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The de Verdun, Verdon and Vardon
families of England & Normandy
The coat of arms above comes from the bookplate of John Vardon, William Vardon of Goldstone's younger brother, who died in 1869. These arms have a mark of cadency in the form of a crescent moon, which usually indicates descent from a 2nd son - this makes sense as William's brother John was their father's second surviving son. But there was a more senior branch of the family, who were well known to the Vardons of Goldstone, so perhaps the crescent signified this, despite the fact that when John and William Vardon's father John had a memorial erected to his memory and that of other members of the family (see home page), the crescent mark was not used. When William Vardon's memorials were erected in three churches with his coats of arms, they all featured the crescent mark of cadency (all displayed on the home page) - this seems to support the view that the Vardons of Goldstone were heraldically recognising their place as a cadet family, rather than the senior line. Whatever the case may be, the family were not consistent in use of the crescent when having their coat of arms displayed or carved, so we shall probably never entirely resolve this particular heraldic question.
The motto 'Coeli sub rore virescens' means 'prosper(ing) under the dews of heaven'. William Vardon and his sucessors at Goldstone used the motto 'Levius Fit Patientia' which can be translated as either 'It becomes Lighter with Endurance' or ‘‘It is rendered lighter by patience’.
The actual colour of the shield is shown in the shield below, without the crescent mark of cadency:-
The shield on the coat of arms is described heraldically as: Or, fretty gules.
As a matter of interest, the de Verdun family who remained in Normandy after 1066 and reside in the area of Crenne and Vessey to this day share the same basic design in coat of arms with some small differences. The senior line (de Verdun de la Crenne), which includes the family of the Comte de Verdun has d'or fretté de sable and in the case of the elder branch of this family, represented by the Marquis de Verdun has d'argent fretté de sable.
BELOW – the shield from the coat of arms of the de Verduns of the de la Crenne branch in Normandy (d'or fretté de sable):-
A beautiful wooden antique reproduction of a jousting shield, carved and painted with the Vardon coat of arms above used to hang in the hall at Goldstone Hall. It used to belong to William Vardon of Goldstone's relation Samuel Arthur Vardon. Sadly this appears to have been stolen along with other items before the sale of the Hall and some of its contents in 1978.
William's cousin, Thomas Vardon of St. John's Place, Battersea Rise (see Edward Hayward's Memorandum books) has the same coat of arms displayed, alongside those of his wife Mary Sophia, on a memorial inside St. Mary's Church in Battersea, but the crest has lost the stag's antlers. Thomas was a member of the senior branch of William's family.
BELOW – coat of arms from the memorial to Thomas and Mary Sophia (nee Pell) inside St. Mary's Church, Battersea, showing his arms with those of Mary Sophia's family:-
The Vardons of Battersea are also commemorated by the naming of Vardens Road (incorrectly spelt with an "e") between St. John's Hill and Battersea Rise, presumably on land that they once owned. One of the signs in Vardens Road is shown below.
By pure coincidence there is another memorial inside St. Mary's Church Battersea to a member of the same original family as Thomas Vardon - namely Henry Boutflower Verdon, who was a curate under the famous Canon J. Erskine Clarke, Vicar of St. Mary's Church Battersea. Erskine Clarke was the driving force behind the building of almost all of the new Churches across Battersea in the 19th Century and the foundation of the Bolingbroke Hospital in South Battersea. Verdon was particularly connected with St. Michael's Church Battersea, off Bolingbroke Grove, where he was Vicar. The coat of arms shown on his memorial below shows a "Fret" as opposed to the design "Fretty" - different branches of the Verdon family of Alton used both designs. In this respect he would appear to have been a very distant relation to Thomas Vardon of Battersea.
Like Thomas Vardon, H. B. Verdon has a road named after him off Battersea Rise - Boutflower Road and at one time there was a ward named after him inside Bolingbroke Hospital in Battersea. Henry Boutflower was the son of the Rev. Edward Verdon, who was Vicar of St. Anne's Church Tottington in Bury, Lancashire by his wife Jane, daughter of Dr. George Hobson of London.
