn In an essay published in 1957, K. B. McFarlane showed that Worcester only contributed two paragraphs to the Annales and that the rest of the work was put together by Hearne.[6]

Worcester's other writings include the last Acta domini Johannis Fastolf. See the Paston Letters edited by James Gairdner (1904); and F. A. Gasquet, An Old English Bible and other Essays (1897).Template:Sfn

Modern editions

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References

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Bibliography

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  • Rundel, David."William Worcestre, Sir John Fastolf and Latin Learning." The Library 25 March 2024):3-28.

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  1. Orme 2006.
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  6. McFarlane, K. B. (1957) ‘William Worcester: a Preliminary Survey’, in Studies presented to Sir Hilary Jenkinson, ed. J Conway Davies, London: Oxford University Press. pp. 196-221 at 206-7.