OTES AND QUERIES,"--Spare my blushes, I am
J. H. VAN LENNEP.
Amsterdam, Feb. 25. 1851.
* * * * *
BARONS OF HUGH LUPUS.
(Vol. iii., p. 87.)
Your correspondent P. asks for information respecting the families and
descendants of William Malbank and Bigod de Loges, two of the Barons of
Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, whose signatures are affixed to the charter of
foundation of St. Werburgh's Abbey at Chester.
Of the descendants of William Malbank I can learn nothing; but it appears
from the MS. catalogue of the Norman nobility before the Conquest, that
Roger and Robert de Loges possessed lordships in the district of Coutances
in Normandy. One at least, Roger, must have accompanied the Conqueror to
England (and his name appears in the roll of Battle Abbey as given by Fox),
for we find that he held lands in Horley and Burstowe in Surrey. His widow,
Gunuld de Loges, held the manor of Guiting in Gloucestershire of King
William; and in the year 1090 she gave two hides of land to the monastery
of Gloucester to pray for the soul of her husband. Roger had two sons,
Roger and Bigod, or, as he is sometimes called, Robert. The former
inherited the lands in Surrey. One of his descendants (probably his
great-grandson) was high sheriff of Surrey and Sussex in the years 1267,
1268, and 1269. His son Roger de Loges owned lands and tenements in Horley,
called La Bokland, which he sold to the Abbot of {190} Chertsea. His
successor, John de Logge of Burstowe, witnessed in the tenth year of Edward
II. a deed relating to the transfer of land in Hadresham, Surrey. The name
became gradually corrupted to Lodge.
To return to the subject of inquiry, Bigod de Loges--
"held five tenements in Sow of the Earl of Chester, by the service of
conducting the said earl towards the king's court through the midst of
the forest of Cannock, meeting him at Rotford bridge upon his coming,
and at Hopwas bridge on his return. In which forest the earl might, if
he pleased, kill a deer at his coming, and another at his going back:
giving unto Loges each time he should so attend him a barbed arrow.
Hugo de Loges granted to William Bagot all his lands in Sow, to hold of
him the said Hugo and his heirs, by the payment of a pair of white
gloves at the feast of St. Michael yearly."--Dugdale.
Bigod de Loges had two sons, Hugo and Odardus:
"Odardus de Loges was infeoffed by Ranulphus d
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