Lyonshall
Lyonshall | |
View of Lyonshall village from the south |
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Lyonshall |
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Population | 757 (2011)[1] |
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OS grid reference | SO3355 |
Unitary authority | Herefordshire |
Shire county | Herefordshire |
Ceremonial county | Herefordshire |
Region | West Midlands |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | KINGTON |
Postcode district | HR5 |
Dialling code | 01544 |
Police | West Mercia |
Fire | Hereford and Worcester |
Ambulance | West Midlands |
EU Parliament | West Midlands |
UK Parliament | North Herefordshire |
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Coordinates: 52°11′42″N 2°58′16″W / 52.195°N 2.971°W
Lyonshall (English pronunciation: /ˈlaɪənzhɔːl/) is a historic village and civil parish in Herefordshire, England. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 750 increasing to 757 at the 2011 Census.
Location
Lyonshall is a parish in the northwest corner of the county of Herefordshire, England. It is near to the border with Wales and has significant stretches of Offa's Dyke running through it. The northern boundary of the parish is marked by the River Arrow. Lyonshall Parish covers 5,000 acres (2,000 hectares) and is on the Black and White Village Trail. The population of 750 people live in 280 households spread across the parish and centred in the village. The town of Kington is 3 miles (4.8 km) to the west of Lyonshall.
History
Lyonshall was listed under the name Lenehalle the Domesday Book of 1086.[2] The entry reads:
'LYONSHALL. Walter holds from him . Thorkell held from Earl Harold . 5 hides which pay tax. In Lordship 2 ploughs; 3 villagers, 11 smallholders and 3 riding men with 5 ploughs. 5 slaves, male and female. From some men settled there 110d are given for as long as they wish . Value before 1066, 60s; now 50s.'
Lyonshall is listed as being in the land of Roger of Lacy in Elsdon Hundred. Other villages in the same Hundred were Hopley's Green, Woonton, Eardisley and Letton. Also making an appearance in Domesday Book are the adjacent parishes of Kington, Titley and Rushock, all described as non-tax paying waste lands. To the east of Lyonshall lies Pembridge, which, like Lyonshall, is described as a reasonable sized manor.
Lyonshall Castle is today a picturesque ruin in private ownership, with well-formed moat and outer enclosure covering approximately three acres. The building of the castle started in about 1090, when the Devereux family, sometimes referred to as d'Évreux or D'Ebroicis, held it as lords of the manor from Roger de Lacy. Lyonshall was important as one of the border manors of the Marcher lords. Its position, occupying a useful spot on the roads to and from Wales, attracted military interest, and it is clear that many of the castle occupants continued to lead lives of some national significance, often serving in the Royal Courts. Many of Lyonshall's lords have been eminent figures, both famous and infamous. In 1322, for example, the castle is mentioned as being part of the estates of Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere, who was described on his execution as 'a great Baron and as great a Rebel.' It seems that even after Magna Carta, some of the Marcher Lords continued to be troublesome to the king. Bartholomew's only son, Giles, died without issue and so Lyonshall became the property of his sister and co-heir Maud; women were often substantial landowners in the Middle Ages. She married John de Vere, 7th Earl of Oxford and one of the heroes of the Battle of Crecy in 1346.
In 1392, Lyonshall passed to Simon de Burley, a royal favourite. Introduced to court at a young age, he went to sea at the age of 14 to fight the Spanish, and he was a soldier until his capture by the French at Poitou in 1369. He was a court tutor, and his former pupil, Richard II, made him Governor of Windsor and Llanstephan, Master of Falconry and Keeper of the Royal Mews; he also received a great number of manors and estates in reward for his service. However, he was charged with treason by the Duke of Gloucester and although the king and queen personally knelt to beg for his pardon, he was executed on 15 May 1388.
