More may be added to the earlier biography.
Urban’s trade or profession is uncertain, although his employment in the later 1420s by a Breton merchant as his attorney in a lawsuit against another Cornishman may point to some legal training.
Whether or not Urban should be identified with the David Renaudin who served as one of the executors of John Urban† of South Fleet, he certainly had close ties with both the Kentish line of the Urbans and the Renaudins, for one John Renaudin had stood surety for him at the time of his quarrel with Roger Archer in 1407, while in the spring of 1432 Dorothy, the widow and executrix of John Urban’s son Andrew was suing him for a debt of more than £45.
Urban apparently maintained connexions with the greater gentry of his native shire. Although he does not appear to have been a regular member of the circles of either the great Arundells of Lanherne or the Bodrugans, he did on occasion act as a feoffee or attorney or attested property deeds for leading members of both families.
As Urban died intestate, the administration of his goods was committed to his widow, Isabel, who was still engaged in settling her late husband’s affairs in 1442.
