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De Birmingham family

The de Birmingham family (or de Bermingham) held the lordship of the manor of Birmingham in England for four hundred years and managed its growth from a small village into a thriving market town. They also assisted in the invasion of Ireland and were rewarded with the Barony of Athenry. They were stripped of most of their lands in England by the notorious John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, who held sway over the young King Edward VI (1547–1553).[editorialising]

Arms of de Bermingham: Party per pale indented or and gules
Effigy of Sir John de Bermingham (d.circa 1400) in St Martin's Church, Birmingham, showing his arms sculpted on his tunic
Arms of the See of Birmingham (founded in 1905), based on the arms of the mediaeval de Bermingham family

Ansculf edit

Following the Norman Conquest of 1066, the Norman soldier Ansculf de Picquigny (or Ausculph de Penchengi, etc)[1] was granted many manors in the county of Warwickshire, and elsewhere, centred upon Dudley Castle.[2][3] The historian Sir William Dugdale identified Ansculf (whom he confused with his son William) as a great man in the time of the Conquest as evidenced by the extent of the lands granted to him, namely twenty-five lordships in Staffordshire, twenty in Buckinghamshire, fourteen in Worcestershire, ten in Berkshire, seven in Surrey, seven in Warwickshire, four in Northamptonshire, one in Middlesex, one in Oxfordshire, one in Huntingdonshire, one in Cambridgeshire.[1]

By the time of the Domesday Book of 1086 Ansculf's lands had passed to his son William FitzAnsculf.[4]

Paganel edit

William Fitz Ansculph's daughter (and possibly his heiress) Beatrice FitzWilliam FitzAnsculph? is believed to have married Fulk Paganel (or Paganell, Paynell, etc) and thus their Paganell descendants inherited various Ansculph estates including Dudley castle[2][5] the manor of Birmingham[6] and Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire.[7] The flow of large parts of the Fitz-Ausculph estate to the Paganells lends itself to the theory that William Fitz Ausculph died with no surviving male heirs and so gave his lands to his daughter and her Paganell heirs. Fulk Paganell was succeeded by his son Ralph Paganell who was in turn succeeded by his son Gervais Paganell,[8] who took part in the unsuccessful rebellion against King Henry II in 1173, during which he was killed, his lands becoming forfeit to the crown and Dudley Castle being demolished.[9]

de Birmingham edit

The manor of Birmingham later was held by the de Birmingham family.[citation needed] Some sources suggest that the de Birminghams were descended from William Fitz Ausculph[6] whilst others disagree.[1]

According to a poem a later William de Birmingham was descended from the Ausculphs via a marriage to the Paganells.[10] According to William Hutton's History of Birmingham another William de Birmingham claimed in 1309 to have had ancestors who had the right to have a market in Birmingham before the Norman Conquest which would indicate that they were an old Anglo-Saxon family and not Norman.[11]

Various sources suggest that the right to hold a market in Birmingham was granted to a certain Peter FitzWilliam, Steward of Dudley Castle,[12] and not to Peter de Birmingham who was known as Steward of Gervais Paganell. At this time men were frequently known by more than one name so it is probable that Peter de Birmingham and Peter Fitz William were the same person.

Fulk Paganell has been claimed to have had several children, one of whom is said to have been called William. It is feasible that William would have been given a small part of the Paganell lands, e.g., Birmingham, while his elder brother Ralph received the rest. This could have led to William Paganell becoming known as William de Birmingham.

Richard edit

According to Hutton, the name of the owner of Birmingham at the time of the Norman Conquest was Richard, who is said to have survived and to have been known as lord of the manor of Birmingham by tenure of knight service to William Fitz-Ausculf as overlord.[11]

In the Domesday Book of 1086 there is a record of a Richard (no surname) occupying four hides at Birmingham which belonged to William FitzAnsculf of Dudley Castle,[13] thus Richard may have been the first of the "de Birmingham" family.

William de Birmingham edit

[6] The first "definite" de Birmingham became enfeoffed of the manor of Birmingham in the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135).[6]

Peter de Birmingham (Peter Fitz William?) edit

[6] William left Peter land of little value; Birmingham was one of the poorest manors in Warwickshire. There was little woodland and it was covered largely in scrub.

