Richard was the fourth of seven 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 12 km east of Melton Mowbray. However, like his near-contemporaries Thomas De L'Isle or John Rippinghale, his vocation did not deter him from indulging in serious organised crime. Although he is not named in connection with the murder of Sir Roger Bellere in 1326, he certainly participated in many of his siblings' later outrages.
Richard seems to have masterminded the gang's most brazen plot, 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 kidnap 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 at length made to pay 1300 marks (nearly £900) for his release, and forced to swear an oath of loyalty to the Folvilles.
The underlying reasons for this attack are obscure. What at first glance looks like casual opportunism may in fact be rooted in local politics, since Willoughby had estates in Leicestershire; the abduction may even have been intended as a challenge to royal authority. Knighton clearly regards it as the latter, conceiving the whole episode as revenge for the trailbaston sessions of 1331, which 'made several outlaws in many places'. As Richard Firth Green comments: 'We may never be able to establish Richard Folville's motives precisely - was he paying off an old debt with a local rival, expressing his contempt for royal justice, or merely indulging in a spot of profitable brigandage?'
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