Duke of Norfolk

Dukedom of Norfolk

Arms: Quarterly, 1st: Gules on a Bend between six Cross-crosslets fitchy Argent an Escutcheon Or charged with a Demi-lion rampant pierced through the mouth by an arrow within a Double Tressure flory counterflory of the first (Howard); 2nd: Gules three Lions passant gardant in pale Or, Armed and Langued Azure, in chief a Label of three points Argent (Plantagenet of Norfolk); 3rd: Checky Or and Azure (Warenne); 4th: Gules a Lion rampant Or, Armed and Langued Azure (Fitzalan).
Creation date 1397 (forfeit 1399–1425) (first creation)
1477 (second creation)
1483 (forfeit 1485–1515, 1547–1553, 1572–1660) (third creation)
Monarch Richard II (first creation)
Henry VI (first creation, restored)
Edward IV (second creation)
Richard III (third creation)
Henry VIII (third creation, restored)
Mary I (third creation, restored)
Charles II (third creation, restored)
Peerage Peerage of England
First holder Thomas de Mowbray
Present holder Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk
Heir apparent Henry Fitzalan-Howard, Earl of Arundel
Remainder to the 1st Duke's heirs male of the body lawfully begotten
Subsidiary titles
Extinction date 1476 (first creation)
1483 (second creation)
Seat(s) Arundel Castle
Carlton Towers
Former seat(s) Framlingham Castle
Bungay Castle
Clun Castle

The Duke of Norfolk is the premier duke in the peerage of England, and also, as Earl of Arundel, the premier earl. The Duke of Norfolk is, moreover, the Earl Marshal and Hereditary Marshal of England. The seat of the Duke of Norfolk is Arundel Castle in Sussex, although the title refers to the county of Norfolk. The current duke is Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk. The dukes have historically been Catholic, a state of affairs known as recusancy in England.

All past and present dukes have been descended from Edward I (see Dukes of Norfolk family tree). The son of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, was Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey; the earl was descended from both Edward I and Edward III.

History

Augmentation to the arms of Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk, for his services at the Battle of Flodden Blazon: The Royal Shield of Scotland, having a demi-lion only, which is pierced through the mouth with an arrow.

Before the Dukes of Norfolk, there were the Bigod Earls of Norfolk, starting with Roger Bigod from Normandy (died 1107). Their male line ended with Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk, who died without an heir in 1307, so their titles and estates reverted to the crown. Edward II then granted his brother, Thomas of Brotherton, the title of Earl of Norfolk in 1312. It passed to Thomas's daughter (and granddaughter of Edward I), Margaret, and then to her grandson, Thomas Mowbray.

When Richard II made Thomas Mowbray the Duke of Norfolk in 1397, he conferred upon him the estates and titles (including Earl Marshal) that had belonged to the Earls of Norfolk. His elderly grandmother Margaret was still alive, and so at the same time she was created Duchess of Norfolk for life. Mowbray died in exile in 1399, some months after his grandmother, and his dukedom was repealed. His widow took the title of Countess of Norfolk.[1]

Between 1401 and 1476, the Mowbray family held the title and estates of the Duke of Norfolk. John de Mowbray, 4th Duke of Norfolk, died without male issue in 1476, his only surviving child being the 3-year-old Anne Mowbray. At the age of 3, a marriage was arranged between Anne and Richard, Duke of York, the four-year-old son of Edward IV. She remained Richard's child bride until she died at the age of 8.

In accordance with the marriage arrangements, Richard inherited the lands and wealth of the Mowbray family. He was also made Duke of Norfolk. However, upon the death of Edward IV, the throne was seized by Edward's brother, Richard III. Prince Richard and his elder brother (briefly Edward V) were declared illegitimate and confined to the Tower of London in mid-1483. They subsequently disappeared, and the titles of both York and Norfolk were forfeited to the crown.