He applied to hold a cattle and food market every Thursday in the grounds of his "castle" and was granted the right by King Henry II in 1154 (some say 1166).[citation needed] He and his heirs were responsible for its jurisdiction.[6] Outsiders were charged to come to the market, encouraging many merchants to live within Birmingham town and hence to pay Peter rents that far exceeded the land's agricultural value. Birmingham became the most successful market in the whole of England. From a population of 50 people in 1086 the town grew to 1500 by 1300.[13]

In 1166 Peter is recorded to have owned a "castle" at Birmingham, to have been the Steward of Gervais Paganell and to have held nine Knight's fees by military service.[6] The "castle" is thought to have been the Birmingham Manor House – a fortified stone manor house surrounded by a circular moat and a range of outbuildings and was probably built in the 12th century. It was rebuilt in the 13th century and remained there until the 18th century. The moat has now been filled in and the house is now the site of the Bull Ring.[13]

Peter bore for his coat of arms:- azure, a bend lozenge, of five points, or.[11]

Sir William de Birmingham edit

[6] The de Birmingham family were instrumental in helping Strongbow in the Norman Invasion of Ireland. They were described as "the noble and warlike family of the Bremichams" and were rewarded much later with the Barony of Athenry, initially as lords of the manor.[14] Both Sir William de Birmingham and one of his youngest sons, Robert de Birmingham, are listed as being among the Normans sent in Henry II's invasion in 1172. Robert was later styled the 1st Baron Athenry.[6]Meyler de Bermingham took part in the invasion of Connacht in the 1230s and started to build the town of Athenry c. 1240.

In 1189 William had the charter to hold a market in Birmingham confirmed by Richard I.[13] William bore the following coat of arms; azure, a bend Lozenge, or.[6]

Robert's prominent medieval descendants in Ireland included Rickard de Bermingham (d.1322) and John de Bermingham, 1st Earl of Louth (d. 1329). The last baron of Athenry died in 1799.

Peter de Birmingham edit

[6] Sir William's eldest son.

Listed by one source as being one of the barons who were in arms to secure Magna Carta from King John between 1213 and 1215.[15]

William de Birmingham edit

[13] William was granted the right to hold a four-day fair starting on the eve of Ascension Day by Henry III in 1250. In 1251 permission was also given to hold a two-day fair beginning on the eve of the Feast of St John the Baptist.[13] William supported Simon de Montford in the Second Barons' War against Henry III and to have died at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. The manor of Birmingham was confiscated by the King and given to Roger de Clifford. William was married to the daughter of Thomas de Astley.[11] Her name in 1263 was recorded as Maud.[16]

A poem has been written about this William called William de Birmingham. Its historical accuracy cannot be verified but it mentions William's claim to de descended from Ausculph via marriage to the Paganells.

William de Birmingham edit

[17] William took up his right to reclaim his father's land by way of paying a fine. In 1283 he strengthened his claims to land in Stockton Worcester, Shetford (Shutford), Oxon, Maidencoat (Maidencourt) Berks, Hoggeston Bucks and Christleton Cheshire.[11] Maidencourt had come into the de Birmingham via a marriage to Sybil de Colville, who was the daughter of Alice de Colville who held the manor of Maidencourt in the early 13th century.[18]

Kingston Bagpuize, Berks was also quitclaimed to him in 1290.[19]

As a military Knight William was obliged to join Edward I at Gascony where he was taken prisoner by the French at the Siege of Bellegarde in 1297 and was carried in triumph to Paris.[11][14][20]

Sir William de Birmingham edit

[11] Knighted in 1305.[17] Tried the right of tollage with the people of Bromsgrove and King's Norton[11]

Sir William de Birmingham edit

 
Cross-legged effigy believed to represent Sir William de Bermingham, circa 1325, St Martin's Church, Birmingham
 
Coat of arms of the City of Birmingham, granted in 1889

Knighted in 1325 by Edward II for whom he raised four hundred infantry.[11][17]

In 1327 William was summoned to Parliament.[13] By this time Birmingham had overtaken the County Town of Warwick in terms of tax revenue. Willam's friend, Hugh Spencer, gave him custody of Dudley Castle[11]

William's tomb lies in Birmingham's original church, St Martin in the Bull Ring, which was originally built by the de Birminghams in the 12th century.