Henry's brother was Sir George Frederic Verdon KCMG CB FRS of Queen Street Melbourne and Alton, Upper Macedon, Victoria, Australia, who was a well known Australian politician, diplomat and (later) banker. Their father Edward Verdon came from Dublin and was a descendant of one of the Verdons of Alton who went to Ireland in the middle ages.
Henry Boutflower Verdon's grandfather claimed the feudal title of Baron Verdon. However, it appears that this feudal barony in fact passed through the heiresses of Theobald de Verdon, 2nd Baron Verdon (elder brother of Henry's ancestor). As a matter of historical interest, it is claimed that Henry's grandfather was named at the coronation of King George IV as the person qualified by descent to continue the right established by Bertram de Verdun of providing a glove on the day of the coronation and supporting the monarch's right hand during the ceremony whilst he held the royal sceptre. Bertram de Verdun (see further details below) is recorded as having done this for William the Conqueror, having crossed the channel with him from his fief of Verdun in the Manche district of Normandy. However, Henry's grandfather was said to have been too infirm to attend and so a representative Irish peer carried out the honour on Verdon's behalf.
Henry's family were descended from Milo de Verdon, a younger brother of Theobald II de Verdon. Milo was the founder of the Verdons of Clonmore, who produced quite a few Priests, both Catholic and Anglican.
Henry does not appear to have had an heir, but his brother George had four sons: Arthur Laurence Ridley Verdon, Reginald Verdon, Egbert Sumner Verdon and Nevil Verdon.
The Verdons of Cheshire (Verdon / Vardon)
There are some old connections between the de Verdons and Chester. Ranulf de Blondeville (also known as Ranulph de Meschines) was not only 4th Earl of Chester, but also Vicomte d'Avranches in Normandy, where some of the de Verduns in Normandy held land under him. Ranulf was a young boy when he inherited on the death of his father Ranulf. One of the men who administered his inheritance during his minority was Bertram III de Verdun of Alton, who was an influential and trusted administrator of Richard I, with whom he went on Crusade in 1189. Bertram was made Governor of Acre in the Holy Land and according to the Chronicle of Croxden Abbey, which was founded by the de Verduns, Bertram was killed on 24th August 1192 at Jaffa, and buried at St. John's in Acre. He is said to have had a positive influence on Ranulf, who also became very close to Richard I and accompanied the King and Bertram on crusade.
Matthew of Westminster records that in September 1194, Ranulf was one of the three sword bearers at the ceremonial re-crowning of King Richard, along with Hamelin de Warrenne and William the Lion, King of Scotland. Ranulf married Constance of Brittany, the widow of Richard's brother Geoffrey. The two became estranged and there was conflict over the claim to succession to the throne by Arthur, her son by Geoffrey. Apparently Ranulf and King plotted to reduce the power of Constance and in March 1195, Ranulf and Richard met at the former's castle in the town of Sainte-James-de-Beuvron to sign a charter relating to the Abbaye de Montmorel near Falaise. Those also recorded as having been present were: Roger de Chester (Ranulf's brother), Roger de Lacy (Constable of Chester), Baldwin Wake and William de Verdun.
The first mention of the Vardon family being in Congleton is in relation to a John Verdon / Vardon who was born c.1570 and died in 1640. His Will, dated 11th December 1639 includes the following variations in the spelling of his name:
In the Name of God Amen the Eleaventhe daie of December In the yeare of our Lorde God one Thousande five hundred Thirtie and nyne And in the Fifteenth yeare of the Raigne of our Sovraigne Lorde Charles by the grace of God, Kinge of Englande, Scotlande, Frannce and Irelande defender of the faithe &r I John Verdon the elder of Congleton in the Countie of Chester........I doe give and bequeathe unto my sonne John Verdon...
.......And I doe Ordayne Constitute and make the said John Verdon Randall Smithe and Rauffe Comberbache [his two sons-in-law] Executors of this my said Laste will and Testament....