This left John Howard, the son of Thomas Mowbray's elder daughter Margaret, as heir to the dukedom, and his support for Richard III's usurpation secured his creation as 1st Duke of Norfolk in 1483, in the title's third creation. From this point to the present, the title has remained in the hands of the descendants of John Howard.

The Catholic faith of the Howard dynasty often resulted in conflict with the reigning monarch, particularly during and after the reign of Henry VIII. In 1546, Thomas Howard, the third Duke, fell out of favour with the dying Henry and was attainted on 27 January 1547; he was stripped of his titles and his lands reverted to the Crown. Imprisoned in the Tower of London, he narrowly escaped execution through Henry's death the following day, but remained imprisoned until the death of Edward VI and the accession of the Catholic Queen Mary to the English throne in 1553, upon which his lands and titles were restored to him. However, the Duke died the following year aged around 81, and was succeeded by his grandson Thomas as the fourth Duke of Norfolk.

Following Mary's death and the accession of her sister Elizabeth I, the Duke was imprisoned for scheming to marry Elizabeth's cousin Mary, Queen of Scots. After his release under house arrest in 1570 and subsequent participation in the Ridolfi plot to enthrone Mary and Catholicism in England, he was executed for treason and his lands and titles again became forfeit.

In 1660, the fourth Duke's great-great-grandson, the 23rd Earl of Arundel, was restored to the family lands and dukedom. Mentally infirm, the fifth Duke never married and died in 1677. He was succeeded by his younger brother Henry as the 6th Duke, through whom the 7th Duke, 8th Duke and 9th Duke of Norfolk were descended in the male-line.

At the death of the 9th Duke, the title was inherited in 1777 by his heir male, Charles Howard, a grandson of Charles Howard of Greystoke, a younger brother of the 5th and 6th Dukes. He was succeeded by his son, Charles, whose lack of a legitimate male heir resulted in the title passing to Bernard Howard, a great-grandson of Bernard Howard of Glossop, the youngest brother of the 5th and 6th Dukes. The title then passed to his son in 1842, Henry Howard, 13th Duke of Norfolk, who was the father of Henry Fitzalan-Howard, 14th Duke of Norfolk, and Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 1st Baron Howard of Glossop.

The title passed through the line of the elder brother from 1856 until the death in 1975 of Bernard Fitzalan-Howard, 16th Duke of Norfolk without male issue. Consequently, he was succeeded by his second cousin once removed, Miles Stapleton-Fitzalan-Howard, 17th Duke of Norfolk, who was a great-grandson of the aforementioned 1st Baron Howard of Glossop.

The current Duke of Norfolk is Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk, who succeeded his father, Miles Stapleton-Fitzalan-Howard, 17th Duke of Norfolk, in 2002.

Duties and other titles

In addition to the ducal title, the Dukes of Norfolk also hold the hereditary position of Earl Marshal, which has the duty of organizing state occasions such as the coronation of the monarch and the state opening of Parliament. For the last five centuries, save some periods when it was under attainder, both the Dukedom and the Earl-Marshalship have been in the hands of the Howard family. According to The House of Lords Act 1999, due to his duties as Earl Marshal, Norfolk is one of only two hereditary peers automatically admitted to the House of Lords, without being elected by the general body of hereditary peers (the other being the Lord Great Chamberlain).

Additionally, the Duke of Norfolk participates in the ceremony of the State Opening of Parliament. He is among the four individuals who precede the monarch, and one of the two of these who would traditionally walk facing the sovereign (thus backwards), but this has not been practiced in recent years.

As the Earl Marshal, the Duke of Norfolk is head of the College of Arms, through which he regulates all matters connected with armorial bearings and standards, in addition to controlling the arrangements for state functions. He is one of three claimants to the title of Chief Butler of England.

The Duke of Norfolk currently holds the following subsidiary titles:

All titles are in the Peerage of England, save for the Barony of Howard of Glossop which is in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. All descend to heirs male except the Barony of Beaumont, which can pass in the female line. The style Earl of Arundel is used as a courtesy title by the Duke's eldest son, the present one of which is Henry Fitzalan-Howard, Earl of Arundel. The style Lord Maltravers is used as a courtesy title by the eldest son of the Duke's eldest son (the Duke's grandson).

