Name Suffix:<NSFX> 3rd Lord Of Tamworth
Robert de Marmyon, eldest son of Robert de Marmyon by his 2nd wife, 3rd feudal Lord of Tamworth, had the lordships of Witringham, and Coningsby, co. Lincoln; Dueinton, co. Gloucester; and Berwick, co. Suffolk, by especial grant of his father, and in the 16th King John [1215], he gave to the king 350 marks and five palfreys for license to marry Amice, the dau. of Jerneygan Fitz-Hugh. After which, being in arms with the rebellious barons, he obtained letters of safe conducts for coming in to the king to make his peace. He again, however, took up arms in the baronial cause in the ensuing reign, along with his brother William, and appears to have held out to the last. This Robert acquired a large accession of landed property with his wife, Alice Fitz-Hugh, and was s. at his decease by his son, William. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 356, Marmyon, or Marmion, Barons Marmyon of Wetrington, co. Lincoln]