Andrew Aubrey

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Andrew Aubrey was an English merchant and politician, who served three terms as Lord Mayor of London during the reign of Edward III.[1] A member of the Worshipful Company of Grocers,[2] Aubrey was elected one of the Sheriffs of London in 1331, served as an alderman from 1333 - 1355, and was elected mayor in 1339, 1340, and 1351.[3] As alderman, he first represented Bread Street Ward, but in 1345 he removed to Cordwainer, where he served until his resignation in 1355.[4] During one of his terms as mayor, while he was charged with keeping the peace during the king's absence abroad, Aubrey put down a riot that had broken out due to conflict between the fishmongers and skinners. During the tumult, one of the ringleaders wounded one of the mayor's officers, while another seized Aubrey himself and threatened him with a sword. [5] Aubrey had both men, along with five other rioters, beheaded without trial and their heads mounted on London Bridge.[6] Not only was Aubrey not punished for his actions, he was congratulated by the king, on the grounds that an assault on the king's officers was the same as an assault on the king's own person.[7]

Andrew Aubrey married a daughter of Robert le Bret, a London goldsmith who served as alderman in the 1330s.[8] One of his children, John Aubrey, married Matilda, daughter of Adam Fraunceys, who succeeded Andrew Aubrey as lord mayor; after John's death, his widow married John Montacute, who later became the Earl of Salisbury.[9]

References

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  2. Herbert, William [1] "The History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies of London, Vol. 1" pg. 307
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  4. Beaven, Alfred [2] "The Aldermen of the City of London Temp. Henry III - 1908" pp. 45, 113, 231
  5. Stow, John, and Mottley, John [3] "A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster, Borough of Southwark, and Parts Adjacent" pg. 46
  6. Bentley, Richard [4] "Bentley's Miscellany, Vol. 5" pg. 375
  7. Corporation of London [5] "Memorials of London and London Life" pp. 210 - 211
  8. Thrupp, Sylvia L. [6] "The Merchant Class of Medieval London, 1300 - 1500" pg. 326
  9. White, William [7] "Notes and Queries" pp. 36 - 37