Heraldic achievement (coat of arms)

Residences

The main residences commonly associated with the Dukes of Norfolk are: Framlingham Castle, Bungay Castle, as well as Clun Castle in Shropshire, which are now largely ruins; Worksop Manor, Carlton Towers, Norfolk House in London, and most notably Arundel Castle.

18th Duke of Norfolk, then the Earl of Arundel, at Carlton Towers, 1981

Framlingham Castle was originally a part of the properties of the Earls of Norfolk, but when the title fell from use, the castle was administered by the crown. In 1397, it was given to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, by King Richard II. And when the Mowbray line became extinct, it passed eventually to the Howard family. Major repairs to this castle were carried out in 1485 by John Howard. The castle would remain in the Howard family, and thus the Dukes of Norfolk, for a while, but would eventually pass from their possession. In 1553, for example, Framlingham was given to Mary Tudor, sister of King Edward VI.[3]

Bungay Castle was also originally a part of the properties of the Earls of Norfolk. In 1483, it passed into the possession of the Howards, Dukes of Norfolk, and the family continued to own it, apart from brief periods, until the late 20th century. However, the castle has been in a state of decay for quite some time. And for this reason, the 17th Duke of Norfolk, in 1987 presented the castle to the town, which had already begun restoration attempts on its own, with an endowment towards its preservation. It is now owned and administered by the Castle Trust.[4]

Carlton Towers is in Carlton, North Yorkshire. It is a Victorian gothic country house remodelled by Edward Welby Pugin for the 8th Baron Beaumont. It is the Yorkshire home of the Duke of Norfolk. Though the Duke of Norfolk's family still live in part of the house, it is now largely used for wedding receptions and similar events.

Arundel Castle has been the principal seat of the Dukes of Norfolk and their ancestors for more than 850 years. Built in the 11th century by Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Arundel, the castle was seized by the crown in 1102. King Henry II, who added on to the castle, in 1155 confirmed William d'Aubigny as Earl of Arundel, with the honour and the castle of Arundel. Arundel Castle is still to this day the home of The Duke and Duchess of Norfolk and their children. The Fitzalan Chapel, founded in 1390 by the 4th Earl of Arundel, is located on the western grounds outside the castle, and has been the burial place of the most recent Dukes of Norfolk.[5]

Glossop Hall as an occasional residence is situated in the High Peak District of Derbyshire. As the family became closely connected with Sheffield, the Farm in Glossop became increasingly used, particularly when Henry Howard lived there in the 1760s; when the 14th Duke enlarged The Farm as an occasional residence; and during the time of the 15th Duke, Henry Granville Fitzalan-Howard, who had interest in the activities of the city. The Glossop estate was sold by the family in 1925.

List of titleholders

Duchess of Norfolk (1397)

Created by Richard II of England (for life)
NamePeriodSpouseNotesOther titles
Margaret
(c. 1320 – 1398)
1397–1398widowedGranddaughter of King Edward ICountess of Norfolk

Dukes of Norfolk (1397)

Created by Richard II of England
#NamePeriodSpouseNotesOther titles
1Thomas de Mowbray
(1365–1399)
1397–1399Lady Elizabeth FitzAlanGrandson of Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk; exiled by Richard II and stripped of the dukedomEarl of Norfolk
Earl of Nottingham
Baron Mowbray
Baron Segrave
2John de Mowbray
(1392–1432)
1425–1432Lady Katherine NevilleSon of the preceding; restored to the dukedom
3John de Mowbray
(1415–1461)
1432–1461Lady Eleanor BourchierSon of the preceding and an important figure in the Wars of the Roses
4John de Mowbray
(1444–1476)
1461–1476Lady Elizabeth TalbotSon of the preceding; died without heirs male

Dukes (Royal) of Norfolk (1481)