The Will is signed by John Vardon
The Verdons of Biddulph and Dalaston were also cadet branches of the de Verdons of Alton. Biddulph is right on the Staffordshire border and is only a couple of miles away from Congleton in Cheshire. The Vardons happen at one time to have held lands in the parish of Biddulph, but this was entirely coincidental since they inherited them through marriage with another family.
Congleton's parish church was St. Mary's in the nearby village of Astbury (otherwise known as Newbold Astbury) and so the Vardons appear in this parish's registers. In addition to property in and around Congleton itself, they also inherited farms at Hulme Walfield in the parish of Astbury. As it happens, within the Cheshire Court Rolls record under the heading 'County Court of St. Peter's Chair, 22nd February 1288-89, a case is recorded as follows:
Abbot of St. Werbugh's, Chester versus William son of Thomas de Venables; advowson of Astebury church. The abbot said he last presented one Mr John de Stanlegh, clerk, in time of peace, and he was duly instituted by the Bishop of Chester. The church is now vacant by his death. William being under age, his guardian Roger de Verdun said the matter must be adjourned till he came of age; meantime it was alleged that though though the abbot presented the last incumbent he was not the true patron at the time but an intruder (quasi male fidei occupator), the heirs being unwilling.
The extract continues without further mention of Roger de Verdun, who was one of the de Verduns of Biddulph.
The de Verdon family of Fulshaw, in the Parish of Wilmslow, Cheshire also changed their name from Verdon to Vardon at about the same time.
For this reason, and the proximity to Congleton, it is thought quite possible that the Verdon/Vardon family of Fulshaw may well be the same family as the Verdon/Vardon family of Congleton. The family gave its name to the settlement of Vardentown in Over Alderley, near Prestbury in Cheshire. This may be the very same place that is referred to as the Lordship of Verdone, which is recorded in J. Charles Fox's 'The Churches of Derbyshire, Volume 3', in a section discussing the Preceptory of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem at Yeaveley in Derbyshire, as follows:
A chartulary of all the English possessions of the Order, which was drawn up by Brother John Stillingflete, mentions that William Meynell, Lord of Yeaveley, gave many lands and tenements there situate to the preceptory of that name, in the year 1268. Other benefactors of the preceptory there enumerated are William Montgomery and Oliver Fouu [?], who jointly have certain lands; Albert Bussell, who gave them the lordship of Verdone, Cheshire; Ranulph, Earl of Cheshire, the donor of a messuage, an acre of land and common pasture rights in the town of Frodsham, et plum alia bona; Margeria de Carun, who granted certain lands and tenements at Longford; Richard de Fitton, the donor of the lordship of Fulshaw, Cheshire; Robert de Bakepuze, who appropriated to the Hospitallers the church of Barrow, in this county [i.e. Derbyshire], and also certain lands in that parish in the reign of Henry II. And Ascuit Musard, who, in the same reign, appropriated to the preceptory half the church of Staveley an appropriation subsequently rendered more valuable by the gift to that moiety, by Walter Abitot, of twenty-two acres of land with common rights at Barlow.
It is interesting that in 1445 an Edward Verdon appears in the Vale Royal's record of the names of the Knights, Gentlemen, and Freeholders in Cheshire in Macclesfield Hundred, recorded by Earwaker, who mentions that Edward had the 'Holding of St. John of Jerusalem'. Perhaps his first name was mistakenly transcribed and should have read Edmund Verdon.
In his 19th century Gazetteer covering this part of Cheshire, Samuel Bagshaw wrote that the Manor of Fulshaw had been given by the de Fitton family to the Prior & Convent of St. John of Jerusalem, and that early in Queen Elizabeth I's reign it belonged to Edmund Verdon.
Earwaker in his history of East Cheshire provides details of this family, as detailed below, with the text divided up into sections to present the chronology better.
