More may be added to the earlier biography.
Treage’s descent from the thirteenth-century head of his family, William Treage, continued to be called into question even after he defeated at law his kinsman Michael Treage in 1406. Thus, in the autumn of 1432 he was once more in dispute over part of his inheritance, this time with one John Tomkyn Trefewa.
Central to Treage’s concerns in the 1420s and early 1430s was nevertheless the protracted dispute over the royal manor of Helston-in-Kirrier, which he had been granted jointly with the rising lawyer Richard Penpons* in 1424, in flagrant disregard of an earlier grant by Richard II to his standard-bearer, Sir Nicholas Sarnesfield, and the latter’s wife, Margaret, in survivorship. Indeed, Margaret’s title had been confirmed by Henry V as recently as 1415.
Despite Treage’s activities throughout Cornwall, particularly close ties bound him to the minor gentry of the far south-west. His well documented connexion with Richard Penpons through their joint tenure of Helston-in-Kirrier aside,
