Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Birth25 Mar 1414
Death22 May 1455, Slain at first battle of St Albans
BurialLady chapel of St Albans abbey church
General8th baron.
FatherJohn Clifford Lord Clifford (ca1390-1421)
MotherElizabeth Percy (-1437)
Notes for Thomas Clifford Lord Clifford
See the entry for Christopher Ferrand of Bingley, father of Richard Ferrand who d. 1641.
DNB Main notes for Thomas Clifford Lord Clifford
Clifford, Thomas de, eighth Baron Clifford 1414-1455

Name: Clifford, Thomas de
Title: eighth Baron Clifford
Dates: 1414-1455
Active Date: 1454
Gender: Male

Place of
    Death
: St. Albans
    Burial: St. Albans (1455), where his body was afterwards buried in the Virgin's chapel
Spouse: A daughter of Thomas, lord Dacres
Sources: Dugdale's Baronage, i. 342-3; Nicolas's Historic Peerage, ed...
Contributor: T. A. A. [Thomas Andrew Archer]

Article
Clifford, Thomas de, eighth Baron Clifford 1414-1455, was the son of John, seventh baron Clifford, by his wife Elizabeth, who, according to Dugdale, was the daughter of Harry Hotspur (Baronage, i. 342; Nicolas's Acts of Privy Council, iii. 36). He was born on 25 March 1414, and succeeded to his father's estates on 13 March 1422 (10 Hen. V, sic), before he was quite eight years old (Dugdale). He appears to have been under the guardianship of his mother and grandmother, to whom the right of ‘maritagium’ was granted in 1423 (Privy Council Acts, iii. 36). His summons to parliament dates from December 1436 (Report on Dignity of a Peer, iii. 896). In 13 Hen. VI (1434-5) he was joined in commission with the Earl of Northumberland to array the northern counties against the Scots, who then threatened Berwick, and next year had livery of his lands on making proof of his age (Dugdale). Some fifteen years later (1449) he appears as a conservator of the truce then being arranged between England and Scotland, and occupied a similar position in 1451 (Rymer, xi. 253, 299). In 1452 he was called upon to muster men and ships from the northern counties for the relief of Calais; and again in 1454. About the same time he was sheriff of Westmoreland, and in this capacity was bidden to lend assistance to the Duke of York (Privy Council Acts, vi. 119, 177). Several years previously (1435) his name occurs as being a member of the Duke of Bedford's retinue in France (William Worcester), and again (c. 1439) as defending Pontoise against the French king (Polydore Vergil). He was slain in the battle of St. Albans (1455), where his body was afterwards buried in the Virgin's chapel by the abbot (Register of J. Whethamstede, i. 176). His wife, according to Dugdale, was a daughter of Thomas, lord Dacres of Gillesland; by her he had four sons/John, his successor [q.v.]; Sir Roger Clifford; Sir Thomas Clifford (one of Henry VIII's councillors); and Robert Clifford, who was concerned in Perkin Warbeck's rebellion (Dugdale). He had also five daughters.

Sources
Dugdale's Baronage, i. 342-3; Nicolas's Historic Peerage, ed. Courthope, p. 112; Rymer's Federa, xi; Nicolas's Acts and Proceedings of the Privy Council, vols. iii. iv. vi.; Registrum Johannis Whethamstede, ed. Riley (Rolls Series), i. 176, 393; Polydore Vergil, ed. Ellis (Camden Society), ii. 65; Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner (Arber's Reprints), i. 264, &c.

Contributor: T. A. A.

published  1887
Last Modified 22 Jan 2022Created 14 May 2022 by Tim Powys-Lybbe
Re-created by Tim Powys-Lybbe on 14 May 20220