(see link - click here - for full transcription of mention of these and other de Verdons of Cheshire)
Earwaker, East Cheshire, London 1877
Volume I - Chapter: Wilmslow Parish, Section: Fulshaw, Page: 151
The share of Fulshaw that Crosse held appears to have passed to the Leghs of Adlington, and the share of the Sherts to have been devided between the Verdons who actually acquired theirs by marriage with Margaret del Shert an heiress; a family of the name Scorgel,[x] whose lands ultimately passed in 1388 to the Leghs of Adlington; and the Davenports.
In 1387 Edmund le Verdon held lands in Woodford, in Prestbury parish;
his son Geoffrey le Verdon died in 1421,[z] beqeauthing in his will his best beast as a mortuary, and 2s. 4d. to make a torch, and to William Staveley, The chaplain 6d. Henry Verdon, his son, is mentioned in his father’s will;
and in 1491 a Thomas Verdon next occurs; and in 1507, by a deed dated “at Scherd in Fulshaw”, he grants all his lands in Fulshaw, in trust to perform his will to William Hondford of Hondford, Esq., Nicholas Davenport of Woodford, Humphrey Newton of Newton, gentleman, and John Hondford, Rector of the Church of Aston. The witnesses to this deed are Sir William Bothe of Bolyn, night, Thomas Davenport (of Fulshaw), gent., Robert Ryley (of Chorley), John Gatley, and Thomas Matley, Chaplains, and others. In it he mentions his wife and eight sons.
His son and heir Edmund Verdon, succeeded his father, but was dead before 1530, in which year “Thomas Verdon of Sherd, son and heir of Edmund Verdon, late deceased,” is mentioned. His father appears to have resided much in Yorkshire; and amongst the Fulshaw deeds is a very curious one date 1530, in which “Thomas, the Prior of the monastry of Watton, of the order of Saint Gilbert, nigh Beverley co.York,” and a number of knights, esquires, gentry, and clergy made a declaration that Thomas Verdon was the only son of his father, and that he was born at Beswick, and baptised at Kinwick, co.York, and “had to his godfathers Thomas Dalby, late Archdeacon of Richmond, and Sir Henry Thwaitts, knight and Mastres Metham, wiff of Thomas Metham of Metham, squire, yet being of lyf, to his godmoder.” [a]
In 1537 he leased all his lands in Fulshaw to Humphrey Newton, son of Humphrey Newton (of Pownall) the elder, and in 1561, by a deed dated April 12th in that year, in which he is described as “Thomas Verdon of Knottyngley, in the countie of York, gentillman,”[b] he sells them to Humphrey Newton then called “of Fulshaw, senior,” for the sum of £112;
and in 1581 William Verdon, his son and heir releases all his rights in the said lands to William Newton of Fulshaw, son and heir of Humphrey Newton of Fulshaw.
Unfortunately the pedigree he refers to has yet to be re-found, having seemed to have disappeared.Footnotes:-
z In 1393 he effected an exchange with John Scorgel and Cecilia his wife, of one acre of land in Fulshaw called Gudamons. This is perhaps what was afterwards known as “Goodmans Acre.”
a To this curious deed there were ten small seals attached seven of which now remain; but they are not heraldic.
b A pedigree of this family of Verdon of Fulshaw is in my Cheshire MSS., Vol. ii.
GEOFFREY LE VERDON, THE ANCIENT POSSESSOR OF FULSHAW
(from the same manuscript)
"We have before observed that Geoffrey le Verdon had married a Daughter of Schert, half owner of the whole Township and settled himself at a house called Schert, after his own name, where Fulshaw Hall now stands. Geoffrey, a pious old man, in the year 1421 made his will, by which he bequeathed his Soul to God, St, Mary and all Saints, and his Body to be buried in the cemetry at Wilmslow; he gave his best good Beast in the name of a Mortuary; he also gave Three Shillings and fourpence to make a Torch, and he gave William Stavely the chaplain sixpence, and the Residue of all his Goods to be distributed for the good of his Soul; and he appointed his wife Margaret and henry his Son, Executirs of his will; who no doubt were very grateful to his memory for taking so much care for himself and little for them.
