Godfrey de Foljambe
Sir Godfrey de Foljambe (born 1317-died 29 May 1376,
He was born in Tideswell, Derbyshire in 1317, the fourth son of Sir Thomas de Foljambe (ca. 1282 - ca. 1326) and Alice Foljambe.[3] The Foljambe family were Lords of the Manor of Tideswell and also held lands at Darley Dale. Godfrey succeeded to the family estates after the death of his three elder brothers, Thomas de Foljambe (born ca. 1300), Lord John de Foljambe (born ca. 1300, died 4 August 1358), and Hugh de Foljambe (born ca. 1310). He also acquired the manor of Bakewell, where he founded a chantry.[3]
He sat in the
On his return to England, he sat regularly on commissions for the peace in Derbyshire and Lancashire.[3] He enjoyed the trust and confidence of John of Gaunt, for whom he acted in numerous administrative capacities, including steward for the Duchy of Lancaster. In his later years, he drew an annuity of £40 in addition to his salary from Gaunt.[4] For a number of years he held a lease on a substantial part of Newcastle-under-Lyme for which he paid £127 p.a. to John of Gaunt. He died 29 May 1376, Bakewell, Derbyshire.[5]
He married (possibly his second marriage, though little is known of the first), Avena Ireland (1320-13 December 1382), a daughter of Sir Thomas Ireland of Hartshorne in Derbyshire, by whom he had several sons, including Godfrey Foljambe (born ca. 1344 died 29 May 1376, Darley, Derbyshire), Geoffrey Foljambe the younger (died 1375), Richard Foljambe (born ca. 1348, Hassop, Derbyshire) and Thomas Foljambe (born ca. 1355, Walton, Derbyshire died 1433, Tideswell, Derbyshire), who inherited the family estates after the premature death of his young nephew.[6] He also had at least one daughter Margery, who married firstly Richard Baskerville of Eardisley, Herefordshire, and secondly Nicholas de Montgomery. Among his descendants were Sir Francis Foljambe (died 1640), the first and last of the Foljambe baronets, and the Earls of Liverpool, second creation.[7]
The mural alabaster monument to Godfrey and Avena is said to be of a very rare kind, with only two examples surviving to the present day. The Foljambe mural shows Foljambe and his wife as if they are looking out of a window and this can still be seen on the south wall of All Saints Church in Bakewell.[8] Below the mural is an explanatory inscription that dates from 1803 and was "added by Mr Blore".[9]
References
- ISBN 0198201745.
- ^ Cox, John Charles Memorials of Old Derbyshire Bemrose and Sons 1907
- ^ a b c d e Ball. F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.1 p.78
- ^ Walker, S. (1990). The Lancastrian Affinity, p. 269.
- ^ 'Newcastle-under-Lyme: Buildings and castle', A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 8 (1963), pp. 8–15. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53355 Date accessed: 31 August 2013
- ^ Roskell et al (Ed). "FOLJAMBE, Thomas (d.1433), of Walton and Brimington, Derbys". History of Parliament. Inst. Of Historical Research. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ^ Mosley, ed. Burke's Peerage 107th Edition Delaware 2003 Vol. 2 p. 2368
- ISBN 0521166209.
- ^ 'Parishes: Bakewell', Magna Britannia: volume 5: Derbyshire (1817), pp. 23–43. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=50721 Date accessed: 30 August 2013