John de Baalun

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John de Baalun or Balun (died 1235), was a justice itinerant and baron.

Baalun possessed estates in Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, and Wiltshire, and was probably descended from one Hameline de Baalun (d. 1104), who came over with Robert, Count of Mortain, half-brother to William the Conqueror.[1] This is probably not the same man who built the castle of Abergavenny, and died circa 1090.[2][3] His father was Reginald de Balun, and in 1207 John de Balun paid a fine for the lands of Hameline, on behalf of his father, to Geoffrey Fitz-Ace and Agnes, his wife, and 100 marks and a palfrey to the king.[2]

In 12 John (1210–11) Balun accompanied the king to Ireland, but at the end of John's reign lost his lands for taking part in the barons' attack upon the king. On the accession of Henry III he was restored on returning to his allegiance, and in 9 Henry III (1224–5) was appointed a justice itinerant for Gloucestershire along with Matthew de Pateshull, archdeacon of Norfolk, Richard de Veym, and the abbot of Tewkesbury. He died in 1235. His son John paid 100l. for his relief, and did homage for his inheritance, and, dying in 1274, was succeeded by another of John's sons, Walter. John de Baalun was at the battle of Evesham 1265, having married Auda, sister and heir of William Paganell of Bohanton.[4]

A justice itinerant who was appointed 9 Henry III and died in the following year (1226) bore the name of Roger de Baalun or Balun, and was probably a son or grandson of Wynebald de Balun of Eastington Manor, in Gloucestershire, brother of Hameline de Balun.

References

  1. Devonshire Wills. According to the source, the Emmeline de Balun who married one Reginald was probably a sister of a person named Emma of Gloucester. (The source probably meant the mother of Brien FitzCount who is called Lucie, Lucy or in some sources, Emmal; however some online genealogies claim that Emma and Bertha de Ballon both married the father of Miles of Gloucester.)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Studies in peerage and family history, John Round, pp. 181-215, (Westminster 1901).
  3. A history of Wales from the earliest times to the Edwardian conquest, Vol 2, pp. 442-4, John Edward Lloyd, (London 1911).
  4. The historic peerage of England, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas & William Courthope, p. 37-8, (London 1857).
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