The five diagonal lozenges of his shield form part of the Coat of arms of Birmingham.[13]

Sir Fulk (de) Birmingham edit

[17] Married Joan and made a settlement of Kingston Bagpuize, Berks in 1340 with the advowson of the church. Remarried to Elizabeth. Leased the manor of Kingston Bagpuize to Peter Coke for life in 1367.[19]

Acted as a Member of Parliament for Warwick during the 1350s and 1360s.[11]

Abandoned the de Birmingham's traditional coat of arms and replaced it with:- partie per pale, indented, or, and gules.[11]

Fulk's tomb lies in St Martin in the Bull Ring.[13]

Sir John (de) Birmingham edit

 
Alabaster effigy of John de Birmingham in St Martin in the Bull Ring

[17] Eldest son of Sir Fulk who served as Sheriff of Warwick in 1397 and as parliamentary representative for Warwickshire, Bedfordshire, and Buckinghamshire.[11]

Married Elizabeth but had no children.

John's tomb (c. 1380) lies in St Martin in the Bull Ring.[13]

Break in direct male line edit

[11] Upon Sir John's death, the manor of Birmingham was left to his widow, Elizabeth, to use as a dower. She remarried to Lord Clinton and they lived in the de Birmingham's manor house in Birmingham until Elizabeth's death in 1424.

The rest of Sir John's lands were left to his brother, Sir Thomas de Birmingham, who built his own castle at Worstone near Birmingham. Upon Elizabeth's death Thomas was to have inherited the manor of Birmingham. However, he died before her and the de Birmingham lands were left to Thomas' two granddaughters:-

  • Lady Ellen Ferrers wife of Edmund Lord Ferrers of Chartley
  • Lady Elizabeth Longeville wife of George Longeville and, on George's death, wife of John Sutton Lord Dudley

who were both daughters of Thomas' only daughter, Elizabeth, who had been the wife of Thomas de la Roche.

Lady Ellen Ferrers' inheritance included the manor of Birmingham, which she eventually passed to a second cousin called William de Birmingham.[21]

William (de) Birmingham ?–1479 edit

[11] Lady Ferrers quit her title in favour of a second cousin, William de Birmingham, who appears to have been a descendant of William de Birmingham, brother of Sir Fulk de Birmingham. He held the manor by military service in 1441 and died in 1479.

Sir William (de) Birmingham 1449–? edit

[11] Married Isabella, heiress of William Hilton, and they had one son, William, who died before them but not before having his own son Edward.

Edward (de) Birmingham 1497–1538 edit

According to Sir William Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire Edward was the last de Birmingham to hold the lordship of Birmingham.[3][14] He was cheated out of it by John Dudley, who would later try to place Lady Jane Grey, his own daughter-in-law, on the throne, an offence for which he was later found guilty of treason and sentenced to death.

Dudley had asked to buy Birmingham from Edward. However, proud of his inheritance, Edward declined. Dudley was not a man to take no for answer though and devised a scheme to obtain Birmingham by dishonest means. A trap was laid for Edward and he was framed for highway robbery by Dudley's thugs. He was thrown in the Tower of London, tried and found guilty. However, Dudley being King Edward VI's closest adviser offered to get Edward a pardon from the King. The offer had a string attached, however, and in order to get the pardon, Edward had to hand Birmingham over to Dudley. Preferring poverty to death Edward did as Dudley demanded and in 1527[22] retired to obscurity, living on a token £40 a year offered as compensation. Edward had died by 1538 although his widow, Elizabeth, continued to live in Birmingham after his death.

Later de Birminghams edit

The lordship of Birmingham was not returned to the de Birmingham family upon Dudley's death. It reverted to the Crown and then to the Marrow family.

Other land held by the de Birminghams does not appear to have been signed over to Dudley and there are records of the de Birminghams' ownership of it after 1527, e.g., Shutford, Oxon in 1544 which mentions a young William, son of Henry, son of William & Margaret de Birmingham.

