Robert was possibly a brother of John Pope I and certainly a kinsman of Thomas Pope and Stephen Pope. He witnessed several conveyances in Gloucester between 1376 and 1392, and was a regular office-holder in the town. While serving as a steward he was elected to Parliament in 1376, and in September following he was chosen bailiff for the first of four annual terms.
Pope’s royal appointments included, in 1381, a commission to investigate reports that the brethren of St. Bartholomew’s hospital, Gloucester, had so wasted certain corrodies that their income no longer sufficed to maintain the chantries, and they themselves now lacked food and clothing. It was also said that various sums of money bequeathed to the hospital by local men had been dissipated. Two years later, in March 1383, he was appointed, with the abbot of St. Peter’s, to visit the hospital, and in the following year, when he was bailiff, to question the warden and draw up ordinances of reform for the guidance of the inmates.
According to a rental of 1430-1, a shop near the North Gate had once been held by Robert Pope as a tenant in frank almoign of the abbey of Winchcombe.