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"We shall hear no more of this Henry nor any of his successors till the year 1506, when Thomas Verdon gave to William Handford, Esquire, Nicholas Davenport, of Widford, Humphrey Newton of Newton, &c., all his lands in Fulshaw, to hold the same to the Intent to perform his Will. The witnesses were William Booth, of Bolin, Knight; Thomas Davenport, gent. (Fulshaw); Robert Ryley Valect (the then Owner of Pumphouse," &c.
Note: "It was a custom to bring the Beast with the Corps to the Church and offer it to the Priest in Satisfaction for all Tithes omitted to be paid to him by the deceased. The Torch was perhaps to burn upon the Altar whilst Mass was saying in St. Mary's Chapel (now the Haythorn Pew), by Stavely, the Chaplain, for the good of Geoffrey's Soul."
Another family of Verdons who lived in Caverswall near Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire in the 17th century also changed their surname to Vardon. They may be connected to the Vardons of Congleton and/or Fulshaw. Caverswall is very near to the ancient seat of the de Verdons at Alton Castle.
The de Vardon (Devardon) and Vardon families of Normandy
- the family of Harry Vardon the famous golfer
The Vardon family of Jersey, from whom the famous golfer "Harry Vardon" was descended, are the descendants of two brothers who fled Normandy after King Louis XIV's revocation of the Edict of Nantes in October 1685. The Edict had been issued by protestant King Henry IV (Henry of Navarre), to protect and grant rights to the protestant - "Hugeunot" - minority.
These Vardons are the protestant branch of the de Vardon family (now Devardon) of Le Bas Vardon and Le Haut Vardon, below Cahan in Normandie, south west of the town of Pont D'Ouilly at the junction of the River Noireau and the Orne. Vardons still live in the area of Athis-de-l'Orne, including well known dairy farmer Jean Vardon of La Ferme de Treillebois, and the Devardons are still at Le Haut Vardon.
The Vardons of Les Tourailles, south east of Athis-de-l'Orne, details of whom are found in the Armorial des Tourailles, du Houlme et de ses environs en Basse-Normadie, Ancien fief des Turgot, written by Christophe Lallau, appear from their Huguenot connections to be the same family as the Vardons of Jersey.
The Armorial des Tourailles also mentions the de Verduns of Normandy. What has not yet been ascertained is whether the de Vardon and de Verdun families of Normandie are one and the same, with the surname having changed from one to the other as it did in England. The first mention of the name Vardon in Normandy appears to be in the early 1600s, but further investigation is required as to any potential earlier mention, or origin from the Normandy family of de Verdun.
The de Verdon family of Normandy
- the family of Bertram de Verdun, companion of William the Conqueror
Bertram de Verdun (also often written as de Verdon) was one of the companions of William the Conqueror. He and his family are well chronicled in the publication 'The Battle Abbey Roll, with some account of the Norman Lineages', page 221-224.
The first of the de Verduns of Normandy was Bertram I de Verdun, who came over to England as one of the companions of William the Conqueror. Some historians have postulated that Bertram was a son of Godfrey III, Duke of Upper Lorraine, also (later) Duke of Lower Lorraine and Count of Verdun-sur-Meuse in Lorraine. After 1066, Bertram de Verdun was given the Manor of Farnham Royal in Buckinghamshire. This manor had been held previously by Goda, daughter of Emma of Normandy by her husband King Ethelred the Unready and therefore sister of Edward the Confessor. Goda's second husband, Count Eustace II of Boulogne, married afterwards Ida the daughter of Godfrey III, supposed father of Bertram de Verdun. This would have made Bertram the brother-in-law of Goda's second husband. Perhaps this connection explains why he was granted Farnham Royal - in all likelihood we will never know for sure. Another story relates that Bertram's forebear, called Norman de Verdun, arrived in Normandy in the suite of Rollo, first Duke of Normandy.