Lords of Lyonshall Castle
Tenure | Incumbent | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
1066 to 1096 | Roger de Lacy (Marcher Lord) | Granted manor after Hastings and began construction of the castle in the 1090s. Forfeited after exiled for rebellion | |
1096 to after 1110 | William Devereux | ||
after 1110 to c1130 | Walter Devereux of Lyonshall | ||
c1130 to after 1166 | Walter Devereux | ||
after 1166 to 1187 | John Devereux | ||
1187 to 1197 | Walter Devereux | The sheriff of Herefordshire held castle from 1187 to 1194 while he was under age | |
1197 to 1227/8 | Stephen Devereux (Marcher Lord) | The sheriff of Herefordshire held the castle from 1197 to 1209 while he was under age | |
1227/8 to 1265 | William Devereux (Marcher Lord) | William died at the Battle of Evesham, and was attainted[3] | |
1265 to 1275 | Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer, | Under the Dictum of Kenilworth, Roger sold Lyonshall back to the son of William Devereux (died 1265) who was also named William.[4] | |
1275 to 1300 | William Devereux, Baron Devereux (of Lyonshall) | Due to the expense of participating on an expedition to Gascony in 1295 for Edward I, William granted Lyonshall for life to Roger de la Warre in exchange for an annual payment[5] | |
1300 | Roger de la Warre | Roger granted Lyonshall for life to Walter de Langton | |
1300 | Walter de Langton, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield | Walter enfoeffed William Touchet | |
1300 to 1305 | William Touchet | Stephen Devereux (grandson of Baron William Devereux above through his son, Walter Devereux of Bodenham) seized Lyonshall by force driving Touchet out. | |
1305 to 1310 | Stephen Devereux of Bodenham and Burghope | Stephen's petition to the King was denied as his grandfather, Baron William Devereux, was still alive. Lyonshall was taken back by the King and granted to Bartholomew de Badlesmere. Walter de Langton had fallen out of favour, and was imprisoned. | |
1310 to 1312 | Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere | in 1312 Bartholomew enfoeffed William Touchet once more. | |
1312 to 1322 | William Touchet | Touchet and Badlesmere both suffered attainder and death, and Lyonshall returned to the crown. | |
1322 to 1326 | Crown hands | On 18 February 1322 the king appointed Stephen Dunheved to take Lyonshall into the king's hand, and on 12 July of the same year it was committed to the care of Richard Waywayn.[6] On 20 March 1326 Edward II granted Lyonshall to John de Felton. William Devereux of Frome, another grandson of Baron William Devereux above, seizes by force.[7] | |
1326 to 1331 | William Devereux of Frome | Edward II directs the escheator on this side of Trent to take Lyonshall back into the king's hand, and inquire as to the proper owner. As Touchet had no heir of his body, it was awarded to Giles de Badlesmere.[8] The king compensated John de Felton in 1327, and denied William Devereux’s claim.[9] William Devereux finally releases the castle to Giles de Badlesmere in 1331 (after reversal of Bartholomew de Badlesmere's attainder in 1328). | |
1331 to 1338 | Giles de Badlesmere, 2nd Baron Badlesmere. | On Gile's death, the castle went to his sister, Maud, who had married John de Vere, 7th Earl of Oxford.[10] | |
1338 to 1366 | Maud de Vere, Baroness of Oxford | William Devereux sues John de Vere in 1340 to reclaim Lyonshall, and again fails.[11] | |
1366 to 1371 | Thomas de Vere, 8th Earl of Oxford, | On 1 April 1373 John de Burley was granted wardship of Lyonshall after the death of Thomas de Vere during the minority of his heir.[12] | |
1371 to c1381 | Robert de Vere, 9th Earl of Oxford | de Vere transfers Lyonshall in fee simple to Simon de Burley. Robert de Vere attainted and exiled in 1388. | |
c1381 to 1384 | Simon de Burley | In 1382 de Burley agrees that if he dies without male issue, Lyonshall should go to John Devereux, 1st Baron Devereux, in fee. John Devereux is a direct descendant of Baron William Devereux through his son, Walter Devereux of Bodenham. In 1384 de Burley grants the castle to John Devereux with interests to John's cousin, another Walter Devereux of Bodenham (1 fee), and Kennard de la Bere, John Clanvowe, and Roger Berden among others. The third surviving male line of Baron William Devereux, Thomas Devereux of Wotton (of the Devereux family of Frome), were also granted an interest. De Burley was attainted and died 18 May 1388. (Membrane 43, 9 Dec at Westminster,14 Richard II) | |