However, this too appears to have been transferred away from them by Henry VIII, possibly under the advice of John Dudley, who was not executed until 1553.

Land held by just the Ausculphs/Paganells edit

  • Dudley Castle, Worcestershire – held by William Fitz Ausculph in 1070 but given to his daughter who married Fulk Paganel. She and her Paganel heirs subsequently inherited the castle.[2][5]
  • Ellesborough, Buckinghamshire – held by Ansculf de Picquiny after the conquest and by William Fitz Ansculf in 1086 before passing to the Paganells. Reverted to the crown on the death of Gervais Paganell.[23]
  • Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire – held by Fitz-Ausculph before passing to the Paganels[7]
  • Wootton, Oxfordshire – held by William Paynell son of Fulk Paynell of Drax in 1184 but reverted to the king in 1232[24]

Land held by both the Ausculphs/Paganells and de Birminghams edit

Land held by just the de Birminghams edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c London; Being an Accurate History and Description of the British Metropolis ... - David Hughson - Internet Archive. W. Stratford. 1809. p. 500. Retrieved 2014-03-06. fitz ausculph.
  2. ^ a b c "Dudley Castle History". Sedgleymanor.com. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  3. ^ a b [1] August 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Norman Birmingham - History of Birmingham Places & Placenames A to Y". Billdargue.jimdo.com. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  5. ^ a b "William Camden | Worcestershire and Staffordshire". Vision of Britain. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lodge, John (1789). "The Peerage of Ireland: Or, A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility ... - John Lodge, Mervyn Archdall - Google Books". Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  7. ^ a b "NEWPORT-PAGNELL | As described in John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870-72)". Visionofbritain.org.uk. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  8. ^ . DudleyMall. Archived from the original on 2012-02-13. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  9. ^ "Dudley, Worcestershire in 1837". Oldtowns.co.uk. 2007-08-15. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  10. ^ "Full text of "Poems"". Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "The Project Gutenberg eBook of An History of Birmingham, by W. Hutton". Gutenberg.org. 2004-11-02. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  12. ^ "Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs to 1516: Warwickshire". History.ac.uk. 2007-03-16. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Medieval Birmingham - History of Birmingham Places & Placenames A to Y". Billdargue.jimdo.com. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  14. ^ a b c "Birkenshaw - Birmingham | A Topographical Dictionary of England (pp. 255-263)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  15. ^ "office". Brookfieldpublishing.com. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  16. ^ "Religious History - Churches built before 1800 | A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 7 (pp. 361-379)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Victoria County History of Berks
  18. ^ "Parishes - East Garston | A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 4 (pp. 247-251)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  19. ^ a b c "Parishes - Kingston Bagpuize | A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 4 (pp. 349-353)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  20. ^ Hutton, William (1836). "The History of Birmingham - William Hutton, James Guest (of Birmingham, England.) - Google Books". Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  21. ^ "Parishes - Kingston Bagpuize | A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 4 (pp. 349-353)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  22. ^ "Birmingham Remembered". Lerwill-life.org.uk. 2013-11-09. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  23. ^ "Parishes - Ellesborough | A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 2 (pp. 331-338)". British-history.ac.uk. 2003-06-22. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  24. ^ "Parishes - Wootton | A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 11 (pp. 259-285)". British-history.ac.uk. 1951-10-12. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  25. ^ "Parishes - Old Swinford | A History of the County of Worcester: volume 3 (pp. 213-223)". British-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  26. ^ "Henry VIII - December 1544, 26-31 | Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Volume 19 Part 2 (pp. 458-478)". British-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-03-06.

