Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 2 Vol 2.djvu/627

 I23I. Apr. 6 1234- Apr. 16. 1241. June 27 1245- Dec. 5- 1246. 1270. July 4 1307. Sep. 3 I307/8. Mar. 12 13 16. Feb. 10. 1338. 1344- 1369. 1375 or Sep. 20. Feb. 10. 1376. 1377- 1380. Mar. 13. APPENDIX D 611 Richard (Marshal), Earl of Pembroke, brother Gilbert (Marshal), Earl of Pembroke, brother Walter (Marshal), Earl of Pembroke, brother, d. 24 Nov. I245(-^) Maud, Countess of Norfolk C') Roger (Bigod), Earl of Norfolk as Deputy ;("=) in his own right 1248 Roger (Bigod), Earl of Norfolk, d. 11 Dec. 1306 Robert de Clifford [Lord Clifford], during pleasure Nicholas de Segrave [Lord Segrave], during pleasure Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, in tail male William (de Montagu), Earl of Salisbury, for life Thomas (de Beauchamp), Earl of Warwick, during pleasure Edmund (de Mortimer), Earl of March, till 1372 Henry, Lord Percy. He was sum. to Pari, i Dec. (1376) 50 Edw. Ill, by writ directed Henrico de Percy Mareschallo Angli^^ and acted as Mar- shal at the Coronation 16 July 1377, when he was cr. Earl of Northumberland John (d' Arundel), Lord Arundel, d. 15 Dec. 1379 Thomas (de Holand), Earl of Kent (') His brother Anselm survived him for less than a month, and was never invested with the Earldom. C') The King notifies, 22 July 1246, to the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer that he has restored [reddidit) the rod of the King's Marshalsea to M[aud] Countess Warrenne the eldest heir [que habet esneciam hereditatis) of Walter Marshal, late Earl of Pembroke, and they are to allov? her all rights thereto belonging. Close Roll, 30 Hen. Ill, m. 7 [ex inform. J. H. Round). ("=) Writ to the Barons of the Exchequer, directing them to cause Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, to have " that which pertains to the rod of the Marshalsea," and to admit [as Marshal of the Exchequer] "him whom he will appoint in his own room;" as Maud, Countess of Warenne and Norfolk, who has the esnecia of the heirs of Walter Marshal Earl of Pembroke, and to whom for that reason the King committed the rod, has with the King's licence committed the same to the said Roger her son and heir, and the King has taken his homage. (Exchequer Memoranda Roll, King's Remembrancer, Michaelmas 31 Henry III; ex inform. W. H. B. Bird). J. H. Round points out that this, with the entry in the previous note, were among the documents printed in the Lord Great Chamberlain case, in which special reliance was placed upon them as proving the right of Lord Ancaster, the eldest coheir to the office.