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 BARDOLF COMPLETE PEERAGE 417 BARDOLF OR BARDOLF OF WIRMEGAY OR WORMEGAYO William Bardolf, s. of William B., (') (who d. i2j^) of Worme- gay, Norfolk, and Shelford, Notts, &c., was sum. to attend the King at Shrewsbury 28 June (1283) 11 Edw. I, (") by writ directed fVillelmo Bardolf. He m. Julian, da. and h. of Hugh de Gournay, of Mapledur- ham, Oxon. He d. i Dec. 1289. His widow d. in 1295. BARONY I . Hugh Bardolf, ('') of Wormegay, and Shelford, afsd., BY WRIT. s. and h., b. about 29 Sep. 1259. He had seizin of his J mother's lands 29 Nov. 1295. He took an active part in ""■ the French and Scottish wars, and was among the retainers of Henry (de Lacy), Earl of Lincoln, at Carlaverock. He was knighted. In addition to the irregular sum. of 8 June 1294, which would not serve to cr. a Barony, C) he was sum. to Pari, from 6 Feb. (1298/9) 27 Edw. I, to 2 June (1302) 30 Edw. I, by writs directed Hugoni Bardolf, whereby he may be held to have become LORD BARDOLF. (') He m., before 1282, Isabel, da. and (15 Feb. 1285/6) sole h. of Sir Robert Aguillon, of Addington, (^) Surrey, Watton at Stone, Herts., fffc, by his ist wife, Joan, one of the seven daughters (and coheirs of the ist wife) of William (de Ferrers), Earl of Derby. He d. Sep. 1304. His widow, who was (") See Stapleton's preface to Liber de Antiquis Legibus, Camden Soc, 1846. (*") This William was s. and h. of Doun B., by Beatrice, da. and h. of William de Warenne, of Wormegay afsd., which Doun or Dodo B. was s. and h. of Thomas B., by Rose, da. of Ralph Hauselyn. V.G. C") As to this supposed Pari, see Preface. () The Bardolfs of Wormegay bore arms of Azure three cinquefoils gold. The stall-plate of Sir William Phelipp, knight of the Garter, shows his shield of Quarterly gules and silver with an eagle gold in the quarter, {ex inform. Oswald Barron.) V.G. () There is proof in the Rolls of Pari, of his sitting, before the record of Writs of Summons began : if the Lords had to adjudicate on the question and were to follow the precedent set in 1841 as to the Barony of Hastings, the date of such sitting and not that of the first writ, 1298/9, would determine the precedency of this Barony. As to the summons of 1294, see Preface. V.G. (') As to how far these early writs of summons did in fact create any peerage title, see Appendix A in the last volume. V.G. (^ He held a manor, afterwards called Bardolfs manor, in the parish of Addington, by Grand Serjeantry, by the service of making a mess called " gerout " for the King's table. The manor had been held at the time of Domesday by Tezelin, the King's Cook, which accounts for the origin of a culinary service. This service was performed for George III by Mr. Spencer, Lord of the manor of Addington (both manors being then united), but in 1807 the property was sold to the See of Canter- bury. See Taylor's Glory of Regality, 1820, p. 147, and Stapleton's Liber de Antiquis Legibus, p. Ixxxviii, note *. 54