John Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings


John Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, feudal Lord of Abergavenny, was an English peer and soldier. He was one of the Competitors for the Crown of Scotland in 1290/92 in the Great Cause and signed and sealed the Barons' Letter of 1301.

Origins

He was born in 1262 at Allesley, near Coventry in Warwickshire, the eldest son of Henry de Hastings who was summoned to Parliament by Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester as Lord Hastings in 1263. Although following the defeat of de Montfort this peerage creation was not recognized by King Henry III, John Hastings is sometimes referred to as the second Baron Hastings. His mother was the great heiress Joanna de Cantilupe, one of the two sisters and co-heiresses of Sir George de Cantilupe, 4th feudal baron of Eaton Bray in Bedfordshire and feudal Lord of Abergavenny.

Career

In 1273 he became the 13th Lord of Abergavenny on the death of his childless uncle Sir George de Cantilupe, and thereby acquired Abergavenny Castle and the vast lands of the honour of Abergavenny. He also inherited many Cantilupe estates including Aston Cantlow in Warwickshire, one of that family's seats.
He fought from the 1290s in the Scottish, Irish and French wars of King Edward I and held the offices of Seneschal of Gascony and Lieutenant of Aquitaine simultaneously. In 1290 he had unsuccessfully contested the crown of the Kingdom of Scotland as grandson of Ada, third daughter of David of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon, who was a grandson of King David I of Scotland. Also in 1290 he was summoned to the English Parliament as Lord Hastings, which created him a peer. In February 1300/1 he had licence to crenellate his manor and town of Fillongley in Warwickshire. He signed and sealed the Barons' Letter of 1301 to Pope Boniface VIII, protesting against papal interference in Scottish affairs.

Marriage and children

He married twice:
He died in February 1313, aged 50, and was succeeded in the barony by his eldest son John Hastings, 2nd Baron Hastings. He and his first wife Isabel de Valence were buried in the Hastings Chapel of the Greyfriars Monastery in Coventry, Warwickshire, commemorated by effigies. According to Dugdale quoting from an inscription in ancient French, the stained glass windows of this chapel displayed coats of arms including: Hastings, Cumyn, Cantilupe, Valence, de Spenser and Huntingfield.