This John Smolyn was probably related to a namesake who had represented Chichester in the Parliament of April 1384, and may even have been his son. Either he or the older John was a parishioner of St. Olave’s church in the city, and as such reported that all was well in the parish when the bishop made a formal visitation in April 1397.
Smolyn was elected constable of the staple in Chichester in May 1410, and from the following Michaelmas he filled both this post and that of mayor of the city. Furthermore, while so engaged in the two offices, in October he received another royal appointment, for in association with Simon Blakebourne, one of the serjeants-at-arms, he was granted the farm of alnage in Surrey and Sussex for a period of three years, the two of them then agreeing to serve as alnagers.
