Ruding was from an established Warwick family. His putative father and namesake, a servant of the Beauchamp lords of Warwick, had represented the borough in Parliament in 1399. He made his own career as a Chancery clerk, probably finding his place there through the Warwickshire esquire, Thomas Bate*, brother of another Chancery man, John Bate, dean of Tamworth (Staffordshire) and a kinsman of John Kemp, cardinal-archbishop of York (chancellor from 1426 to 1432). It is significant in this context that Thomas was elected to represent Warwickshire in the Parliament in which Ruding sat for the county’s borough. On 1 Mar. 1442, while this Parliament was in session, Ruding was nominated by the Crown to receive the pension that the priory of Trentham in Staffordshire was bound to pay one of the King’s clerks until the prior should have provide the clerk with a benefice.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
209614
