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  1. Career. Neville was knighted sometime after 1426. [4] In 1438, Bergavenny, as he was now styled, was a justice of the peace for Durham. [4] He was a captain in the embattled Duchy of Normandy in 1449. [4] . His eldest son Richard was one of the hostages given to the French when the English surrendered the city of Rouen in that year.

    • Edward Neville

      Edward Neville. Edward Neville or Nevill may refer to: Sir...

  2. Edward Neville. Edward Neville or Nevill may refer to: Sir Edward Neville (courtier) (1471–1538), English courtier. Edward Neville (pirate) (fl. 1675–1678), English buccaneer. Edward Neville, 3rd Baron Bergavenny (bef. 1414–1476)

    • Origins
    • Rise to Power
    • Earls of Westmorland
    • Wars of The Roses
    • Later History
    • Members in The Male Line
    • Coats of Arms
    • External Links

    The great Neville family traces its origins to Geoffrey "de Neville" (d.circa 1242), the son of Robert FitzMaldred and Isabel de Neville, who adopted the family name of his mother.

    The family's wealth and power grew steadily over the following centuries. Their regional power benefited greatly from frequent appointment to such royal offices as sheriff, castellan, justice of the forest, and justice of the peace in various parts of northern England. This prominent office-holding began with Geoffrey de Neville's son Robert, in th...

    The Nevilles' emergence into the highest echelon of the aristocracy received formal recognition in 1397, when the Lord of Raby Ralph Neville was created Earl of Westmorland by Richard II. By this time the Nevilles' power in the north was matched only by the Percy Earls of Northumberland, with whom they developed an acrimonious rivalry. These compet...

    Yorkist champions

    Salisbury and Warwick became the most important supporters of Richard, Duke of York during the early stages of the Wars of the Roses. They probably hoped that a Yorkist seizure of power would bring a favourable resolution of major inheritance disputes involving Warwick, and of a sporadically violent struggle for preeminence in the north between Salisbury and the Percys. They were also connected to York by marriage, as he had married Salisbury's sister Cecily; their children included the futur...

    Disaffection and defection

    Warwick, now the richest man in England after the king, was the power behind the throne in Edward's regime during its early years, but the two men later fell out. Their estrangement was due in large part to the king's secret marriage in 1464 to Elizabeth Woodville. This humiliated Warwick, who had negotiated an agreement with Louis XI of Francefor Edward to marry the French king's sister-in-law. Relations were further aggravated by the subsequent influence of the Woodvilles, who successfully...

    Aftermath

    Warwick and Montagu were never formally attainted, which would have meant the forfeiture of their property. Nonetheless, the victorious Yorkists did not allow the process of inheritance to follow its normal legal course. Montagu's estates should have passed to his son George Neville, Duke of Bedford, along with the considerable portion of Warwick's inherited possessions which had been entailed to heirs male, giving Bedford precedence over Warwick's daughters. However, in practice Bedford was...

    The regional power of the northern magnates, already severely weakened by the losses suffered in the Wars of the Roses, was further diminished by the growing power of central government in the 16th century. In 1569 the Nevilles and Percys buried their traditional rivalry to undertake the Revolt of the Northern Earls, an attempt to overthrow Elizabe...

    John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby 1. 1. Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, c.1364–1425 1.1. A. John Neville, Lord Neville c.1387–1420 1.1.1. I. Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland c.1406–1484 1.1.2. II. John Neville, Baron Neville c.1410–1461 1.1.2.1. a. Ralph Neville, 3rd Earl of Westmorland 1.1.2.1.1. i. Ralph Neville, Lord Neville ...

    see Category:Neville arms 1. Neville arms on old-style shield 2. Neville, Earls of Westmorland, and Barons Neville of Raby 3. Neville, Barons of Raby 4. Neville, Earls of Westmorland 5. Sir John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby, KG 6. Sir Ralph Neville, 4th Baron Neville de Raby, KG 7. Sir Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, KG 8. Arms of Ric...

  3. She was therefore the great-granddaughter of granddaughter of Edward III. She inherited her father's estates upon his death in 1422, and succeeded to the title of Lady Bergavenny [E., 1392] on 18 March 1422, suo jure. She became the first wife of Edward Neville, 3rd Baron Bergavenny (d. 1476) before 18 October 1424.

  4. Edward Neville (vers 1414 – 18 octobre 1476), 3 e baron Bergavenny, est un aristocrate anglais.

  5. Edward and his heirs inherited the dignity, but little else, until 1512, when his grandson, George Neville, 3rd Baron Bergavenny, was granted the castle and lordship by King Henry VIII. [2] Captain in Normandy, 1449 [5]

  6. In 1450, Sir Edward Nevill, widower of the 3rd Baroness, was summoned to Parliament as Lord Bergavenny. It has been assumed that this summons was intended to be in the right of his wife, but as she was already dead and the Barony was already vested in her son by Nevill, by modern doctrine this served to create a new Barony by writ.