Created by Edward IV of England
#NamePeriodSpouseNotesOther titles
1Prince Richard of Shrewsbury
(1473–1483)
1477–1483Anne de Mowbray, 8th Countess of NorfolkSon of King Edward IV and son-in-law of the 4th Duke of NorfolkDuke of York
Earl of Norfolk
Earl of Nottingham

Dukes of Norfolk (1483)

Created by Richard III of England
#NamePeriodSpouseNotesOther titles
1John Howard
(c. 1425 – 1485)
1483–1485widowedGrandson of Thomas de Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk, died at the Battle of Bosworth Field, forfeiting the dukedomBaron Mowbray
2Thomas Howard
(1443–1524)
1514–1524Elizabeth Tilney
Agnes Tilney
Son of the preceding, restored to the dukedom. Great grandfather of Queen Elizabeth IEarl of Surrey
Baron Mowbray
3Thomas Howard
(1473–1554)
1524–1554Lady Elizabeth StaffordSon of the preceding and uncle of Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard, forfeited the dukedom having incurred Henry VIII's disfavour and restored by Mary I
4Thomas Howard
(1536–1572)
1554–1572Lady Mary FitzAlan
Margaret Audley
Elizabeth Leyburne
Grandson of the preceding, executed for treason against Elizabeth I, forfeiting the dukedom
5Thomas Howard
(1627–1677)
1660–1677unmarriedGreat-great-grandson of the preceding, restored to the dukedomEarl of Arundel
Earl of Surrey
Earl of Norfolk
Baron Mowbray
Baron Maltravers
Baron Furnivall
6Henry Howard
(1628–1684)
1677–1684Jane BickertonBrother of the precedingEarl of Arundel
Earl of Surrey
Earl of Norfolk
Earl of Norwich
Baron Mowbray
Baron Maltravers
Baron Furnivall
Baron Howard of Castle Rising
7Henry Howard
(1655–1701)
1684–1701Mary Mordaunt, 7th Baroness MordauntSon of the preceding

Baron Mowbray by writ of acceleration on 14 Jan. 1678
8Thomas Howard
(1683–1732)
1701–1732Maria ShireburnNephew of the preceding
9Edward Howard
(1685–1777)
1732–1777Mary BlountBrother of the preceding
10Charles Howard
(1720–1786)
1777–1786Catherine BrockholesSecond cousin of the precedingEarl of Arundel
Earl of Surrey
Earl of Norfolk
Baron Maltravers
11Charles Howard
(1746–1815)
1786–1815Frances ScudamoreSon of the preceding
12Bernard Edward Howard
(1765–1842)
1815–1842divorcedThird cousin of the preceding
13Henry Charles Howard
(1791–1856)
1842–1856Charlotte Leveson-GowerSon of the preceding
14Henry Granville Fitzalan-Howard
(1815–1860)
1856–1860Augusta LyonsSon of the preceding
15Henry Fitzalan-Howard
(1847–1917)
1860–1917Lady Flora Abney-Hastings
Gwendolen Constable-Maxwell, 12th Lady Herries of Terregles
Son of the preceding
16Bernard Marmaduke Fitzalan-Howard
(1908–1975)
1917–1975Lavinia StruttSon of the precedingEarl of Arundel
Earl of Surrey
Earl of Norfolk
Baron Maltravers
Lord Herries of Terregles
17Miles Francis Stapleton Fitzalan-Howard
(1915–2002)
1975-2002Anne Constable-MaxwellSecond cousin once removed of the precedingEarl of Arundel
Earl of Surrey
Earl of Norfolk
Baron Maltravers
Baron Beaumont
Baron Howard of Glossop
18Edward William Fitzalan-Howard
(b. 1956)
since 2002Georgina GoreSon of the preceding

The heir apparent is the Duke's eldest son, Henry Miles Fitzalan-Howard, styled Earl of Arundel (b. 1987).

