Baron St John of Basing
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The title Baron St John de/of Basing was created twice in the Peerage of England.
On 29 December 1299 John St John was summoned to parliament. On the death of the third baron the barony fell into abeyance in 1347. Only fourteen years later, the abeyance was terminated in favour of Isabel Poynings, née St John, in whose right Lucas de Poynings, her husband, was summoned. And at the death of the fifth baron, who was the son-in-law of the third Earl of March, the barony fell into abeyance again.
The second creation was in 1539 for William Paulet, who was later created Earl of Wiltshire and Marquess of Winchester, with which titles the barony has remained united, although the Marquesses of Winchester were also Dukes of Bolton from 1689 to 1794, when the dukedom became extinct.
[edit] Barons St John de Basing (1299)
- John St John, 1st Baron St John (d. 1329)
- Hugh St John, 2nd Baron St John (d. 1337)
- Edmund St John, 3rd Baron St John (d. 1347) (abeyant 1347)
- Isabel St John, 4th Baroness St John (d. 1393) (terminated 1361)
- Lucas de Poynings (d. c.1385) (summoned to parliament in her right)
- Thomas Poynings, 5th Baron St John (d. 1429) (abeyant 1429)
[edit] Barons St John of Basing (1539)
- William Paulet, 1st Baron St John of Basing (later created Earl of Wiltshire and Marquess of Winchester)
- for further barons see Marquess of Winchester
[edit] References
This page incorporates information from Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page.