He has/had a relationship with Joan de Kilpeck.
Child(ren):
Aboutedit | history
Philip de Marmion was the son of Robert de Marmion and Juliana de Vassi.1 He was the last Marmion lord of Tamworth Castle
Philip de Marmion married firstly Joan de Kilpec, daughter of Hugh de Kilpec, circa 1239.2 On 24 January 1249 there is recorded a notification that the king has inspected a charter of King Henry, his grandfather, granting to Robert Marmion, great-grandfather of Philip Marmion, warren in all his lands in co. Warwick and especially in Tameworth, and a charter of King Henry, the king's uncle, granting to the said Robert Warren in all his land of Lindsey, both which charters the king has ratified.3
On 20 February 1254 at Bazas, Gironde, a charter was granted by the king to Philip Marmiun and his heirs [to hold] a weekly market on Monday at his manor of Pulrebach, co. Salop, and a three days' fair on the eve, the day, the morrow of St. Edith the Virgin [25th April].4
Philip de Marmion and Joan de Kilpec were living on 8 July 1258 when they reached agreement with William and Isabella "The manor of Kilpek, a carucate of land in Tobinton, and advowson of the Church of Nortbery (Norbury). Philip and Joan acknowledge the above to be the purparty of Isabella, of the inheritance of Hugh de Kilpec, father of Joan and Isabella; and for this acknowledgment Philip and Joan quit-claim to William and Isabella and heirs of Isabella all their right in the manor of Rokele; and William and Isabella concede to Philip and Joan the manors of Fernts, Bradeford, Kastres, Nortbery, Pulrebach, and advowsons of the same, except the advowson of Nortbery, as the reasonable purparty of Joan."5 On 8 May 1259 confirmation of a lease by Phlip Marmiun to the prior and convent of Stodleg' of his manors of Midelton and Scryveleby, with his mill of Thameworth, for two years from the Invention of the Holy Cross 43 Henry III [3 May 1259].6
Philip de Marmion married secondly Mary (Unknown).7
Philip de Marmion died before 5 December 1291 when the escheator was ordered to take his lands into the King's hands.8
Notes
from Wilipedia
Marmion's eldest son Robert the Elder married Juliana de Vassy, and had a son, Philip, died 1291. This Philip was High Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire in 1249, and of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1261. He served in Poitou in 1254, and was imprisoned when on his way home through France at Pons. He was one of the sureties for the king in December 1263, and fighting for him at Lewes, on 14 May 1264, was there taken prisoner. Philip Marmion married, first, Jane, daughter of Hugh de Kilpeck, by whom be had two daughters, Jane and Mazera; and secondly, Mary, by whom he had another daughter Jane, who married Thomas de Ludlow, and was by him grandmother of Margaret de Ludlow. Tamworth passed to Jane, daughter of Mazera Marmion, and wife of Baldwin de Freville, and Scrivelsby eventually passed with Margaret de Ludlow to Sir John Dymoke, in whose family it has since remained.
from http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ancestorsearch&id=I14793
The death of Philip Marmion in 1291 began the chain of events which led to the acquisition of the college of St. Edith, Tamworth, Staffs, by the Crown.
Philip left four heirs: three daughters:
Joan I, who had married William de Morteyn. She dsp before 13.08.1295.
Maud, the wife of Ralph Butler.
Joan II, a minor who later married first Thomas de Ludlow and secondly Henry Hillary.
and a grand-daughter: another Joan, wife of Alexander de Freville and child of Philip's second daughter, Mazera, who had predeceased her father.
sources
"Marmion" in Early Yorkshire Families. Charles Clay, Diana E. Greenway. Cambridge University Press, Apr 18, 2013 - History - 176 pages. Page 58
Links
http://www.sewellgenealogy.com/p317.htm#i18533
The Village of Scriven and Slingsby Family History
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