Page:A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire Chunk 2.djvu/283

 SCA or, for FesNacs; 2nd and 3rd, arg., a chevron, between with three dane., four eons; of wheen the yosmgret, Marmaduke, three moles, in., for TWIOLETON. cvesle—lat, FIENNEO: a wolf sejant, ppr. 2nd, TweaLo’eow: and chancellor of that ssniversity, hislsop of Corhole (1430), an arm, embossed and vested, sa., cuff, arg., band ppe., treasurer of England (1446), and bishop of Lineiin (1451). holding a mole-spade, or, headed and armed, ccl the second. Thomas, the eldest eon, d. in 1404, acid was s. by his brother, Sopperlers—Two wolves, arg., gorged and chained, as the 5cR JoisM DR Lueei.cv, Lord Lnmley, who, doing homage crest. .etfslio—Fertem poscc aneenum. Jecci—Bronghton Caatle, near Banbury, Oxfordehire. .RcsieieeeLe’ry Hicei.v—Itereferd. S C A It B It 0 U C) H. SCAUBROUOH, EARL OF (Richard-George Lumley), lordship’s eldest son, Thomas Lssmiey, predeeeasing him, Vieeount Lumloy, and Baron Lnmley, of Luenley left four acne and three dane., by his wife Elizabeth Plantagenet, Castle, co. linrham, in tho peerage of England; Vieconnt Lumley, of Waterford, in the peerago of Ireland ; formerly heat-colonel Vest Yorkshire and woe e. by his grandson, Yeomanry Cavalry; b. 7 May, 1813; a. his cousin, Recnaen, Lord Lnmiey, who lead summons to parliamaeet as 9th earl, 29 Oct. 1856; CR. 8 Oct. 1846, EredericaMary.Adehiza, in 1560. His lordaleip m. Anne, don, of Sir John Conyers, 2nd dan. of the late Andrew-Robert KG., of Hornby Castle, so, York,hy whom he left two sane, Drnmmond, Eeq. (see STnATHALLAN, V.), by the Lady i. Jonae, his eneeeesor. Elizabeth Manners his wife, and has issue, s. Lyulph-Riehard-Granby.Wllhiem, Visceseset Lecoeley, t. 7 June, 1850; ii. nma. 23 Aug. 1662. 51. ALnaen - Fannanecee - Gnonoe - Bretosvnnn, Varseeai LRnsley, ii. 16 Nov. 1857. iii. Albert-VieterGeerge-Atheling, 0. 11 July, 1862. r. Algitha-Frederlea-Mary, s:s. 13 Aug. iies, to the Hon. Tide nobleman was one of the barons whe signed, in the W.-T. Orde-Powlett, eldest eon of Lord Bolte:s. ix. Ida-Pracaeee-Annabdlla. ses. Liliase-Selina-Rheabeth, xv. Sibell-Mary. ILtllCEgC. The surname of this family was assumed from Lumley lords who appeared in the inenrreetton, called the Pilgrimage on the Weare, in the bishopric of Durham, and the family deduces its lineage from Lrntra (sen of Osbert do Lnmley), who m. Algetha, dan. whom he had an only son, of Alfred, Earl of Northumberland, by Edgina, dan. of GEOOOE, u-ho being implicated in the treason of Lord ETHoLnaan II. This Linlph, who was a nobleman of great Darey, Sir Thomas Percy, and others, was committed te the popularity in the time of the CoNFEssoR, was murdered by Tower, and coeevieted and executed. He so. Jane, 2nd dan. means of Leoferise, chaplain to Watcher, bishop of Durham; aced co-heir of Sir Riehas’d Knighticy, by whom he had two a erinee soon after avenged by the populace of Dnrbam, who dane. and a eon, sacrificed both the chaplain and the prelate to their just JoRac, who was croated Lord Linetey by parliament. resentment. The eldest sen of Linlph, assuming the surname Jane, sea, to Geifrey 3larkbam, Faq.; and ci. e. J of LsiasLav, succeeded as UcnTen ne Luaee.cv, and from him lineally descended Room no LUMLEY. who see. Sybil, one of the dane. and ce-heirs of the great Northumberland feudal baron, Huon .feec-aeaal ased Exitmsei Peerege.) DR StoaEwec, and was 5. by his son, SIR ROBERT OR Luaetev, who m. Lnoia, one of the three JOHN, who was restored in bleed by an act of parliament sisters and co-heirs of William, Robert, and Thomas de passed in 1147, whereby it was eeeaeted, that the said John Thweng, Barons Thweng, and was e. by his sen Sia isIAaaeAnuKE neLuaes,vv, Knt., who first assumed the This nobleman was one of the peee’e who sot in judgment arms of the aeselent house of Thweng, which arms the upon 31.aav Qneen of Sects, and Robert Deverenx, Earl of family have ever sines borne. This Sir Slarmadnke was o. Essex. His lordahipsa. twice; but dyieegiasneleas, 11 April, by his eldest son, ROBERT DR LUMLEY, who d sisem. 