William Dalderby

William Dalderby (fl. 1383–1404) was an English politician. He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Lincoln in October 1383 and January 1404. William, the second son of Robert Dalderby, prospered in the wool trade. In September 1378, he became bailiff of Lincoln, and soon thereafter he received his first royal commission. During his year in office in 1383, as a member of Parliament, his term was uneventful.[1]

Offices held

  • Bailiff, Lincoln - September, 1378–1379
  • Mayor of Lincoln - 1382–1383, 1384–1385
  • Controller of a tax, Lincoln - December 1380
  • Collector, Lincoln - November 1386
  • Commissioner, Lincoln - November 1383
  • Mayor of the Boston Staple, Lincolnshire - July 1389 – 1390
  • Coroner of the liberty of Lincoln - August 1403 – 1406[1]
gollark: The US model does give the executive branch more power, I think.
gollark: Except the senate is actually elected.
gollark: I kind of want to read one of those verbose rants now.
gollark: Because it'll find some way to wiggle out of the constraint, or come up with some solution which is still bad, and because "maximize happiness" might not be a goal we want anyway, and because that does not actually fix current problems.
gollark: Solar would probably be more widely used if energy storage was better.

References

  1. "Dalderby, William, of Lincoln". History of Parliament. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993


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