Richard was the fourth of 7 sons born to Sir
John Folville (died 1310) of
Ashby Folville,
Leicestershire. In 1321, he was created rector to the small country parish of
Teigh, about 12km east of
Melton Mowbray. A warrant for Folville's arrest was issued in March 1326 for his part in connection with
the assassination of Sir Roger Bellere, and he was also involved in much of his siblings' later strifes. Folville seems to have masterminded the abduction and ransom of the justice Sir
Richard Willoughby, later
Chief Justice of the King's Bench. The chronicler
Henry Knighton, our principal witness to the activities of the Folvilles, claims that the "savage, audacious" Richard was in charge of the
socialem comitivam ('allied company') which attacked Willoughby. The kidnapping occurred in January 1332. Willoughby was seized on the road to
Grantham and escorted into nearby woodland. One indictment claims that he was carried from here to numerous dens and hideouts across the county, "from wood to wood". He was eventually made to pay 1300 marks for his release and forced to swear an oath of loyalty to the Folvilles. ==Capture and death==