The Trelawnys were an important gentry family from eastern Cornwall with traditions of parliamentary service dating back to the reign of Edward II. The family’s lack of imagination when it came to choosing names for their male offspring meant that throughout the fifteenth century there were at any one time at least two, and often more kinsmen of identical name active in the south-west, and their activities are often difficult to disentangle. It nevertheless appears clear that the man who represented Liskeard in Henry V’s last Parliament was the younger son of one of the Cornish knights of the shire in the same assembly.
This John Trelawny is recorded in 1422 as the beneficiary of a settlement of lands in the parish of Linkinhorne to the north of Liskeard.
Like his father before him, Trelawny was a well-respected figure in Cornish society. Among the gentry families whose deeds he attested were the Colyns of Helland and Dernefords of East Stonehouse;
The death in that same summer of 1449 of Trelawny’s elder brother, Richard, without male heirs, sparked off a series of lengthy and acrimonious disputes between the dead man’s two daughters and their descendants on the one hand, and his surviving brother (the subject of this biography) and his offspring on the other. Almost immediately, Trelawny laid claim to the family estates, claiming that Richard’s daughters had been born out of wedlock. In September 1455, Bishop Lacy of Exeter ordered an inquiry, but its findings were delayed by the bishop’s death a few days later and the troubles which beset the choice of his successor.
John Trelawny of Brightor was succeeded by his son, yet another John, and it was he who in 1497 was drawn into the Cornish uprising against Henry VII and is thought to have fought at Blackheath. Certainly, this John Trelawny and his neighbour John Coryton had to pay a fine of ten marks on behalf of the inhabitants of their parish of Menheniot shortly afterwards.
