Baron Marmion
There have been four different Marmion Baronies.
The first was gained by Robert Marmion, Lord of Fontenay and Castellan of Falais Castle when he was granted the lordship and castle of Tamworth after the exile of Roger d'Abetot (nephew and heir of the King's Steward, Robert Despenser) between 1110 and 1114.
A second was obtained by Roger Marmion, Lord of Fontenay during the Norman invasion of Wales when he was rewarded with the Barony of Llanstephan whose castle played a central role in the Welsh wars.
The third was created for the eldest son of the 3rd Baron Marmion of Tamworth when he was granted the lordship of Winteringham.
Its final creation was by writ of summons for William Marmion to Simon de Montfort's Parliament in 1264, but was not continued after the rebels' defeat at Evesham in 1265.
Ancestry
According to Cokayne "the earliest known occurrence of the Marmion name seems to be that of a William Marmion who exchanged 12 acres of land with Ralf Taisson, son of Ralf the Angevin, which were granted by the latter to the abbey of Fontenay before Oct 1049 and who acted as a witness to a confirmation charter by William Duke of Normandy in 1060.[2] Due to similarities between the coats of arms of the Taisson and Marmion families there is some speculation that they were related.
In 1140 King Stephen left Robert Marmion of Fontenay in charge of defending Falaise Castle from Geoffrey of Anjou.[3] Falaise was the birthplace of William the Conqueror and former seat of the Dukes of Normandy so was a big prize. Robert, was "a warlike man with no match for boldness, fierceness or cunning"[4] and his successful defence of Falaise so angered Geoffrey that he marched to Fontenay and captured and destroyed Marmion's own castle.[5]
Robert moved to England (possibly after being rewarded by King Stephen for the defence of Falaise and the loss of his own castle) and expelled the monks of Coventry, making a castle of their church. Soon after, on 8 September 1143, in a fight with the Earl of Chester he was thrown from his horse and broke his thigh. As he lay on the ground he was killed by a common soldier. Robert was buried at Polesworth, Warwickshire, in unconsecrated ground as an excommunicated person.
Robert was married to Millicent, a kinswoman of Adeliza of Louvain,[3] wife of Henry I. Upon Robert's death Millicent remarried to Richard de Camville.[3]
Some believe that either Robert or his eldest son married the daughter of Gervais, Count of Rethel (brother to Baldwin II King of Jerusalem).[disputed – discuss]
King's Champion
Legend has it that the Marmions were Champions of Normandy before moving to England during the Anarchy. Robert Marmion's defence of King Stephen's castle at Falaise (birthplace of William the Conqueror and former seat of the Dukes of Normandy) in 1140 against Geoffrey of Anjou, is possibly an indication that the title originally had more than symbolic meaning.[6] In addition, as Normandy was still the homeland of the Kings of England at this time, it makes sense that, if one existed, the Kings Champion would be known as "Champion of Normandy and England".
Philip Marmion (d.1291) used the "3 Swords" badge, later used by the Dymokes to denote being heridatary Champions of England, as a seal as early as 1265[6] and in 1328 Tamworth Castle was held by the service of "appearing armed in the Royal Arms and mounted on the King's best charger to make proof for the king against any who opposed his coronation".[6]
The duty passed to the Dymokes through Philip's granddaughter Margaret Ludlow due to him having no legitimate male heirs.[6]
Baron Marmion of Tamworth (c.1110-14)
By Tenure
- Robert Marmion, 1st Baron Marmion of Tamworth (d. 1143 Coventry), son of Roger Marmion. Lord of Fontenay. Castellan of Falaise. Granted lordship and castle of Tamworth. Married Millicent (de Rethel?[disputed – discuss]).
- Robert Marmion, 2nd Baron Marmion of Tamworth[2][7][8] (d.bef Oct 1181[2]), son and heir. Lord of Fontenay. Married Elizabeth(?) (de Rethel?[disputed – discuss])
- Robert Marmion, 3rd Baron Marmion of Tamworth (d.bef 15 May 1218[2]), son and heir. Chief Judiciary of England. Sheriff of Worcestershire. Rebel in the First Barons' War.