48th Enwran SIC., and parliament which restored hie lordahip to the dignity of a mhsor, was e. by hia brother, Sea RALPR DE LnssLzv, Knt., who was summoned to father), as did the barony of the new creation, it being parliament among the barons of the realm from 1364 to limited to hoirs male only, while the eatateo devolved by 1359. This nobleman was a deputy-governor of Berwiekaspen-Tweed, bie lordship’s will, and by deed of eettlcment, upon his under Henry de Percy, Earl of Northumberland, kinaman, in the 15th of Rscno.an II., and obtained royal permission, Sea Racuran LUMLEY, Knt., (refer to the Hon. Anthony in the 16th of the same reign, to convert his Lumley, 2nd eon of Richard, 5th Lord Lnmley), who was manor-house of Luneley into a castle. His lordship joining elevated to the peerage of Ireland, as Viaceanf Laceahey, ef subsequently, however, to the rebellion of Thomas de Wcslerfercl, 12 July, 1628. This nobleman, adhering faithfnhly Holland, Earl of Kent, was attainted, and died in the field of battle. He had Es. Eleanor, dan. of John, Lord Nevtt of a garrison, and being a principal cemmander nnder Prince Raby, and sister of Ralph, Earl of Weetmoreland, and left, Rnpert, marched with that general into the n-eat of Eng 985 SCA was successively master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, in the 6th of HENRY IV., had livery of all eastlee, manors, and laeeda, whereof Sir Ralph Lnmley, his father, was seised at the time of his attainder, and was restored in blood by parliament in 1411. This nobleman was actively engaged in the Free rhware of HeNRY IV., and in those of HENRY V. in the 10th year of whose reign he lost his life, witls Thomae, Duke of Clarence, at the battle of Beange, in Anjon, (13 April, 1421), and was s. by his only son, TnoMAa ne LUMLEY, who obtained from parliament, in 1461, a reversal of the attainder of his grandfather, and was summoned as a baron, from 1461 to 1497, in which latter year he iv supposed to have died. His lordship ice. llargaret, dan. of Sir James Harrhegton, and was s. by bis only eon, Sea Cooaoz, Lord Lumley, u-ho dees net appear to have been snmniened at any time to pcerhansent. Thisnebleman was sheriff of Northumberland, a powerful ece in these days, in the 2nd year of EDwARD IV. Die lordship eie. Elirabctb, dan. and heir of Roger Thornton, Esq. an opulent mercbant of Neweastle-upen-Tyne, with whose bastard eon, Gilee Thornton, he had eeebeeqnantiy proerested litigation, until at length he slew the said Giles at Windsor. His natural dim, of Enwaan IV., by Lady Elizabeth Lucy. Lord Lnmley ci. tn the 23rd year ef heNRY VII., ii. Anthony, who m. a dan. of Richard Gray, Eeq., eo. Northnmberlae,d, and left, Richard, who ne. Anne Knrtwioh, and bad, wIth other issue, Richard )Sir), of whom hereaIter,aaistVeaoouNr LUMLEY. His lordship ci. in 1510, aced was e. by his elder son, JOHN, Lord Lnmley, summoned to parliament in 1514. 22nd year of IIRNRY VIII., the memorable letter to Popo i CLEMENT VII., intimating that unless Isle holiness complied with the king’s wishes regarding his divorce from Queen QATOeRINE, that the papal supremacy would be much estlangered in England. But in the 28th of the same monarch, he was one ef she chief of those northern of Grace; he shared, however, the royal clemency. His lordahip see. Joan, dan. of Henry, Lord Seroep of Bolton, by Barbara, ne to Humphrey Lloyd, Eeq. of Denbegh. and her descendant, the Rsv. Ba. LLOYD, claimed, nnsneeesefnlly, the Barony of Lnmley in 1723. CSee BUEEE’e His lordship was a. by his grandson, and his heirs male shenid enjoy the dignity of a baron. 1i09, the ancient baro:ey of Lnnicy expire’i (the act of Lord Lnmley not having repealed the attainder of his to the king during the civil wars, made Lnmley Castle