Christopher Talbot’s prospects at birth were as modest as his ancestry was exalted. When he was born in about 1415, he was, with respect to the Talbot patrimony (which lay largely in Shropshire), the younger son of a younger son, and in regard to the Furnival inheritance of his mother (centred on Sheffield in south Yorkshire), his prospects depended on his elder brother’s premature and childless death. Although, in 1421, his chances of a competence were increased when the death of his young cousin, Ankaret, brought the Talbot lands to his father, in another respect his prospects receded. As he was growing up, the potential claims on the family lands grew with him, for his father had several children by a second wife, Margaret Beauchamp.
None the less, this disadvantage aside, Christopher was able to carve out a very promising career for himself. He was playing a part in the management of his father’s affairs by the summer of 1434. On 3 Aug. he was party to a lease of Talbot property dated at Sheffield, and soon afterwards he ordered the receiver of Blackmere, John Wenlock, and other of his father’s servants to ride to the house of Sir Richard Lacon* (unfortunately, the purpose of their visit is not known).
On Christopher’s return from France, his father made him the sort of provision that was vital to a younger son. On 27 Aug. 1436 Lord Talbot’s feoffees granted him the manor of Bubnell in north Derbyshire in fee tail, and he is known to have received the neighbouring manor of Glossop at about the same time. Both manors had been purchased by his father in the 1420s, and he must have been aware that he had little hope of receiving any part of the Talbot patrimony, not least because his father had already made a generous settlement in favour of his children by Margaret Beauchamp.
However, even though Sir Christopher remained active in Shropshire, it was clearly his father’s intention that both he and his elder brother, Sir John, should play a part in the administration of the family’s Furnival estates in the north. At the same time as our MP received his Derbyshire manors, the valuable manor of Worksop in north Nottinghamshire was settled on Sir John, and both brothers played some part in the affairs of the West Riding. In March 1438, for example, Sir Christopher was attending to his father’s affairs at Sheffield.
Sir Christopher’s new local prominence was soon recognized by the Crown. On 4 May 1442, a few weeks after the conclusion of the Parliament in which he had represented Shropshire and on the same day on which his father was raised to an earldom, he was added to the bench in the West Riding (again together with his elder brother). At the end of the same year the Crown surrendered its rights in respect of the lease of 1441: it granted him the office of bailiff of Staincross, part of the duchy of Lancaster, and a yearly rent of 19 marks out of the lordship of Edwinstowe, both of which Lowther had held by royal grant since the reign of Henry IV.
By the early 1440s Sir Christopher was a significant figure in his own right. Although most of the surviving evidence relates to his role in local affairs, whether in Shropshire or Yorkshire, he also had a place in the King’s household. In two royal grants, that of the rent from Edwinstowe and that made to him in May 1443 of £20 p.a. from the issues of Shropshire (to be held jointly with his elder brother), he is described as ‘King’s knight’; and in a later indictment he is described as a knight of the Household.
Such court connexions, together with his father’s influence, may have helped Sir Christopher to a marriage that allowed him to overcome the disavantages of a younger son and become a rich man. The match is known only from a suit in the court of common pleas: in 1445 Sir John Talbot had an action for the considerable debt of £500 against his brother’s widow, Joyce, Lady Tiptoft and Powis. She was a woman of great wealth: not only did she have significant dower and jointure holdings from her first marriage, but in her own right she was one of the two coheiress to the lands of her father, the feudal lord of Powis, and through her mother she had title to a small share of the Holand earldom of Kent.
The marriage was to be a very short one. In the following summer Sir Christopher met his death in strange circumstances. On 10 Aug. 1443, days after his father had returned to Normandy after another brief visit, a Welsh knight, Sir Gruffydd Vaughan of Trelydan (in Guilsfield in Montgomeryshire), ran him through with a lance at Caus castle (Shropshire), the property of Humphrey, earl of Stafford. Talbot’s death seems to have happened in the context of a tournament, but it was not seen as an accident. It was the subject of two indictments. The first of these was taken at Shrewsbury on 17 Oct. before royal commissioners, headed by Sir Richard Lacon, inquiring into treasons in Shropshire and the adjacent march. A jury placed the death in the context of a treasonable rising: it claimed that Sir Gruffydd and others imagining the death of the King had collected many traitors from Wales at Caus where Sir Gruffydd had killed Sir Christopher, described in the indictment as Vaughan’s master. Later, on 16 June 1444, a further indictment was laid at Shrewsbury, on this occasion before the county’s j.p.s. headed by our MP’s elder brother, Sir John.
Talbot’s death was soon followed by another. Even though his wife was in her forties at his death, she was then pregnant. The infant’s life was to be very brief: at some date between September 1443 and September 1444 the borough authorities at Shrewsbury spent 10d. on wine given to the Talbot servants who had come to the town for the burial of Sir Christopher’s child. Joyce, Lady Powis, did not long survive this double blow. She died in the autumn of 1446 and thus did not live to see her second husband apparently avenged.
