Baron Berkeley
The title of Baron Berkeley is a hereditary peerage in the Peerage of England, created by writ of summons on 20 October 1421 for James de Berkeley (c. 1394–1463), a member of the ancient Berkeley family of Gloucestershire.[1] The title traces its origins to the feudal barony of Berkeley, established in the mid-12th century when King Henry II granted lands including Berkeley Castle and manor to Robert FitzHarding (c. 1095–1170), a wealthy Bristol merchant of Anglo-Saxon descent who rose to prominence as a supporter of the Angevins.[2] This feudal barony, confirmed to FitzHarding's heirs, formed the basis of the family's enduring noble status, with the Berkeleys maintaining possession of Berkeley Castle—built in the 12th century and expanded over centuries—continuously for nearly 900 years, making the Berkeleys one of five families in England able to trace their male-line descent to Saxon times.[3] The peerage title has a complex history marked by abeyances, legal disputes, and elevations to higher ranks. An earlier summons to Parliament in 1295 for Thomas de Berkeley (1245–1321) is sometimes considered a first creation, but it lapsed due to the family's attainder and later controversies; the 1421 writ established the enduring second creation.[1] The barony's succession became separated from the earldom in 1882, allowing it to pass through the female line. Notable holders include William de Berkeley, 2nd Baron (1426–1492), who was successively created Viscount Berkeley (1481) and Earl of Nottingham (1483) before those titles expired, and his descendant George Berkeley, 9th Baron (1628–1698), elevated as 1st Earl of Berkeley in 1679, with the earldom lasting until 1942.[4] The barony was held by female heirs thereafter, including Eva Mary Foley, 16th Baroness (1875–1964), who succeeded in 1899; it fell into abeyance on her death in 1964 and was revived in 1967 for Mary Lalle Foley-Berkeley, 17th Baroness (1905–1992).[1] Today, the title is held by Anthony FitzHardinge Gueterbock, 18th Baron Berkeley (b. 1939), who succeeded his mother in 1992 and also sits in the House of Lords as a life peer under the title Baron Gueterbock (created 2000).[4] A businessman and transport advocate, he chairs the Rail Freight Group and was appointed OBE in 1989 for services to transport; the heir apparent is his elder son, Hon. Thomas FitzHardinge Gueterbock (b. 1969).[4] The Berkeley family has played significant roles in English history, from military service in the Wars of the Roses and Tudor era to patronage of arts and science, exemplified by the 5th Earl's contributions to agriculture and the Enlightenment.[1]Feudal Origins
Establishment of the Feudal Barony
The feudal barony of Berkeley was established through a grant by King Henry II to Robert FitzHarding, a prominent Bristol burgess, conveying the castle, manor, and associated lands in Gloucestershire around 1153–1155. This conferral occurred shortly before or upon Henry's accession to the throne in 1154, rewarding FitzHarding for his steadfast support of the Angevin cause during the Anarchy, the protracted civil war (1135–1153) between King Stephen and Empress Matilda. The previous holder, Roger de Berkeley, had sided with Stephen and was consequently dispossessed, allowing Henry to redistribute the strategic estate to a loyal ally who had provided both military and financial aid.[5] Robert FitzHarding (c. 1095–1170), the founder of the Berkeley family line, rose from a background as a wealthy merchant and civic leader in Bristol, where he served as provost or reeve and amassed estates in Gloucestershire, Wiltshire, and Warwickshire. Of Anglo-Saxon descent, he was the second son of Harding, son of Eadnoth the Staller, a high-ranking Anglo-Saxon official under Edward the Confessor, which positioned him as a rare non-Norman beneficiary of royal favor in the post-Conquest era. Although later traditions occasionally linked his lineage to Danish nobility through Eadnoth's possible Scandinavian ties, primary records emphasize his English roots and mercantile success as key to his elevation. The barony's feudal structure imposed standard obligations under English tenure, including knight-service to the crown, with Robert certifying in 1166 that he owed the service of five knights for the Berkeley holdings. These duties encompassed maintaining the castle as a defensive stronghold, providing military support when summoned, and rendering other aids such as scutage payments in lieu of personal service. The estate was held in capite from the Honour of Gloucester, integrating it into the broader network of marcher lordships that buffered England from Welsh incursions. Early documentation of the barony survives in royal and private charters, notably a 1153–1154 writ from Henry II authorizing FitzHarding to rebuild and fortify Berkeley Castle, and FitzHarding's own grants to religious houses like St. Augustine's Abbey, which he founded c. 1140 and whose church was dedicated on 11 April 1148. These records underscore the barony's creation as a stabilizing measure in the aftermath of the Anarchy, securing loyalty in the volatile Welsh marches through the enfeoffment of a capable administrator with deep local ties.[6][7]Early Lords of Berkeley