Line of succession

Remainder

In 1660, the 23rd Earl of Arundel was restored to the Dukedom of Norfolk with remainder to:

  1. the heirs male of his body. (he never married)
  2. the heirs male of his father Henry Howard, the 22nd Earl. (the present line; through the fifth Duke's brother the Hon. Bernard)
  3. the heirs male of his grandfather the 21st Earl. (extinct in 1762)
  4. the heirs male of his great-grandfather the 20th Earl, eldest son of the fourth Duke. (he had none apart from the 21st Earl)
  5. the heirs male in the line of descent from the Earl of Suffolk, younger half-brother of the 20th Earl. (currently extant)
  6. the heirs male descended from Lord William Howard, younger half-brother of the 20th Earl: (both lines currently extant)
    1. the heirs male in the senior line of descent from Lord William Howard through his elder son Sir Philip Howard, grandfather of the first Earl of Carlisle.
    2. the heirs male in the junior line of descent from Lord William Howard through his second son Francis, ancestor of the Howards of Corby Castle, Cumberland, England

In the event all the currently extant lines of descent from the fourth Duke fail in the male line, the Dukedom of Norfolk and its subsidiary titles will become extinct; though there exists a currently extant branch of the Howard dynasty, the Earls of Effingham, in descent from the second Duke, their line was unaccountably omitted from the 1660 remainder. The Barony of Beaumont, however, will either fall into abeyance or descend through the female line, as its remainder provides for that eventuality.

Knights of the Garter

12th Duke of Norfolk shown wearing the star and sash of the Order of the Garter

Many of the Dukes of Norfolk have also been knights of the Order of the Garter. The following list is of those Dukes of Norfolk, along with their year of investiture, who were also Knights of the Order of the Garter across all creations of the title.

Family tree

Mowbray & Howard Family Tree: Dukes of Norfolk
King Edward I
1239–1327
r.1272–1327
Earl of Norfolk, 1312
Thomas of Brotherton,
1st Earl of Norfolk

(1300–1338)
Margaret,
Duchess of Norfolk
(for life)

2nd Css of Norfolk

(1320–1399)
John Segrave,
4th Baron Segrave

(1315–1353)
Elizabeth de Segrave,
5th Baroness Segrave
(1338–1368)
John de Mowbray,
4th Baron Mowbray

(1340–1368)
Earl of NottinghamDuke of Norfolk, 1397
John de Mowbray,
1st Earl of Nottingham

(1365–1383)
Thomas de Mowbray,
1st Duke of Norfolk

(c.1368–1399)
Banished, Dukedom forfeit
Duke of Norfolk, 1397
(restored 1425)
Sir Richard Howard
(1385–1436)
Lady Margaret
de Mowbray
(c.1388–1459)
Thomas de Mowbray,
4th Earl of Norfolk

(1385–1405)
John de Mowbray,
2nd Duke of Norfolk

(1392–1432)
Duke of Norfolk, 1483
John Howard,
1st Duke of Norfolk

(1425–1485)
Killed at Bosworth, titles forfeit
John de Mowbray,
3rd Duke of Norfolk

(1415–1461)
Duke of Norfolk, 1483
(restored 1514)
Thomas Howard,
2nd Duke of Norfolk

(1443–1524)
Lord High Treasurer
King Edward IV
1442–1483
r.1461–1470/
1471–1483
John de Mowbray,
4th Duke of Norfolk

(1444–1476)
Baron Howard
of Effingham
Duke of Norfolk, 1477
William Howard,
1st Baron Howard
of Effingham

(c.1510–1573)
Thomas Howard,
3rd Duke of Norfolk

(1473–1554)
Lord High Treasurer
Attainted 1547, restored 1553
m.(1)
Anne of York
Richard of Shrewsbury,
Duke of York
Duke of Norfolk

(1473–1483)
Anne de Mowbray,
8th Countess
of Norfolk

(1472–1481)
Earl of NottinghamViscount Howard of Bindon
Charles Howard,
1st Earl of Nottingham

