Online Encyclopedia

DYMOKE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 756 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DYMOKE  , the name of an

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English
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family holding the office of king's champion . The functions of the champion were to ride into Westminster Hall at the coronation banquet, and challenge all corners to impugn the king's title (see CHAMPION) . The earliest record of the ceremony at the coronation of an English king
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dates from the accession of Richard II . On this occasion the champion was
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Sir John Dymoke (d . 1381), who held the
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manor of Scrivelsby,
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Lincolnshire, in right of his wife Margaret, granddaughter of
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Joan Ludlow, who was the daughter and co-heiress of Philip Marmion, last Baron Marmion . The Marmions claimed descent from the lords of Fontenay, hereditary champions of the dukes of
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Normandy, and held the castle of
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Tamworth, Leicestershire, and the manor of Scrivelsby, Lincoln-
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shire . The right to the championship was disputed with the Dymoke family by Sir Baldwin de Freville, lord of Tamworth, who was descended from an elder daughter of Philip Marmion . The court of claims eventually decided in favour of the owners of Scrivelsby on the ground that Scrivelsby was held in
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grand
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serjeanty, that is, that its tenure was dependent on, rendering a
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special service, in this case the championship . Sir Thomas Dymoke (1428?-1471) joined a Lancastrian rising in 1469, and, with his
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brother-in-law Richard, Lord
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Willoughby and Welles, was beheaded in 1471 by order of
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Edward IV. after he had been induced to leave sanctuary on a promise of
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personal safety . The estates were restored to his son Sir Robert Dymoke (d . 1546), champion at the coronations of Richard III., Henry VII. and Henry VIII., who distinguished himself at the siege of Tournai and became treasurer of the
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kingdom . His descendants acted as champions at successive coronations .

Lewis Dymoke (d . 182o) put in an unsuccessful claim before the House of Lords for the
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barony of Marmion . His
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nephew Henry (18oI-1865) was champion at the coronation of George IV . He was accompanied on that occasion by the duke of Wellington and Lord Howard of Effingham . Henry Dymoke was created a
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baronet; he was succeeded by his brother John, rector of Scrivelsby (1804-1873), whose son Henry Lionel died without issue in 1875, when the baronetcy became
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extinct, the estate passing to a collateral branch of the family . After the coronation of George IV. the ceremony was allowed to lapse, but at the coronation of King Edward VII . H . S . Dymoke
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bore the standard of England in Westminster Abbey .

End of Article: DYMOKE
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