1384 to 1392/3 | John Devereux, 1st Baron Devereux (of Whitechurch Maund) | Walter Devereux of Bodenham and Weobley, Herefordshire holding 1 fee. Thomas Devereux of Wotton, Herefordshire (of the Devereux family of Frome) holds an interest. | |
1392/3 to 1396 | John Devereux II, 2nd Baron Devereux | On the 2nd Baron's death, his sister Joan Devereux retained control of Lyonshall. Walter Devereux of Bodenham and Weobley, and Thomas Devereux of Wotton retain their interests. | |
c1396 to 1409 | Joan Fitzwalter, 3rd Baroness Devereux and Baroness FitzWalter | Joan holds Lyonshall on behalf of her sons, Humphrey and Walter FitzWalter. After the death of her husband, Baron Walter FitzWalter, she conveys Lyonshall in 1407 to 'Sir William Bourchier and others' in trust for self and sons. Walter Devereux of Bodenham and Weobley holds 1 fee until his death in 1403, and then his widow, Agnes (Crophull) Devereux holds it as part of her dower and conveys it to John Merbury when they marry after her second husband, John Parr, dies. Thomas Devereux of Wotton continues to hold his interest. On the death of Joan (Devereux) Fitzwalter in 1409, Lyonshall passes to the control of John Merbury by right of the dower of his wife Agnes (Crophul Devereux Parr). | |
1409 to 1436 | John Merbury, High Sheriff of Herefordshire | John Merbury is indicated in 1428 as holding the one share of Lyonshall previously held by the Lord Fitzwalter. In 1429, Thomas Devereux of Wotton deeds away his interests and that of his heirs, the grandchildren of his brother Sir John Devereux of the Hill (of the Devereux family of Frome).[lower-alpha 1] With his death between 1429 and 1436 the male line of the Devereux family of Frome failed. Upon Agnes (Crophul Devereux Parr) Merbury's death on 9 February 1436, Lyonshall passed to her heir and grandson, another Walter Devereux of Bodenham and Weobley who had married Elizabeth, daughter of John Merbury by a previous marriage. [lower-alpha 2] | |
1436 to 1459 | Walter Devereux | ||
1459 to 1485 | Walter Devereux, 7th Baron Ferrers of Chartley | Lyonshall Castle has fallen into ruins, and is no longer a residence. | |
Community
The parish has the church of St Michael & All Angels, a pub (The Royal George), a post office and the Lyonshall Memorial Hall. The Parish Council is well supported and achieves improvements around the parish and voices opinions of parishioners to the Herefordshire Council.
In the 19th century, from about 1870 to sometime in the 1890s, the Vicar of Lyonshall was Charles Madison Green, whose wife, Ella, was the eldest sister of author H. Rider Haggard, famous for King Solomon's Mines and She.
Commerce
Lyonshall parish has a largely agricultural economy. It hosts six substantial poultry farms, produces blackcurrants, potatoes and livestock as well as the normal arable crops.
The major businesses are Burgoynes of Lyonshall – which owns farms, hires marquees and runs a fleet of lorries – and Lynhales Nursing Home which employs almost 100 people in caring for around 50 elderly residents in a historic manor house.
As well as the larger businesses there is a myriad of smaller, often one-person enterprises spread across the parish. The pub, The Royal George, is in the centre of the village and is a black and white building dating from 1600. It was originally named The George, but was renamed after the naval disaster of 1782 when the flagship The Royal George sank at Spithead with the loss of 900 lives. There is a company, The Four-Poster Bed Coy, producing hand-made beds and other furniture specialising in the use of sustainable local oak. Mayglothlings Waste Ltd is based in the parish and has a fleet of tankers seen around the West Midlands, as well as Mercia Drain Ltd that is in the same line of business.
In popular culture
Sue Gee's 2004 novel The Mysteries of Glass concerns a curate working in the parish of St. Michael and All Angels in Lyonshall in 1860/1.[18]
Gallery
- The Whittern
- Lyonshall Church
- At one time Lyonshall had a Great Western Railway station
References
- ↑ "Civil Parish population 2011". Retrieved 1 November 2015.
