chamberlainship การใช้
- The Fitzgerald chamberlainship passed by marriage to the Redvers Earls of Devon.
- In that year, the first Earl of Lindsey inherited the Great Chamberlainship.
- He was the last to hold the Lord Great Chamberlainship as an undivided office.
- The holder of the Earldom of Ancaster was the senior holder of the Lord Great Chamberlainship.
- He inherited a fraction of the Lord Great Chamberlainship of England, succeeded by his son, William.
- The Lord Great Chamberlainship was inherited by his five daughters as co-heiresses ( 5 % each ).
- Thereafter, the barony of Willoughby de Eresby has been associated with the senior share of the Lord Great Chamberlainship.
- As of 2004, only one-fourth of the Lord Great Chamberlainship is possessed by the holder of the barony.
- His son, King George V, Lord Lincolnshire held also the Lord Great Chamberlainship, 25 % of which he inherited from his mother.
- He forfeited it to the Crown on her death in 1293, after which time the office-holders of this chamberlainship were appointed by patent.
- Among the offices the family held besides the master chamberlainship were the forestership of Essex, and they founded the Essex religious houses of Colne Priory, Hatfield Broad Oak Priory, Castle Hedingham Priory.
- The Maudit chamberlainship descended to the Beauchamp Earls of Warwick and passed into the hands of the Crown in 1483 upon the accession of Richard III, son-in-law of the 16th Earl.
- The various individuals who hold fractions of the Lord Great Chamberlainship are technically each " Joint Hereditary Lord Great Chamberlain ", and the right to exercise the office for a given reign rotates proportionately to the fraction of the office held.
- In 1275 Isabel de Forz, eldest daughter of Baldwin de Redvers, 6th Earl of Devon, and 8th Countess of Devon in her own right, alienated her chamberlainship-in-fee to her steward, the moneylender Adam de Stratton.