(1536–1624)
Lord High Admiral
Henry Howard,
Earl of Surrey

(1517–1547)
Executed for treason
Thomas Howard,
1st Viscount
Howard of Bindon

(c.1520–1582)
Earl of EffinghamEarl of Northampton
Thomas Howard,
4th Duke of Norfolk

(1536–1572)
Executed for treason, titles forfeit
Henry Howard,
1st Earl of Northampton

(1540–1614)
First Lord of the Treasury
Earl of Suffolk
St. Philip Howard,
20th Earl of Arundel

(1557–1595)
Attainted 1589
Thomas Howard,
1st Earl of Suffolk

(1561–1626)
Admiral, Lord High Treasurer
Lord William Howard
(1563–1640)
Earl of Norfolk, 1644Earl of BerkshireBaron Howard of EscrickEarl of Carlisle
Thomas Howard,
21st Earl of Arundel,
1st Earl of Norfolk

(1585–1646)
Viscount Stafford
Henry Frederick Howard,
22nd Earl of Arundel,
2nd Earl of Norfolk

(1608–1652)
Bl. William Howard,
1st Viscount Stafford

(1614–1680)
Executed for treason
Earl of Stafford
Duke of Norfolk, 1483
(restored 1660)
Earl of Norwich
1672
Thomas Howard,
5th Duke of Norfolk

(1627–1677)
Henry Howard,
6th Duke of Norfolk

(1628–1684)
Cardinal Philip Howard
(1629–1694)
Hon. Charles Howard
(1630–1713)
Col. Bernard Howard
(1641–1717)
Henry Howard,
7th Duke of Norfolk

(1655–1701)
Lord Thomas Howard
(1662–1689)
Henry Charles Howard
(d. 1720)
Bernard Howard
(1674–1735)
Thomas Howard,
8th Duke of Norfolk

(1683–1732)
Edward Howard,
9th Duke of Norfolk

(1685–1777)
Charles Howard,
10th Duke of Norfolk

(1720–1786)
Henry Howard
(1713–1787)
Charles Howard,
11th Duke of Norfolk

(1746–1815)
Bernard Howard,
12th Duke of Norfolk

(1765–1842)
Henry Howard,
13th Duke of Norfolk

(1791–1856)
Baron Howard
of Penrith
Baron Howard of Glossop
Henry Fitzalan-Howard,
14th Duke of Norfolk

(1815–1860)
Edward Fitzalan-Howard,
1st Baron Howard of Glossop

(1818–1883)
Viscount FitzAlan of DerwentHenry Fitzalan-Howard,
15th Duke of Norfolk

(1847–1917)
Francis Fitzalan-Howard,
2nd Baron Howard of Glossop
(1859–1924)
Bernard Fitzalan-Howard,
16th Duke of Norfolk

(1908–1975)
Bernard Fitzalan-Howard,
3rd Baron Howard of Glossop

(1885–1972)
Miles Fitzalan-Howard,
17th Duke of Norfolk

(1915–2002)
Edward Fitzalan-Howard,
18th Duke of Norfolk

(b. 1956)

See also

References

  1. C. Given-Wilson, ‘Mowbray, Thomas (I), first duke of Norfolk (1366–1399)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  2. Brooke-Little, J.P., FSA (1978) [1950]. Boutell's Heraldry (Revised ed.). London: Frederick Warne LTD. p. 125. ISBN 0-7232-2096-4.
  3. http://www.castles-abbeys.co.uk/Framlingham-Castle.html
  4. "Bungay Suffolk Town Guide". Bungay-suffolk.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  5. "Arundel Castle". Arundel Castle. Archived from the original on 20 June 2010. Retrieved 16 November 2010.

Further reading

  • Robinson, John Martin. The Dukes of Norfolk: A Quincentennial History. Oxford University Press, 1982.
  • Cracroft's Peerage page
  • European Heraldry page
  • The River Adur (land ownership, Norfolk Bridge, etc.)
  •  Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Catholic Dukes of Norfolk". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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