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  1. Philip Basset (c. 1185 – 19 October 1271) was the Justiciar of England. Philip was the son of Alan Basset of High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire . [4] His elder brothers were Gilbert , a baronial leader, and Fulk , who became bishop of London .

    • Aline Basset, Margery Basset
    • Henry III
  2. Philip Basset (c. 1185 – 19 October 1271) was the Justiciar of England. Philip was the son of Alan Basset of High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire and his wife, Alice, the daughter of Stephen Gray. He inherited the manor of Wycombe; the town received market borough status in 1237.

    • Wycombe Marsh, England
    • 1184
    • "Basset"
  3. As early as 1248 she had entered into a relationship with Philip Basset, a leading justice and lord of the barony of High Wycombe who that year was involved in her business interests in Warwickshire. They married in or around 1254 when Philip obtained a papal dispensation because the pair were related in the third degree.

  4. Philip Basset (c. 1185 - 19 October 1271) was the Justiciar of England. Philip was the son of Alan Basset of High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire and his wife, Aline de Gai (Gay). His elder brothers were Gilbert, a baronial leader, and Fulk, who became bishop of London. [4] He inherited the manor of Wycombe; the town received market borough status ...

  5. But in 1270 Basset himself, if we take the coram rege clerk's "in these words" literally, seems to have been ready to confirm that he heard the case not, for example, as a justice commis- sioned ad hoc , but in the court coram rege as its presiding judge. The. 1270 coram rege clerk continued his entry with the heading.

  6. When Philip Basset Justiciar of England was born in 1184, in Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, his father, Alan Basset of Wycombe, was 29 and his mother, Aline de Gai, was 22. He married Hawise de Louvaine in 1236, in Essex, England. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter. In 1261, his occupation is listed as chief justice of england in ...

  7. Hace 4 días · Stephen of Oxcroft forfeited the fee when he was hanged in 1234; it was granted first to William of Fordham and later to Philip Basset (d. 1271). Philip's heir was his daughter Aline, wife of Roger Bigod, earl of Norfolk, but in 1280 his widow Ela, dowager countess of Warwick, held Oxcroft.