A chart showing an incomplete family tree for the de Verdon family can be seen by clicking here:
In addition to Bertram I de Verdun, another member of the family is cited in 1066 - a Guy de Verdun.
Below is a transcription of the entire chapter from ‘The Battle Abbey Roll’ book, which deals with the Verdon family.
_______
Verdoune : an illustrious name still represented in Normandy. La Roque and La Chesnaye-du-Bois both maintain that it had its origin in the county of Mortaine, where one of its branches was of long continuance; yet it is incontestable that in the twelfth century there was a fief of Verdun in the arrondissement of Avranches; and, according to M. de Gerville, the cradle of the family was Barenton, in that neighbourhood.
Bertram de Verdon, the founder of the great English house, in 1086 held Farnham Royal, in Buckinghamshire, by the grand serjeantry of providing a glove for the King's right hand on the day of his coronation, and supporting his right arm during the said service, so long as he bore the royal sceptre. In 1095, he attests a charter of William Rufus to St. Mary's Abbey, York, and served as Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1100. His son Norman followed him about 1130, and married Lescelina, the daughter of the famous Justiciar, Geoffrey de Clinton, who had great possessions in Leicestershire, and brought him Brandon in Warwickshire, where he built a castle. Alton, in North Staffordshire, was, however, his principal seat and the head of his barony. The next in succession, Bertram II., played a considerable part in the history of his time. "His political career I date," says Eyton, "from the year 1166, when he appears in King Henry's court at Caen. On 3rd February, 1170, the King being over sea, the Constable of Normandy, Richard de Humez, and Bertram de Verdon were at Stamford (Lincolnshire). Bertram, be it known, held estates in Lincolnshire, both under the Crown and under the aforesaid Constable. What is more remarkable is that at this very juncture De Humez was Sheriff of Rutland, while at the ensuing Easter (April 5, 1170) the King, in Council at Windsor, instituted that enquiry into the conduct of the English Sheriffs which resulted in the ejectment of William Basset from the Shrievalty of Warwickshire and Leicestershire, and the substitution of Bertram de Verdon.
"Meanwhile in the rebellion of 1173, Bertram de Verdon was one of those Barons whom Benedictus signalizes as having stood by the elder King. For twelve succeeding years he variously occurs as a Sheriff, as an assessor in the Curiae Regis, as a witness of royal charters in England and Normandy; and on one occasion as King Henry's ambassador to Spain. His relinquishment of the Shrievalty of Warwickshire and Leicestershire, in 1185, was not for any cause of disgrace. At this very juncture he was attending Prince John in his notable mission to Ireland; and while Hugh de Lacy figures as Constable (of Ireland) during John's vice-royalty, so has Bertram de Verdon the title of Seneschal when attesting one of the Prince's charters.
"On June 14, 1188, William de Humez, then Constable of Normandy, and Bertram de Verdon, were assessors of the King in a Curia sitting at Geddington. Bertram de Verdon, accompanying King Richard in the crusade of 1190, died at Jaffa in 1192, and was buried at Acre." This city had been, after its capture, committed to his charge by Coeur de Lion.
His two sons were the last heirs-male of his house. The elder, Thomas, married to Eustachia Basset, had no children; and the second, Nicholas, left only one daughter, Roese, who in 1223, at the urgent recommendation of J Henry III., married Theobald Le Botiller of Ireland. "Being so great an Heir, tho' she matched with a Husband of a very Honourable Family, she did not bear his sirname, but retained her own, and so did her Posterity."—Dugdale. She was early left a widow, for in 1231 she paid the customary heavy fine not to be compelled to marry again, and later in life founded the Cistercian Abbey of Grace-Dieu on one of her Leicestershire manors.