birmingham, family, confused, with, birmingham, surname, birmingham, family, bermingham, held, lordship, manor, birmingham, england, four, hundred, years, managed, growth, from, small, village, into, thriving, market, town, they, also, assisted, invasion, irel. Not to be confused with Birmingham surname The de Birmingham family or de Bermingham held the lordship of the manor of Birmingham in England for four hundred years and managed its growth from a small village into a thriving market town They also assisted in the invasion of Ireland and were rewarded with the Barony of Athenry They were stripped of most of their lands in England by the notorious John Dudley Duke of Northumberland who held sway over the young King Edward VI 1547 1553 editorialising Arms of de Bermingham Party per pale indented or and gulesEffigy of Sir John de Bermingham d circa 1400 in St Martin s Church Birmingham showing his arms sculpted on his tunicArms of the See of Birmingham founded in 1905 based on the arms of the mediaeval de Bermingham family Contents 1 Ansculf 2 Paganel 3 de Birmingham 4 Richard 5 William de Birmingham 6 Peter de Birmingham Peter Fitz William 7 Sir William de Birmingham 8 Peter de Birmingham 9 William de Birmingham 10 William de Birmingham 11 Sir William de Birmingham 12 Sir William de Birmingham 13 Sir Fulk de Birmingham 14 Sir John de Birmingham 15 Break in direct male line 16 William de Birmingham 1479 17 Sir William de Birmingham 1449 18 Edward de Birmingham 1497 1538 19 Later de Birminghams 20 Land held by just the Ausculphs Paganells 21 Land held by both the Ausculphs Paganells and de Birminghams 22 Land held by just the de Birminghams 23 See also 24 ReferencesAnsculf editFollowing the Norman Conquest of 1066 the Norman soldier Ansculf de Picquigny or Ausculph de Penchengi etc 1 was granted many manors in the county of Warwickshire and elsewhere centred upon Dudley Castle 2 3 The historian Sir William Dugdale identified Ansculf whom he confused with his son William as a great man in the time of the Conquest as evidenced by the extent of the lands granted to him namely twenty five lordships in Staffordshire twenty in Buckinghamshire fourteen in Worcestershire ten in Berkshire seven in Surrey seven in Warwickshire four in Northamptonshire one in Middlesex one in Oxfordshire one in Huntingdonshire one in Cambridgeshire 1 By the time of the Domesday Book of 1086 Ansculf s lands had passed to his son William FitzAnsculf 4 Paganel editWilliam Fitz Ansculph s daughter and possibly his heiress Beatrice FitzWilliam FitzAnsculph is believed to have married Fulk Paganel or Paganell Paynell etc and thus their Paganell descendants inherited various Ansculph estates including Dudley castle 2 5 the manor of Birmingham 6 and Newport Pagnell Buckinghamshire 7 The flow of large parts of the Fitz Ausculph estate to the Paganells lends itself to the theory that William Fitz Ausculph died with no surviving male heirs and so gave his lands to his daughter and her Paganell heirs Fulk Paganell was succeeded by his son Ralph Paganell who was in turn succeeded by his son Gervais Paganell 8 who took part in the unsuccessful rebellion against King Henry II in 1173 during which he was killed his lands becoming forfeit to the crown and Dudley Castle being demolished 9 de Birmingham editThe manor of Birmingham later was held by the de Birmingham family citation needed Some sources suggest that the de Birminghams were descended from William Fitz Ausculph 6 whilst others disagree 1 According to a poem a later William de Birmingham was descended from the Ausculphs via a marriage to the Paganells 10 According to William Hutton s History of Birmingham another William de Birmingham claimed in 1309 to have had ancestors who had the right to have a market in Birmingham before the Norman Conquest which would indicate that they were an old Anglo Saxon family and not Norman 11 Various sources suggest that the right to hold a market in Birmingham was granted to a certain Peter FitzWilliam Steward of Dudley Castle 12 and not to Peter de Birmingham who was known as Steward of Gervais Paganell At this time men were frequently known by more than one name so it is probable that Peter de Birmingham and Peter Fitz William were the same person Fulk Paganell has been claimed to have had several children one of whom is said to have been called William It is feasible that William would have been given a small part of the Paganell lands e g Birmingham while his elder brother Ralph received the rest This could have led to William Paganell becoming known as William de Birmingham Richard editAccording to Hutton the name of the owner of Birmingham at the time of the Norman Conquest was Richard who is said to have survived and to have been known as lord of the manor of Birmingham by tenure of knight service to William Fitz Ausculf as overlord 