Considering that he was a great-nephew of the famous ‘Dick’ Whittington† and hailed from a family which had occasionally supplied Gloucestershire with knights of the shire since Edward II’s reign,
As a landholder of some substance, Whittington easily qualified for knighthood, an honour for which he was distrained on at least two occasions, and it was as ‘notabilis armiger’ that he was returned to the Parliament of 1455.
Just weeks into Henry’s Readeption, Whittington died in London. He was buried in the city’s fashionable Greyfriars’ church, where a monumental inscription recorded that his death had occurred on 3 Nov. 1470.
