Francis Toppesfeld

Francis Toppesfeld (died after 1427) was an English Crown servant who became a judge in Ireland.

He is first heard of in the reign of King Henry IV, when he was an esquire of the body, in personal attendance on the Royal Family. He was a senior official who held the position of Controller of the Household to King Henry's second son Thomas of Lancaster, Duke of Clarence. Clarence held office as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1401-13 (arriving in Dublin in November 1401) and it is almost certain that Toppesfeld accompanied him to Ireland, as did another future Baron of the Exchequer, Sir John Radcliffe, then Lancaster's Secretary and later a distinguished military commander. Toppesfeld married Alice, an heiress who brought him a considerable landholding in Ireland. They were visiting England in 1410, having appointed Thomas Shorthalls, later another colleague of Toppesfeld on the Court of Exchequer, as their attorney.

Thomas Duke of Clarence-effigy

Clarence, his employer, had left Ireland for good in 1409; he was killed fighting in France in 1421. Shortly afterwards he stepped down as a judge in favour of Robert Chambre. His date of death is not recorded.