11 In the Domesday Book of 1086 there is a record of a Richard no surname occupying four hides at Birmingham which belonged to William FitzAnsculf of Dudley Castle 13 thus Richard may have been the first of the de Birmingham family William de Birmingham edit 6 The first definite de Birmingham became enfeoffed of the manor of Birmingham in the reign of King Henry I 1100 1135 6 Peter de Birmingham Peter Fitz William edit 6 William left Peter land of little value Birmingham was one of the poorest manors in Warwickshire There was little woodland and it was covered largely in scrub He applied to hold a cattle and food market every Thursday in the grounds of his castle and was granted the right by King Henry II in 1154 some say 1166 citation needed He and his heirs were responsible for its jurisdiction 6 Outsiders were charged to come to the market encouraging many merchants to live within Birmingham town and hence to pay Peter rents that far exceeded the land s agricultural value Birmingham became the most successful market in the whole of England From a population of 50 people in 1086 the town grew to 1500 by 1300 13 In 1166 Peter is recorded to have owned a castle at Birmingham to have been the Steward of Gervais Paganell and to have held nine Knight s fees by military service 6 The castle is thought to have been the Birmingham Manor House a fortified stone manor house surrounded by a circular moat and a range of outbuildings and was probably built in the 12th century It was rebuilt in the 13th century and remained there until the 18th century The moat has now been filled in and the house is now the site of the Bull Ring 13 Peter bore for his coat of arms azure a bend lozenge of five points or 11 Sir William de Birmingham edit 6 The de Birmingham family were instrumental in helping Strongbow in the Norman Invasion of Ireland They were described as the noble and warlike family of the Bremichams and were rewarded much later with the Barony of Athenry initially as lords of the manor 14 Both Sir William de Birmingham and one of his youngest sons Robert de Birmingham are listed as being among the Normans sent in Henry II s invasion in 1172 Robert was later styled the 1st Baron Athenry 6 Meyler de Bermingham took part in the invasion of Connacht in the 1230s and started to build the town of Athenry c 1240 In 1189 William had the charter to hold a market in Birmingham confirmed by Richard I 13 William bore the following coat of arms azure a bend Lozenge or 6 Robert s prominent medieval descendants in Ireland included Rickard de Bermingham d 1322 and John de Bermingham 1st Earl of Louth d 1329 The last baron of Athenry died in 1799 Peter de Birmingham edit 6 Sir William s eldest son Listed by one source as being one of the barons who were in arms to secure Magna Carta from King John between 1213 and 1215 15 William de Birmingham edit 13 William was granted the right to hold a four day fair starting on the eve of Ascension Day by Henry III in 1250 In 1251 permission was also given to hold a two day fair beginning on the eve of the Feast of St John the Baptist 13 William supported Simon de Montford in the Second Barons War against Henry III and to have died at the Battle of Evesham in 1265 The manor of Birmingham was confiscated by the King and given to Roger de Clifford William was married to the daughter of Thomas de Astley 11 Her name in 1263 was recorded as Maud 16 A poem has been written about this William called William de Birmingham Its historical accuracy cannot be verified but it mentions William s claim to de descended from Ausculph via marriage to the Paganells William de Birmingham edit 17 William took up his right to reclaim his father s land by way of paying a fine In 1283 he strengthened his claims to land in Stockton Worcester Shetford Shutford Oxon Maidencoat Maidencourt Berks Hoggeston Bucks and Christleton Cheshire 11 Maidencourt had come into the de Birmingham via a marriage to Sybil de Colville who was the daughter of Alice de Colville who held the manor of Maidencourt in the early 13th century 18 Kingston Bagpuize Berks was also quitclaimed to him in 1290 19 As a military Knight William was obliged to join Edward I at Gascony where he was taken prisoner by the French at the Siege of Bellegarde in 1297 and was carried in triumph to Paris 11 14 20 Sir William de Birmingham edit 11 Knighted in 1305 17 Tried the right of tollage with the people of Bromsgrove and King s Norton 11 Sir William de Birmingham edit nbsp Cross legged effigy believed to represent Sir William de Bermingham circa 1325 St Martin s Church Birmingham nbsp Coat of arms of the City of Birmingham granted in 1889Knighted in 1325 by Edward II for whom he raised four hundred infantry 11 17 In 1327 William was summoned to Parliament 13 By this time Birmingham had overtaken the County Town of Warwick in terms of tax revenue