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  1. Hace 4 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 2 días · (g) Sir Roger de Felbrigg, alias Bigod, was lord in the 25th of Edward III. and had a mercate and fair here; in the 28th of that King, he is said to have been prisoner in the wars of France; was living in the 41st of the aforesaid King, and sealed with a lion salient, died at Paris in France, and was there buried.

  3. 26 de may. de 2024 · It wasn‘t until 1213 that Framlingham Castle rose from the ashes, rebuilt by Hugh‘s son, Roger Bigod. The new castle was an impressive feat of medieval engineering, boasting 13 towering walls and sturdy stone walls that would stand the test of time.

  4. Hace 5 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 .

  5. 22 de may. de 2024 · The house was at that time in the king's custody by reason of the lands of Roger Bigod, late earl of Norfolk, being in his hands. John Barnham, by his will of 1465, was buried in the priory church of Weybridge; he appointed his wife Katharine and Prior Robert Norwich as his executors.

  6. 28 de may. de 2024 · 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.

  7. Hace 5 días · On 30 April, Roger Bigod marched into Westminster in the middle of the King's parliament, backed by his co-conspirators, and carried out a coup d'état. Henry, fearful that he was about to be arrested and imprisoned, agreed to abandon his policy of personal rule and instead govern through a council of 24 barons and churchmen, half chosen by the King and half by the barons. [269]