Robert FitzHarding (d. c. 1170), the son of a prominent Bristol merchant named Harding, rose to prominence as a wealthy burgess and supporter of Empress Matilda during the Anarchy. In recognition of his loyalty, Henry II granted him the manor and honor of Berkeley in 1153, following the attainder of Roger de Berkeley for backing King Stephen, thereby establishing Robert as the first feudal baron of Berkeley. This grant was confirmed in a settlement that awarded Roger the manor of Dursley in exchange, resolving a contentious inheritance dispute over the estates. Robert also provided military service to Henry II, contributing to the stabilization of the king's realm in the west of England. He married Eve (parentage uncertain), which strengthened ties to Norman interests. A devout benefactor, Robert founded St Augustine's Abbey in Bristol c. 1140, endowing it generously with manors such as Billeswick and Almondsbury, and the abbey church was dedicated on 11 April 1148 by several bishops; he later became a canon there and was buried in the abbey upon his death around 1170.[7] Robert's eldest son, Maurice FitzRobert (d. 1190), succeeded as the second feudal baron of Berkeley, inheriting the core estates and continuing the family's consolidation of power in Gloucestershire. Maurice faced ongoing tensions from the earlier settlement with the de Berkeley line, but he expanded family holdings through royal favor, receiving a grant of the manor of Dursley—previously allocated to Roger de Berkeley—as part of efforts to secure the barony's boundaries. Maurice's tenure emphasized feudal obligations, including knight service, and he forged early alliances with neighboring marcher lords to protect the barony's strategic position near the Welsh borders. Thomas de Berkeley (d. 1243), Maurice's son and the third feudal baron, further solidified the family's status by obtaining livery of Berkeley Castle in 1222, marking his full assumption of the inheritance after a period of royal wardship. He married Joan de Somery, daughter of Ralph de Somery and Margaret Marshal, around 1217, a union that linked the Berkeleys to influential families and enhanced their political leverage. Thomas acquired additional lands through strategic purchases and exchanges, bolstering the barony's economic base in the Severn valley. He provided military service in the Welsh wars under Henry III, participating in campaigns during the 1220s and 1230s to suppress border unrest, which underscored the Berkeleys' role as key defenders of the realm's western frontiers. These early lords' efforts in land acquisition and marital alliances laid the groundwork for the barony's transition toward summons by writ in the late 13th century.[8]The Barony by Writ
First Creation (1295–1417)
The first creation of the Barony of Berkeley by writ occurred on 24 June 1295, when Thomas de Berkeley (c. 1245–1321), previously a feudal baron, was summoned to Parliament as "Thome de Berkelegh", thereby becoming the 1st Baron Berkeley in the Peerage of England.[9] This summoning elevated the family's existing feudal title to a parliamentary peerage, reflecting Thomas's loyal service to King Edward I, including his participation in the Scottish wars at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298 and the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, as well as diplomatic missions to France in 1296 and to the Pope in 1307.[9] Thomas married Joan de Ferrers (d. 1309/10), daughter of William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby, which strengthened the family's alliances and lands; they had several children, including sons Maurice, Thomas, John, and James.[9] Upon Thomas's death in 1321, the barony passed to his eldest son, Maurice de Berkeley (c. 1281–1326), who became the 2nd Baron Berkeley and is known by the epithet "the Magnanimous", coined by John Smyth of Nibley in his family history.[9][10] Maurice had been summoned to Parliament as early as 16 August 1308 during his father's lifetime and continued military service in the Scottish wars, notably at the Siege of Caerlaverock in 1300, though he faced imprisonment in 1322 for supporting Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, in his rebellion against Edward II.[9] He married firstly Eve la Zouche (d. 1314) and secondly Isabel de Beauchamp, producing sons including Thomas and Maurice, as well as daughters; the barony devolved to his son Thomas upon his death in 1326.