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  1. Hace 5 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 3 días · Philip married his surviving daughter and heir Aline first c. 1260 to Hugh Despenser (killed 1265), next to Roger Bigod, earl of Norfolk. Bigod succeeded to that Soham estate, including 70 a. held of other manors there, when Philip died in 1271.

  3. Hace 4 días · Roger held also, on the deprivation of Alward, 2 socmen with 12 acres of land and 3 borderers who had half a carucate of ploughed land, which was valued in Felbrigg. In the 9th of Edward I. Roger Bigod (a younger branch of the Earls of Norfolk,) had a lordship here, and a grant of free warren.

  4. Hace 3 días · An elaborate charter of confirmation by Henry III in 1235 marks a great variety of other benefactions chiefly of small plots of land, made since the foundation, including the church of St. Mary Roughton, by Roger de Glanville, and the mill of Wainford by Roger Bigod, earl of Norfolk.

  5. Hace 3 días · She married, secondly, Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, against whom Elaine, wife of Philip Basset, brought a suit for the dower which she ought to have enjoyed in Woking Manor. Aliva's death, which occurred in 1281, was the signal for a dispute over her estates.

  6. Hace 3 días · 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]

  7. Hace 5 días · This plan faced opposition from the most important noblemenRoger Bigod, marshal and earl of Norfolk, and Humphrey Bohun, constable and earl of Hereford. Norfolk and Hereford argued that they owed the king military service in foreign lands but only if the king were present.