John, the eldest of her four sons, in whom the name of Verdon was resuscitated with added splendour, married another great heiress, Margery de Lacy, the last-born of the two sisters that shared the princely possessions of their grandfather, Walter, Lord Palatine of Meath. She brought him the castle and honour of Weobley in Herefordshire, as well as a moiety of Ewyas-Lacy; and with them, the harassing duties and responsibilities of a Lord-Marcher. Accordingly, in 1249, he was ordered by the King to take up his residence on the borders, and check the inroads of the Welsh. He was slain in Ireland in 1278, and was succeeded by Theobald, the first Baron Verdon, who was summoned to parliament in 1295. He had been Constable of Ireland in 1274, and in 1290 was arraigned for high treason, and sentenced to be imprisoned, and to forfeit all his royalties at Ewyas-Lacy; but the King, taking into consideration the good service done by his ancestors, "freed him of his imprisonment for five hundred marks fine." After this, he was again in favour at Court, received several writs of summons to the Northern wars, and sat in the Parliament at Lincoln that asserted Edward's supremacy as "Lord of the whole Realm of Scotland."
Theobald II., his only surviving son—John, the eldest, had died in Ireland during his lifetime—was the second and last Lord Verdon, and Justiciar of Ireland in 1312. He was twice married; first, to Maud, daughter of Edmund Lord Mortimer of Wigmore, by whom he had two sons that died young, and three daughters; and secondly, to one of the co-heirs of the great Honour of Clare, Elizabeth, third daughter of Gilbert Earl of Gloucester by Joan of Acres, daughter of Edward I., and widow of John de Burgh, Earl of Ulster. This last marriage took place in 1315, and he died the year following at Alton Castle, in the thirty-fourth year of his age, leaving his wife, in Scriptural language, "great with child." The child proved a fourth daughter, and thus, for the second time, the name perished in the elder line, and the great fief of Verdon was split up among co-heiresses. Joan, who, as the eldest of these richly-dowered sisters, had the ancestral seat, Alton Castle, and the Staffordshire honour, married Lord Furnival, and died in childbed in 1334. Elizabeth, the second, had the castle and fief of Ewyas-Lacy in Herefordshire, with Stoke-upon-Terne in Shropshire, and married Bartholomew de Burghersh. Margery, the third, had another great Herefordshire estate, the honour and castle of Weobley, with Heath in Oxfordshire, and was three times married: first to William le Blund; secondly to Marcus Husee; and thirdly to John Crophull. The posthumous Isabel—to all appearance the most slenderly portioned of the four—had certain manors in Shropshire and Staffordshire, and was the wife of Lord Ferrers of Groby.
Besides this principal line, and several minor ones alluded to by Burke—the Verdons of Draycot, Warwickshire, and Ibstock, Leicestershire; the Verdons of Darlaston and Biddulph, in Staffordshire; and the Verdons of Denston, in the same county—one, if not two more baronial houses sprung from the original stock. The first of these – wholly unnoticed by Dugdale – was seated at Brisingham in Norfolk, where William de Verdon, about the year 1100, was efoeffed of six knight’s fees by Roger, the father of Hugh Bigod. His descendant John, in 1285, claimed view of frank-pledge, assize of bread, and ale, infangthef, gallows, and free-warren in all his lands and manors in Norfolk, which had been granted to his father by Henry III. : and another Sir John was a baron of the realm in 1332. “He seems to have been a person of great hospitality, from the inventory of the establishment he left at Brisingham, to treat his tenants &c. whenever he should go there to reside.” – Banks. This Sir John, with his brother Sir Thomas, figured as tilters at the great tournament held in 1308 at Stepney, and again five years later at Dunstable. Instead of the Verdon fret, they wore Sable ove un Lyon Rampant Argent, the younger brother adding a chess-rook for a difference. Each of Sir John’s two sons had a son who left no issue : and the inheritance fell between two granddaughters, one of whom was Lady of Shelfhanger in right of her mother, Isabel Vis de Leu.
