Although not foremost among the governing elite of Kingston-upon-Hull, Titelote was a figure of some importance in the town where he enjoyed an office-holding career lasting nearly 40 years. Perhaps a kinsman of Robert Titelot (d.1390) of Hornsea (16 miles from Hull), accused of piracy in 1383, he was admitted to the freedom of the town (upon payment of the customary fine) in 1433-4.
Almost certainly because he dealt principally in domestic rather than the more important overseas trade,
Both before and after becoming an alderman, Titelote was active in property dealings at Hull. In May 1450, for example, Nicholas Robinson and Stephen Hyngham and his wife conveyed a tenement in Finkle Street to him and John Darris, and in July 1453 he received a demise of half a garden and a dovecote from Margaret Masham, daughter and heir of Richard Bate.
The settlement of his real property was the dominant concern of Titelote’s will. In the will, dated 3 Sept. 1484 and proved on 18 Jan. 1485, he sought a modest funeral and burial in the parish church of the Holy Trinity at Hull. He assigned to his wife, Alice, the tenement in Monkgate in which he lived, along with another in the same street, five others in Old Kirklane and two in Finkle Street. After she died, the Monkgate residence was to pass to Edmund, son of Thomas Brackenburgh, again to hold for life and provided that he spent 3s. 4d. annually on masses for the good of the testator’s soul, and then to her assigns. Titelote named three executors: Alice, the merchant James Tomlinson and the merchant and apothecary Lawrence Swattok, bequeathing 20s. in cash to each of the latter two for their trouble.
