Richard Page's parentage is unknown. It is thought that he likely came from Surrey or Middlesex.
Career
Page began his climb to prominence in the serviceCardinal Thomas Wolsey, becoming Wolsey's chamberlain. By 1516 he had been knighted, and was a Gentleman of Henry VIII's Privy Chamber. In 1522 he was appointed a Justice of the Peace for Surrey, and in 1524 for Middlesex. In 1525 Page was in Yorkshire, where he was a member of the Council of the North and vice-chamberlain, at £20 wages, in the household of Henry FitzRoy, illegitimate son of King Henry VIII. While in Henry Fitzroy's service, Page devised armorial bearings for the boy. Page was a close associate of Anne Boleyn. He was appointed to the Privy Chamber in 1527, after publicly taking Anne's side against Cardinal Wolsey, then the King's chief minister. He afterwards served as Captain of the King's Bodyguards, whilst enjoying the favours of the court, as a letter from Thomas Cromwell to Wolsey describes:
Mr. Page received your letter directed to my Lady Ann Boleyn and will deliver the same. She gave him kind words, but will not promise to speak to the King for you.
Mr. Payge and Mr. Wat are in the tower, but it is thought without danger of life, though Mr. Payge is banished the King's court for ever.
Both Page and Wyatt were released from the Tower in June 1536 on the advice of Cromwell. Though Page had been banished from court in disgrace, the King summoned him back, and he was made High Sheriff of Surrey in 1537. During the same year the King bestowed on Page the office of Chamberlain to his son, Prince Edward.
Marriage and issue
In 1512 Page married Elizabeth Bourchier, daughter of Fulk Bourchier, 10th Baron FitzWarin and Elizabeth Dynham, by whom he had a daughter, Elizabeth Page, who married Sir William Skipwith of Ormesby, only son and heir of Sir William Skipwith by his first wife, Elizabeth Tyrwhit. Before her marriage to Richard Page, Elizabeth Bourchier had been the wife firstly of Henry Beaumont; secondly of a husband surnamed Verney, by whom she had a daughter, Katherine Verney; and thirdly of Sir Edward Stanhope, by whom she had a daughter, Anne Stanhope, who married Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, uncle of King Edward VI. Elizabeth Bourchier died 8 August 1557, and was buried at Clerkenwell, as noted in Machyn's diary. After Page's death she married for the fourth and final time to Nicholas Pigot.