WALTER DE COLEVILLE, son and heir of Roger (not Robert) DE C., of Bytham Castle, co. Lincoln, by Beatrice, his wife (living 25 October 1265). He took part in Simon de -Montfort's rebellion, and was summoned to Parliament 24 December 1264, by writ directed Waltero de Colevilla, which writ however, having issued in rebellion, should not create a peerage dignity. He was taken prisoner at Kenilworth in 1264, by Prince Edward, and his lands forfeited, but they were redeemed, and he was possessed of them at his death.
He married Isabel or Elizabeth (e). He died 1277, before 2 September, when the writ for his Ing. p. m. is dated. [Complete Peerage III:374, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
(e) Aubourn, Counthorpe, and other of his manors, co. Lincoln, were committed, 25 Oct 1265, to Isabel late (sic) the wife of Walter de Coleville; where also, 20 Feb 1265/6, is a grant of lands in Aubourn to Elizabeth, wife of Walter de Colveville, the King's enemy who is in prison. Elizabeth and Isabel are her merely different forms of the same name, and the word "late" in the first passage is an error. V.G.