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The male line of the Nevilles was of native origin, and the family may well have been part of the pre-Conquest aristocracy of Northumbria. [1] Following the Norman Conquest, most of the existing Anglo-Saxon aristocracy of England were dispossessed and replaced by a new Norman ruling elite, and although such survivals are very rare, continued landholding by native families was more common in ...
William Nevill, 1st Marquess of Abergavenny KG MVO JP (16 September 1826 – 12 December 1915), styled Viscount Neville between 1845 and 1868 and known as The Earl of Abergavenny between 1868 and 1876, was a British peer.
Arms of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, KG. The Percys had lands throughout northern England, while the northern lands of the Nevilles were concentrated in north Yorkshire and in County Durham. As Warden of the West March, Salisbury was in a position to exert great power in the northwest, in spite of holding only Kendal and Penrith. The ...
Baron Neville of Raby (1st creation by writ), 1295: Ralph Neville 1262–c. 1331 3rd/1st Baron Neville de Raby: King Edward III 1312–1377: Ralph Neville c. 1291 –1367 4th/2nd Baron Neville de Raby: John of Gaunt 1312–1377 Duke of Lancaster: John Neville 5th/3rd Baron Neville de Raby c. 1337 –1388: Alexander Neville c. 1340 –1392 ...
G. Geoffrey de Neville (died 1285) George Nevill, 1st Earl of Abergavenny; George Nevill, 4th Baron Bergavenny; George Nevill, 5th Baron Bergavenny; George Nevill, 11th Baron Bergavenny
Margaret de Longvillers (also spelt Lungvilliers) was born in Farnley, Yorkshire, either in or prior to 1252. [1] She was the daughter and heir of John de Lungvilliers and inherited land in Hornby as well as other property in Lancashire, the West Riding of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, [2] upon his death in 1255. [3]
After his second wife's death on 15 July 1927 he married his first cousin, Mary Frances Nevill, daughter of the Honourable Ralph Pelham Neville and widow of Henry Hardinge, 3rd Viscount Hardinge, on 18 October 1928. [2] This marriage produced no children. Lord Abergavenny died after falling from a horse during a fox hunt. [5]
Ralph Neville was born about 1364, the son of John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville by his wife Maud Percy (d. 1379), a daughter of Henry de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy of Alnwick, Northumberland, by his wife Idoine de Clifford, a daughter of Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford. [1]