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Baron Fauconberg (also Falconberg or Falconbridge) is an hereditary title created twice in the Peerage of England.. First created in 1295 when Sir Walter de Fauconberg, [1] an Anglo-Norman, was summoned to parliament.
Thomas Fauconberg, 5th Baron Fauconberg (20 July 1345 – 9 September 1407) was an English peer. Fauconberg was the eldest son of Walter Fauconberg, 4th Baron Fauconberg, and his wife, Maud. Circa 1376, Thomas joined the French in the Hundred Years' War and was imprisoned in Gloucester Castle , for treason , from 1378 to 1391.
William was one of a number of the Neville sons to make a good match, marrying the Fauconberg heiress, Joan de Fauconberg, 6th Baroness Fauconberg suo jure, daughter of Thomas de Fauconberg, 5th Baron Fauconberg by his second wife, Joan Brounflete (died 1409), and taking the title Lord Fauconberg; just as his nephew, Richard Neville, married ...
Coat of arms of Walter de Fauconberg, Lord of Fauconberg, Or, a fess Azure, three pales in chief Gules. Walter de Fauconberg, 1st Baron Fauconberg (died 1304), Lord of Rise, Withernwick and Skelton, was an English noble. He fought in the wars in Flanders and was a signatory of the Baron's Letter to Pope Boniface VIII in 1301.
Baron Fauconberg: 1627: Belasyse: extinct 1815: 1st Baron created Viscount Fauconberg in 1643. Baron FitzAlan: 1627: Beaumont, FitzAlan-Howard: extant: The Barony was united with the Earldom of Arundel by Act of Parliament in 1627 and is held by the Duke of Norfolk. [17] Baron Lovelace of Hurley: 1627: Lovelace: extinct 1736: Baron Mountjoy of ...
Constable of Hugh de Lacey, apparently later a baron John de Baalun ~1180–1235 Gloucestershire Apparently a minor English baron who served as Justice itinerant Guy de Balliol: 1222–1265 Scotland A knight who fought in the battle of Evesham on the rebel side. John de Bayeux ~1190–1249 Lincolnshire A nobleman, murderer, and justice itinerant
Thomas Belasyse, 1st Viscount Fauconberg (1577 – 18 April 1653), [1] styled Baron Fauconberg between 1627 and 1643 and Sir Thomas Belasyse, 2nd Baronet between 1624 and 1627, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1597 and 1624 and was raised to the peerage in 1627.
Viscount Fauconberg, of Henknowle in the Bishopric of Durham, was a title in the Peerage of England held by the head of the Belasyse family. This family descended from Sir Henry Belasyse, High Sheriff of Yorkshire from 1603 to 1604, who was created a Baronet , of Newborough in the County of York, in the Baronetage of England in 1611.