- Robert Marmion, 4th Baron Marmion of Tamworth (aka Robert Marmion the Elder) (d.1241), son and heir of Robert Marmion, 3rd Baron Marmion of Tamworth and his 1st wife. Rebel in the First Barons' War. Married Juliana daughter of Philip de Vassy,[7] Baron of Vassy, Lord Forest Auvray[9]
- Philip Marmion, 5th Baron Marmion of Tamworth (d.1291), son and heir. Sheriff of Warwickshire & Leicestershire. Royalist in the Second Barons' War. Died without legitimate male heirs so his office of Kings Champion of England and Manor of Scrivelsby passed to Dymoke descendants of his daughter Margery.
Baron Marmion of Llanstephan (c.1114)
By Tenure
- Roger Marmion, Lord of Fontenay (d.abt.1129). Awarded Llanstephan c.1114.[7]
- Robert Marmion, 1st Baron Marmion of Tamworth (d. 1143), eldest son of Roger Marmion, Lord of Fontenay.
- Robert Marmion, 2nd Baron Marmion of Tamworth (d. 1185)
- Geoffrey Marmion, youngest son of Roger Marmion, Lord of Fontenay. Granted Llanstephan by his nephew, Robert Marmion, 2nd Baron Marmion of Tamworth, in 1166.[7] Benefactor of the Knights Templar.[7]
- Albreda, sole daughter and heir of Geoffrey Marmion, married William, son of the crusader Richard de Camville, and so the barony passed into the de Camville family.
Baron Marmion of Winteringham
By Tenure
- Robert Marmion, 1st Baron Marmion of Winteringham (d.bef 1242) (aka Robert Marmion the Younger), son of Robert Marmion, 3rd Baron Marmion of Tamworth and his 2nd wife. Rebel in the First Barons' War. Married Avice (Inq PM 1282[10]) daughter of Jernegan Fitz-Hugh of Tanfield.[11]
- William Marmion, 2nd Baron Marmion of Winteringham (d.27 Jul 1274[7]), son and heir. Rebel in the Second Barons' War. Married firstly Lorette, daughter of Richard FitzRoy, illegitimate son of King John of England and secondly to Sibilla relict of Robert de Mar(e)s of Mears Ashby.[12]
By Writ
- John Marmion, 3rd Baron Marmion of Winteringham (d.1322 Battle of Boroughbridge?), son and heir. Married Isabel.
- John Marmion, 4th Baron Marmion of Winteringham (d.1335), son and heir. Married Maud, daughter of Thomas, 1st Lord Furnival[11]
- Robert Marmion, 5th Baron Marmion of Winteringham (d.abt.1360), son and heir, died without issue whereupon the Barony fell into abeyance between his sisters, Joan, Lady Bernack and Avice, Lady Grey. The Barony passed to the male Fitz-Hugh descendants of Avice.
Baron Marmion of Torrington (1264)
By Writ
- William Marmion. Son of Robert Marmion, 3rd Baron Marmion of Tamworth. Priest (and Dean of Tamworth?). Summoned to Parliament as a Baron after the Battle of Lewes but after the rebels' defeat at Evesham was never recalled.
References
- Nicholas, Nicholas Harris (1857). Historic Peerage of England. London: John Murray.
Notes
- ^ Bernard Burke (1884), Burkes General Armory (hardback), London: Burkes
- ^ a b c d George Edward Cokayne (1893), Complete Peerage (hardback), London: George Bell & Sons.
- ^ a b c Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (hardback), Oxford University Press
- ^ Sir Leslie Stephen (1893), Sidney Lee (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 36, London: Smith, Elder & Co
{{citation}}
:|format=
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(help) - ^ John Burke (1883), Sir Bernard A Burke (ed.), Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Scotland and Ireland, extinct, dormant and in abeyance (hardback), London: Burkes Peerage
- ^ a b c d Sir Anthony Richard Wagner, ed. (1957), Rolls of Arms Henry III (hardback), London: Harleian Society
- ^ a b c d e f Charles Ferrers R. Palmer (1875), History of the Baronial Family of Marmion, Lords of the Castle of Tamworth, etc. (hardback), Tamworth: J. Thompson
- ^ John Horace Round (1895), Feudal England, London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co
{{citation}}
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(help) - ^ François-Alexandre Aubert de La Chesnaye Des Bois (1969), Dictionnaire De La Noblesse (hardback), Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint
- ^ John Caley, ed. (1806), Calendarium Inquisitionum post mortem sive Escaetarum (hardback), vol. 1, London: Record Commission
- ^ a b John Nichols (1795), The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester (hardback), Leicester: John Nichols
- ^ Thomas Stapleton (1844), Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normannias, London: Society of Antiquaries
External links
- Baronies in the Peerage of England
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