The other house always hitherto assigned to the stock of Verdon is one of the most famous of our baronage – that of Audley. “That the first,” says Dugdale, “who assumed this surname was a branch of that ancient and noble family of Verdon, whose chief seat was at Alton Castle, in the northern part of Staffordshire, I am very inclined to believe; partly by reason that Henry had the inheritance of Aldithley given to him by Nicholas de Verdon, who died in the sixteenth of Henry III., or near that time; and partly for that he bore for his arms the same ordinary that Verdon did, viz. fretté ; but distinguished with a large canton in the dexter part of the shield, and thereon a cross paté.” This origin is now denied,* notwithstanding the similarity of the coats of arms, this left unexplained; and it is at least clear, that Aldithley was not the grant of Nicholas de Verdon. “Aldithley (Audley) Baltredelez (half Balterby) and Talc (Talke in Audley) all held in 1086 by the Thane, Gamel, seem to have come, early in the reign of Henry I., into the hands of the first Adam de Audley, who divided them between his sons, Lydulph and Adam. In 1130, ‘Liulf de Audley’ lay under a heavy penalty for the murder of Gamel.” – Eyton. Adam II. was apparently the father of Henry de Audley, “the great territorial acquisitionist of the district,” who built the castle of Heighly, and is represented by Dugdale as the first who assumed the name.
I do not therefore feel justified in including the Audleys in this notice, and must reluctantly forbear to give an account of one of my favourite heroes, the Sir James Audley who fought “as long as his breath served him, in the chief of the battle” at Poictiers. He had vowed that whenever the King or one of his sons should be present on the field, he “would be one of the first setters-on, or else die in the pain,” and so well did he keep his word, that he was praised and rewarded by the Black Prince, as the “best doer in arms” that day. The names of his four squires, to whom he instantly transferred the prince’s bounty, declaring “That honour I have, is by their valiantness,” though not given by Froissart, have been preserved in Cheshire tradition. They were Sir Robert Fouleshurst, Sir Thomas Dutton (Sheriff of the county), Sir John Delves, and Sir John Hawkestone. All of them, bore the Audley fret on some part of their coat of arms.
* “There are few noble families whose early history has suffered worse at the hands of genealogists than the family of Audley. Dugdale’s Baronage, a splendid work, but from its very nature occasionally inaccurate, has been followed with such servility that his errors, by constant repetition, have almost acquired the sacredness of truth.” – Castles of Herefordshire and their Lords, by C. J. Robinson.
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As mentioned in the text above, John de Verdon, son of Roesia de Verdon (sometimes also written as: Roese or Rohese), married Margery de Lacy. Amongst the de Lacy property that came to the de Verdons by this marriage was a moiety of Ludlow, where the de Lacys had built the first castle, within what had been part of the parish of Stoke Lacy. It is for this reason that the de Verdon coat of arms appears in one of the windows in the magnificent abbey-like St. Laurence's Church in Ludlow.
Below: the arms of the de Verdun family, within a window on the north wall of St. Laurence's Church, Ludlow:-
The de Verdon family of Wrottesley, Tettenhall
There is another branch of the de Verdon family who settled at Wrottesley in Tettenhall Parish, Staffordshire and became the Wrottesley of Wrottesley family. Their direct connection with the de Verdons of Alton is not yet established but there is no doubt at all that they were members of the same extended family.
In an old history of Tettenhall there is a lot of information about the family including the following brief early family tree:
William de Verdon of Wrottesley above is the same person as 'William de Wrottesley' whose coat of arms appears in the same book, as shown below:
At the bottom of the coat of arms is an inscription that reads:
SIR WILLIAM DE WROTTESLEY
Married Joan, daughter of Sir Roger Bassett, son of Ralph,
Lord Bassett, of Drayton
Some old seals from old deeds at Wrottesley, including one for Sir William and his son Hugh are also shown in the Tettenhall book:
Much later a Wrottesley was made a Baronet and then Sir John Wrottesley Bart was elevated to become the 1st Baron Wrottesley of Wrottesley. His coat of arms (shown below) illustrates how the Wrottesleys changed their arms to those of Bassett, with the same core design as shown above impaled with de Verdon, but with a different colour combination.












