Owing to his very common name, Wyke is impossible to identify with certainty. As a result, the cursus honorum above is speculative rather than definitive, but it is very likely that he was of sufficient status to exercise at least some of the offices listed. The lack of any known references to a John Wyke ‘of Malmesbury’ in the surviving sources might suggest that the MP was an outsider to the borough he represented in Parliament, even though he was probably from Wiltshire.
To compound the problems of identification, Wiltshire did not lack for men named John Wyke or Wykes during the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. Among them was a millward married to an Agnes, with whom he possessed a messuage at Christian Malford in 1379. Presumably, the John Wyke and his wife who took part in a land transaction at Wootton Bassett a decade later were not the same couple, since her name was Margaret rather than Agnes, although it is possible that the millward had remarried.
Records from Henry VI’s reign also contain references to various men from Wiltshire named John Wyke or Wykes. Among them were a merchant from Trowbridge and a ‘gentleman’ from Marden. By the late 1420s, John of Trowbridge had become a feoffee of the nearby manor of Great Chalfield for William Rous esquire (d.1452). Rous did not however enjoy an undisputed title to the manor, which was the subject of a lengthy series of quarrels until it was finally secured by one of the claimants, Thomas Tropenell*, in the later fifteenth century.
While it is impossible to confirm whether he was any of the men mentioned above, there are at least reasonable grounds for assuming that the MP was associated with two influential knights, Sir Henry Hussey* and Sir William Sturmy*. At the beginning of 1417 Hussey conveyed his manor of Standen in Wiltshire to John Wyke, John Bird* of Marlborough and other feoffees, while in 1418 and 1422 John Wyke witnessed deeds for Sturmy, a knight of the shire for Wiltshire in no fewer than eight Parliaments.