[9] The 3rd Baron, Thomas de Berkeley (c. 1296–1361), succeeded in 1326 and served prominently in the early phases of the Hundred Years' War, including as custodian of the deposed Edward II in 1327 and fighting at the Battle of Crécy in 1346 under Edward III.[9] He married firstly Margaret de Mortimer (d. 1337), daughter of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March, and secondly Katherine le Veel (d. 1385), with issue including Maurice and daughters Joan and John; the barony then passed to his son Maurice de Berkeley (c. 1330–1368), the 4th Baron.[9] The 4th Baron continued the family's martial tradition, campaigning in Gascony in 1355 and participating in the Battle of Poitiers in 1356, where he was captured but later ransomed; he married Elizabeth le Despencer (d. 1389), daughter of Edward le Despencer, 1st Baron le Despencer, and they had sons Thomas, James, John, and Maurice.[9] The barony's succession culminated with Thomas de Berkeley (1352/3–1417), the 5th Baron, who inherited in 1368 and exemplified the family's role in the Hundred Years' War through extensive service in France, Spain, Brittany, and Scotland, including as Admiral of the South and West in 1403 and a Privy Councillor.[9] Known as "the Magnificent" in family tradition recorded by Smyth, he married Margaret de Lisle (d. 1391/2), daughter of Warin de Lisle, Lord Lisle, but died without male issue on 13 July 1417, leaving only daughters, which led to the barony's presumed extinction for want of legitimate male heirs, though it briefly passed to his daughter Elizabeth as suo jure Baroness before falling into abeyance upon her death in 1422.[9][10] The epithets for these barons, including those for the 2nd and 5th, were posthumously assigned by Smyth based on their reputed characteristics and achievements as documented in Berkeley family records.[10] The barony was revived in a second creation by writ in 1421 to James Berkeley, a collateral heir.[9]Second Creation (1421–present)
The second creation of the Barony of Berkeley occurred by writ of summons dated 20 October 1421, issued to James de Berkeley, the nephew and heir male of the last baron of the first creation, thereby renewing the title in the male line and confirming its hereditary nature through parliamentary summons to heirs general, with close ties to the tenure of Berkeley Castle and associated lands.[1][11] This writ established the barony's continuity, distinguishing it from feudal tenure while preserving the family's ancestral seat at Berkeley Castle in Gloucestershire, which remained central to inheritance claims and legal validations throughout the period.[1] James de Berkeley (c. 1394–1463), styled "the Just," became the 1st Baron Berkeley of the second creation upon his summons to Parliament from 1421 to 1461.[11] He was the son of Sir James Berkeley of Raglan and Elizabeth Bluet, whom he married as his first wife, and inherited the family estates after a protracted legal dispute resolved in his favor.[1] During the Wars of the Roses, James maintained a position of relative neutrality but supported the Lancastrian cause indirectly through alliances, including service as a knight from 1426 and involvement in regional conflicts tied to the family's Lisle inheritance claims.[1] He died in November 1463, leaving the title to his son.[11] The succession continued through several key holders in the late 15th and 16th centuries, emphasizing the barony's stability amid Tudor reforms. William de Berkeley (c. 1426–1492), 2nd Baron, succeeded his father and actively defended family lands, notably leading forces at the Battle of Nibley Green in 1470 against the Talbot claims, marking one of the last private battles in England.[1] He was elevated temporarily to higher ranks under Richard III and Henry VII but died without surviving male issue, leading to a brief entail of the estates to the Crown until 1553.[11] Maurice de Berkeley (c. 1435–1506), 3rd Baron, his brother, recovered alienated properties and served as a Knight of the Body to Edward IV.[1] Maurice's son, another Maurice de Berkeley (1467–1523), 4th Baron, participated in campaigns in France in 1513 and 1523 but left no legitimate heirs, passing the title to his uncle.[11] Thomas de Berkeley (1472–1532/3), 5th Baron, exemplified the barony's adaptation to the Henrician era, serving as Constable of Berkeley Castle and fighting at the Battle of Flodden in 1513.[1] The Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII significantly impacted the Berkeleys, as the family acquired former church lands, including portions of dissolved religious houses in Gloucestershire, bolstering their estates despite losses in advowsons and presentations.[1] His son, Thomas de Berkeley (1505–1534), 6th Baron, was knighted at Anne Boleyn's coronation in 1533 and also held the constableship of the castle.