, at which Sir Ralph Hastings was knighted During the
Wars of the Roses, Ralph Hastings was a committed supporter of the
House of York. He was both an
esquire and a knight of the body to
Edward IV. He fought at the battles of
Barnet on 14 April 1471 and at
Tewkesbury on 4 May 1471, where he was knighted. In the same year the King appointed him joint keeper of
Rockingham Castle in Kent, and granted him an annuity of 50 marks. In 1462 he was granted the manor of
Great Harrowden, forfeited to the crown by the
attainder on 4 November 1461 of Sir William Vaux, later slain at
Tewkesbury. He held numerous offices during the reign of
Edward IV, including Keeper of the Lions and Leopards in the
Tower of London. In 1470 he was Controller of Customs in Lynn, Norfolk, as well as Controller of Petty Customs in London. He was
High Sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1471, and represented the county in Parliament as
Knight of the Shire in 1472. In 1472 he and his eldest brother,
William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, were granted licence to found a
guild at the church of St Gregory in
Northampton. In 1475 he was with the English forces in France, and from 1474 to 1483 was Lieutenant of
Guisnes. He also served as
Captain of Calais, where his eldest brother,
William, was Lieutenant, and in 1483 was granted an annuity of £40 from the town's revenues. Edward IV died on 9 April 1483, and two months later, on 13 June 1483, the future
Richard III had Hastings's eldest brother,
William, beheaded at the
Tower of London for allegedly conspiring against him. Despite this, on 6 July another of Hastings' brothers,
Richard Hastings, Baron Welles, was among the thirty-five peers who attended Richard's coronation. Hastings died before 1 December 1495. In his will, dated 17 September 1495 he left his manors in Wanstead,
Essex, and
Woolwich, Kent to his wife, a marriage portion to his daughter Amy, his 'little primer' to his granddaughter, Anne Longueville, and his best horse to his brother,
Richard Hastings, Baron Welles. He requested burial at
St Bridget of Syon in Middlesex, and failing that, at
Barking Abbey. ==Marriages and issue==