Baron Furnivall

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Baron Furnivall is an ancient title in the Peerage of England. It was originally created (by writ) when Thomas de Furnivall was summoned to the Model Parliament of 1295 as Lord Furnivall. The barony later passed to Thomas Nevill, who had married Joan de Furnivall, and was summoned to parliament in her right. His daughter, Maud de Neville, married John Talbot, who was also summoned to parliament in her right. He was later created Earl of Shrewsbury. On the death of the seventh earl in 1616, the barony fell into abeyance. The abeyance was terminated in favour of Alathea Howard in 1651 and passed through her to the Dukes of Norfolk. On the death of the ninth Duke in 1777, the barony again fell into abeyance. In 1913 the abeyance was terminated again in favour of Mary Frances Katherine Dent (née Petre), daughter of Bernard Henry Philip Petre, 14th Baron Petre. Through her father she was a great-great-great-granddaughter of the ninth Baron Petre and his first wife Anne Howard, niece of Edward Howard, 9th Duke of Norfolk and 18th Baron Furnivall, who became co-heir to the Barony on her uncle's death in 1777. On Lady Furnivall's death in 1968 the barony fell into abeyance for the third time.

[edit] Barons Furnivall (1295)

Co-heiresses: The Hon. Rosamond Dent and The Hon. Mrs. Bence, daughters of the 19th Baroness.

As Rosamond Dent is a nun, without issue, the barony will in due course automatically come out of abeyance either to one of the co-heiresses and then to Walton Francis Petre Hornsby (b 1958) the eldest son of The Hon. Mrs. Bence

[edit] See also