This MP’s family had long been connected with Ludgershall, for his forebear (perhaps father or grandfather) Roger Sotewell, a servant of Edward III’s daughter Isabel, was granted by her in 1364 keeping of the park at Ludgershall for term of her life, and continued to hold the keepership until his own death after being confirmed in office by Richard II in 1382.
Richard lived at Chute (some three miles from Ludgershall), and was among the parishioners there who in 1409 reported to the bishop of Salisbury’s commissary that the chancel roof, windows, walls and door of the church were defective through the negligence of the prebendary. He and members of his family continued to hold land there until the seventeenth century.
Subsequently, Sotewell served as a juror at Winchester in January 1429 for the post mortem of Robert Avenell, but it was as one of the gentry of Wiltshire that five years later he was listed to take the generally-administered oath not to maintain malefactors,
Nothing is known about the family of Sotewell’s wife Joan, who brought to the marriage land and property at Faccombe in Hampshire, which in January 1447 she leased to their daughter Anne and son-in-law John Benger for ten years. At the same time John Benger the elder settled on the couple the manor of Collingbourne Sunton and land at Shaw in Chute. John and Robert Sotewell, probably both sons of the late MP, witnessed the transaction. John, certainly Richard’s son and heir, received from his widowed mother her holdings in Faccombe and Andover in August 1460.