Willam s friend Hugh Spencer gave him custody of Dudley Castle 11 William s tomb lies in Birmingham s original church St Martin in the Bull Ring which was originally built by the de Birminghams in the 12th century The five diagonal lozenges of his shield form part of the Coat of arms of Birmingham 13 Sir Fulk de Birmingham edit 17 Married Joan and made a settlement of Kingston Bagpuize Berks in 1340 with the advowson of the church Remarried to Elizabeth Leased the manor of Kingston Bagpuize to Peter Coke for life in 1367 19 Acted as a Member of Parliament for Warwick during the 1350s and 1360s 11 Abandoned the de Birmingham s traditional coat of arms and replaced it with partie per pale indented or and gules 11 Fulk s tomb lies in St Martin in the Bull Ring 13 Sir John de Birmingham edit nbsp Alabaster effigy of John de Birmingham in St Martin in the Bull Ring 17 Eldest son of Sir Fulk who served as Sheriff of Warwick in 1397 and as parliamentary representative for Warwickshire Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire 11 Married Elizabeth but had no children John s tomb c 1380 lies in St Martin in the Bull Ring 13 Break in direct male line edit 11 Upon Sir John s death the manor of Birmingham was left to his widow Elizabeth to use as a dower She remarried to Lord Clinton and they lived in the de Birmingham s manor house in Birmingham until Elizabeth s death in 1424 The rest of Sir John s lands were left to his brother Sir Thomas de Birmingham who built his own castle at Worstone near Birmingham Upon Elizabeth s death Thomas was to have inherited the manor of Birmingham However he died before her and the de Birmingham lands were left to Thomas two granddaughters Lady Ellen Ferrers wife of Edmund Lord Ferrers of Chartley Lady Elizabeth Longeville wife of George Longeville and on George s death wife of John Sutton Lord Dudleywho were both daughters of Thomas only daughter Elizabeth who had been the wife of Thomas de la Roche Lady Ellen Ferrers inheritance included the manor of Birmingham which she eventually passed to a second cousin called William de Birmingham 21 William de Birmingham 1479 edit 11 Lady Ferrers quit her title in favour of a second cousin William de Birmingham who appears to have been a descendant of William de Birmingham brother of Sir Fulk de Birmingham He held the manor by military service in 1441 and died in 1479 Sir William de Birmingham 1449 edit 11 Married Isabella heiress of William Hilton and they had one son William who died before them but not before having his own son Edward Edward de Birmingham 1497 1538 editAccording to Sir William Dugdale s Antiquities of Warwickshire Edward was the last de Birmingham to hold the lordship of Birmingham 3 14 He was cheated out of it by John Dudley who would later try to place Lady Jane Grey his own daughter in law on the throne an offence for which he was later found guilty of treason and sentenced to death Dudley had asked to buy Birmingham from Edward However proud of his inheritance Edward declined Dudley was not a man to take no for answer though and devised a scheme to obtain Birmingham by dishonest means A trap was laid for Edward and he was framed for highway robbery by Dudley s thugs He was thrown in the Tower of London tried and found guilty However Dudley being King Edward VI s closest adviser offered to get Edward a pardon from the King The offer had a string attached however and in order to get the pardon Edward had to hand Birmingham over to Dudley Preferring poverty to death Edward did as Dudley demanded and in 1527 22 retired to obscurity living on a token 40 a year offered as compensation Edward had died by 1538 although his widow Elizabeth continued to live in Birmingham after his death Later de Birminghams editThe lordship of Birmingham was not returned to the de Birmingham family upon Dudley s death It reverted to the Crown and then to the Marrow family Other land held by the de Birminghams does not appear to have been signed over to Dudley and there are records of the de Birminghams ownership of it after 1527 e g Shutford Oxon in 1544 which mentions a young William son of Henry son of William amp Margaret de Birmingham However this too appears to have been transferred away from them by Henry VIII possibly under the advice of John Dudley who was not executed until 1553 Land held by just the Ausculphs Paganells editDudley Castle Worcestershire held by William Fitz Ausculph in 1070 but given to his daughter who married Fulk Paganel She and her Paganel heirs subsequently inherited the castle 2 5 Ellesborough Buckinghamshire held by Ansculf de Picquiny after the conquest and by William Fitz Ansculf in 1086 before passing to the Paganells Reverted to the crown on the death of Gervais Paganell 23 Newport Pagnell Buckinghamshire held by Fitz Ausculph before passing to the Paganels 7 Wootton Oxfordshire