- ↑ "Lyonshall". Domesday Book. The National Archives. 1086. Retrieved 15 March 2008.
- ↑ , Calendar of Close Rolls, Supplementary, 1244–1266. Ann Morton (editor). 1975. Pages 34–50, entry 455 (1265–6).
- ↑ , Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward I, Volume 1. H.C. Maxwell Lyte (editor). 1900. 3 February 1275, Caversham
- ↑ The National Archives, accessed April 5 2013, William Devereux Petition Regarding Lyonshall SC8/329/E930
- ↑ , Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Edward II, Volume 3, 1319–1327. London: Wyman and Sons. 1912. Pages 95, 144, and 174.
- ↑ , Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Edward II, Volume 3, 1319–1327. London: Wyman and Sons. 1912. Pages 382.
- ↑ Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Edward III, Volume 4, 1327–1337. London: Wyman and Sons. 1913. Page 35
- ↑ The National Archives, accessed April 5 2013, William Devereux Petition Regarding Lyonshall SC8/43/2102
- ↑ , Calendar of Fine Rolls, Edward III, Volume 5, 1337–1347. London: Wyman and sons. 1915. Page 103
- ↑ George Wrottesley. Pedigrees from the plea rolls. (Great Britain, 1905). Page 5, De Banco, Michaelmas, 14 Edward III, membrane 591
- ↑ , Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Edward III, Volume 8, 1356–1368. London: Wyman and Sons. 1923. Page 209 and 216
- ↑ J. Duncumb et al. Collections Towards the History and Antiquities of the County of Hereford in continuation of Duncumb’s History. (High Town [England: Jakeman & Carver, 1897). Page 42 to 49 (includes Devereux Genealogy submitted by Lord Hereford)
- ↑ G.E.C. Complete Baronetage. (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1984 [first published in England in 1916]). Volume IV, pages 296 to 306
- ↑ Brock Holden. Lords of the Central Marches: English Aristocracy and Frontier Society. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008). Pages 94 to 108
- ↑ Charles J. Robinson. A History of the Castles of Herefordshire and Their Lords. (Logaston [England]: Logaston Press, 2002 [first published in 1869]). Pages 124 to 129
- ↑ Sir Bernard Burke. A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1978). page 169
- ↑ KINGTON LIBRARY HOSTED BOOK LAUNCH Retrieved 2 June 2015.
Notes
- ↑ Thomas Deveros otherwise Devereus of Wotton co. Herforde esquire, brother of John Deveros otherwise Devereus knight, father of Margaret Cheyne mother of Joan wife of Henry Chadirton and of Katherine wife of Richard Wynnesley and grandmother of Humphrey Stafforde son and heir of Elizabeth Stafforde sister of the said Joan and Katherine who are cousins and heirs of the said Thomas, to Humphrey duke of Gloucestre, Henry earl of Northumberland, Humphrey earl of Stafforde, Lewis Robbyssart lord Bourghchier, Reynold West, Maurice Bruyn, Edward Benstede knights, John Merbury, Richard Baynarde, Robert Darcy, John Terell, John Russell, Lewis John, Richard Fox, Robert Molyngton esquires, Richard Durivalle chaplain and William Fawkeswelle, their heirs and assigned. Quitclaim with warranty of the castle, manor and lordship of Leonhales otherwise Lenhales co. Hereford, and of all other lands, rents, reversions and services therein. Witnesses: John Brugge, Thomas Bromwyche the elder esquires, John Monyngton, Hugh Monyngton, Thomas Brugge of Ley. Dated Webbeley, 3 July 4HenryVI. Memorandum of acknowledgement at Webbeley co. Herforde 11 April this year before the prior of Wormesley, by virtue of a dedimus potestatem which is on the chancery file for this year.
- ↑ 10 April 1436. Inquest taken at Kyrkeby Kendale for Agnes, who was the wife of John Parr, Esquire, deceased. Agnes died 9 February 1436. Walter Deverous is her kinsman and next heir, viz. son of Walter Deverous, knight, son of the same Agnes, aged 24 years.
External links
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