Philip Marmion, 5th Baron Marmion of Tamworth

Sir Philip Marmion

Arms of Philip Marmion:- vair, a fess gules, fretty or[1]
King's Champion
In office
1241–1291
Monarch Henry III, Edward I
High Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire
In office
20 Jul 1249  1251
Monarch Henry III
Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk
In office
9 Jul 1261  26 Feb 1262
Monarch Henry III
Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire
In office
24 Dec 1263  1265?
Monarch Henry III
Personal details
Died 1291
Spouse(s) 1. Joan de Kilpeck
2. Mary Cantilupe
Parents Robert Marmion
Juliana de Vassy

Philip Marmion, 5th and last Baron Marmion of Tamworth (died 1291) was King's Champion and Sheriff. He was descended from the lords of Fontenay-le-Marmion in Normandy, who are said to have been hereditary champions of the Dukes of Normandy.

Career

Philip was High Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire in 1249, and of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1261, having also been summoned to Parliament in that year.

He served in Poitou in 1254, and was imprisoned when on his way home through France at Pons.

Philip was one of the sureties for the king in December 1263 and was one of his leading supporters at the Battle of Northampton in April 1264.[2] He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Lewes on 14 May 1264.

He died before 5 Dec 1291 when an Inquisition post mortem was held.[3]

Family and descendants

Modified Arms of Kilpeck borne by Sir Philip:- sable, a sword erect in pale, point in chief argent[4]

Marmion first married Joan,[3] daughter and heiress of Hugh, Baron of Kilpeck, with whom he had the following issue:

and secondly, to Mary Cantilupe,[5] (Inq P.M. 1315[6]) who bore him:

he also had a lovechild with a mistress whose identity is not known:-

Tamworth passed to Joan, daughter of Mazeera Marmion, and wife of Alexander de Freville, and Scrivelsby eventually passed with Margaret de Ludlow to Sir John Dymoke, in whose family it has since remained along with the title 'Champion of England'.

References

Notes

Philip and Lady Marmion's effigy in Scrivelsby church
  1. Bernard Burke (1884), Burkes General Armory (hardback), London: Burkes
  2. Chronica Monasterii St Albini, II, London: Longman, Green, Longmand, Roberts & Green, 1865
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, III, London: HMSO, 1912
  4. Joseph Foster (1902), Feudal Coats of Arms (hardback), London: James Parker & co
  5. Thomas Christopher Banks (1844), Baronies in Fee (hardback), London: W. M. Harrison
  6. John Caley, ed. (1806), Calendarium Inquisitionum post mortem sive Escaetarum, 1, London: Record Commission
  7. The Knights of Edward I (hardback), London: Harleian Society, 1929
  8. 1 2 Charles Ferrers R. Palmer (1875), History of the Baronial Family of Marmion, Lords of the Castle of Tamworth, etc. (hardback), Tamworth: J. Thompson
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