held by William Paynell son of Fulk Paynell of Drax in 1184 but reverted to the king in 1232 24 Land held by both the Ausculphs Paganells and de Birminghams editBirmingham Warwickshire a moated and castellated manorhouse which is now the site of the Bull Ring Kingston Bagpuize Berkshire the northern part was held by Fitz Ausculph in 1086 while the southern part was held by Henry de Ferrers 19 In 1290 land in Kingston Bagpuize was quitclaimed to William de Birmingham 17 Amblecote Worcestershire held by William Fitz Ansculf in 1086 and then by the De Birminghams until 1322 25 Land held by just the de Birminghams editMaidencourt Royal Berkshire held by the de Birminghams from at least the mid 13th century until 1420 17 Christleton Cheshire held by William de Birmingham in 1283 11 Hoggeston Buckinghamshire held by William de Birmingham in 1283 11 Shutford Oxfordshire held by William de Birmingham in 1283 11 Given away by Henry VIII in 1544 due to the minority of William Birmingham who was the son of Henry Birmingham who was the son of William amp Margaret Birmingham 26 Stockton Worcester held by William de Birmingham in 1283 11 See also editBirmingham West Midlands England History of Birmingham Barony of Athenry People called Birmingham Bermingham surname People called Bermingham Alternative spellings of Birmingham Archived 2008 12 08 at the Wayback MachineReferences edit a b c London Being an Accurate History and Description of the British Metropolis David Hughson Internet Archive W Stratford 1809 p 500 Retrieved 2014 03 06 fitz ausculph a b c Dudley Castle History Sedgleymanor com Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b 1 Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine Norman Birmingham History of Birmingham Places amp Placenames A to Y Billdargue jimdo com Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b William Camden Worcestershire and Staffordshire Vision of Britain Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c d e f g h i j k Lodge John 1789 The Peerage of Ireland Or A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility John Lodge Mervyn Archdall Google Books Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b NEWPORT PAGNELL As described in John Marius Wilson s Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales 1870 72 Visionofbritain org uk Retrieved 2014 03 06 Dudley Castle Brief History DudleyMall Archived from the original on 2012 02 13 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Dudley Worcestershire in 1837 Oldtowns co uk 2007 08 15 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Full text of Poems Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t The Project Gutenberg eBook of An History of Birmingham by W Hutton Gutenberg org 2004 11 02 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs to 1516 Warwickshire History ac uk 2007 03 16 Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c d e f g h i j Medieval Birmingham History of Birmingham Places amp Placenames A to Y Billdargue jimdo com Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c Birkenshaw Birmingham A Topographical Dictionary of England pp 255 263 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 office Brookfieldpublishing com Retrieved 2014 03 06 Religious History Churches built before 1800 A History of the County of Warwick Volume 7 pp 361 379 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c d e f g Victoria County History of Berks Parishes East Garston A History of the County of Berkshire Volume 4 pp 247 251 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 a b c Parishes Kingston Bagpuize A History of the County of Berkshire Volume 4 pp 349 353 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Hutton William 1836 The History of Birmingham William Hutton James Guest of Birmingham England Google Books Retrieved 2014 03 06 Parishes Kingston Bagpuize A History of the County of Berkshire Volume 4 pp 349 353 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Birmingham Remembered Lerwill life org uk 2013 11 09 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Parishes Ellesborough A History of the County of Buckingham Volume 2 pp 331 338 British history ac uk 2003 06 22 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Parishes Wootton A History of the County of Oxford Volume 11 pp 259 285 British history ac uk 1951 10 12 Retrieved 2014 03 06 Parishes Old Swinford A History of the County of Worcester volume 3 pp 213 223 British history ac uk Retrieved 2014 03 06 Henry VIII December 1544 26 31 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Volume 19 Part 2 pp 458 478 British history ac uk Retrieved 2014 03 06 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title De Birmingham family amp oldid 1218500300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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