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  1. Hace 3 días · By the time Roger IV came into his inheritance, he was, then, what one might call an earl in the second division. With his marriage and the death of his own mother, Roger IV was able to add significantly to his lands and wealth and he consequently became one of the greatest English magnates.

  2. Hace 4 días · It remained in the Crown till King Stephen granted it to Hugh Bigod, on his being created Earl of Norfolk. Roger Bigod his son, being Earl, enfeoffed Sir Ralph Bigod , his brother, of this town, and of Stockton , and was lord of both in the 24th of Henry III. and dying s. p .

  3. Hace 5 días · Hugh Bigod Earl of Norfolk, granted to Hervy the land which Roger de Constantine held of the lay-fee, and the land which Helias his mace-bearer held in Hethill, by the service of being his wheelwright; witnesses were Henry Bigot his brother, Roger his bastard son, and Hugh his son, William de Nevile his constable, Sulim his sewer, &c.

  4. Hace 4 días · Roger Bigod succeeded his father Hugh, and was constituted Steward of the Household, and Earl of Norfolk, by King Richard I. in the first year of his reign; he confirmed all the gifts made to the monastery by any of his predecessors, and sealed with this seal his whole life, never bearing a lion rampant for his arms, as some imagine; he died, according to Mr. Weaver, in 1218, but as Mr ...

  5. Hace 3 días · On 30 April 1258 a group of barons, led by Roger Bigod, the earl of Norfolk and hereditary marshal, marched to the hall of the royal palace at Westminster and induced the king to initiate a programme of reform.

  6. Hace 5 días · The originalia version of the orders for the seizure of the lands of earls Richard Marshal of Pembroke and Roger Bigod of Norfolk in August 1233, for example, omits the lengthy prologues in which the government outlined the extent of their rebellion, the refusal to obey the king’s summons and the seizure of two marcher castles: E ...

  7. Hace 1 día · Bigod argued that the military obligation only extended to service alongside the King; if the King intended to sail to Flanders, he could not send his subjects to Gascony. In July, Bigod and Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford and Constable of England , drew up a series of complaints known as the Remonstrances , in which objections to the extortionate level of taxation were voiced. [271]