[11] By the late 16th and early 17th centuries, the barony maintained its prominence through loyal service. Henry de Berkeley (1534–1613), 7th Baron, succeeded to the full estates in 1553 after their reversion from the Crown and was summoned to Parliament from 1558 to 1606, serving as Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire from 1603.[11] His grandson, George de Berkeley (1601–1658), 8th Baron, inherited in 1613 and supported the Royalist cause during the English Civil War, resulting in repeated plundering of Berkeley Castle by Parliamentarian forces between 1644 and 1646.[1] The title's hereditary status was repeatedly affirmed through writs and entailments linked to the castle's baronial tenure, ensuring male-line descent until later developments, including the family's attainment of the Earldom of Berkeley in 1679.[11][1] The barony continued in the Berkeley family, merging with the Earldom of Berkeley upon the posthumous creation of George, 8th Baron, as 1st Earl in 1679. It remained subsumed within the earldom until the death of the 8th Earl (17th Baron) in 1942 without male heirs, causing abeyance. The barony was revived from abeyance in 1967 and is currently held by the 18th Baron; further details on higher titles, abeyances, and the modern succession are covered in subsequent sections.| Baron | Lifespan | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| James (1st) | c. 1394–1463 | Summoned 1421; Wars of the Roses involvement; m. Elizabeth Bluet. |
| William (2nd) | c. 1426–1492 | Battle of Nibley Green (1470); temporary higher titles. |
| Maurice (3rd) | c. 1435–1506 | Knight of the Body to Edward IV; land recovery. |
| Maurice (4th) | 1467–1523 | French campaigns (1513, 1523); no heirs. |
| Thomas (5th) | 1472–1532/3 | Flodden (1513); Dissolution acquisitions. |
| Thomas (6th) | 1505–1534 | Knighted 1533; castle constable. |
| Henry (7th) | 1534–1613 | Estates reversion 1553; Lord Lieutenant. |
| George (8th) | 1601–1658 | Royalist in Civil War; castle plundered. |
Higher Titles in the Berkeley Family
Earldom of Berkeley (1679–1942)
The Earldom of Berkeley was created on 11 September 1679 by letters patent for George Berkeley, 9th Baron Berkeley (c. 1627–1698), an English merchant, politician, and peer who had served as a Member of Parliament for Gloucestershire from 1654 to 1658 and later as Governor of the Levant Company from 1673 to 1696. He was also appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1678 and Master of Trinity House in 1681–1682, roles that underscored his influence in trade and maritime affairs. Upon his death on 14 October 1698, the earldom passed to his son Charles Berkeley (1649–1710), who succeeded as 2nd Earl and served as Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire from 1694 until his death, as well as envoy to Madrid in 1689.[12] Charles's son, James Berkeley (c. 1679–1736), became the 3rd Earl in 1710 and pursued a distinguished naval career, rising from captain in the Royal Navy in 1701 to Vice-Admiral of Great Britain by 1717–1736; he also held the position of First Lord of the Admiralty from 1717 to 1727 and was invested as a Knight of the Garter in 1718.[12] The title then devolved to James's son Augustus Berkeley (1716–1755), the 4th Earl, who acted as Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire and was appointed a Knight of the Thistle in 1741. Augustus's son, Frederick Augustus Berkeley (1745–1810), succeeded as 5th Earl in 1755 and served similarly as Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire, but his tenure was overshadowed by a major legitimacy controversy arising from his 1785 marriage to Mary Cole at Berkeley Castle, which lacked sufficient public documentation and was not registered until 1796.[12] The House of Lords Committee for Privileges ruled in 1811 that the marriage was invalid for peerage purposes, rendering the couple's first six children illegitimate and causing the earldom to fall dormant upon Frederick's death in 1810, as no undisputed heir could claim it. De jure, the title passed to the eldest surviving son from the disputed marriage, Thomas Moreton FitzHardinge Berkeley (1796–1881), who never formally claimed it or took his seat in the House of Lords, reportedly to honor his mother's wishes and avoid further scandal; he was known for an extravagant lifestyle centered on fox hunting, horse breeding at Berkeley Castle, and estate management, including disputes with siblings over property like the manor of Mangotsfield.[13] Upon Thomas's death in 1881, the de jure succession went to his nephew George Lennox Rawdon Berkeley (1827–1888), son of his brother George Henry Frederick Berkeley, as the 7th Earl. After George Lennox's death in 1888 without issue, his son Randal's claim was validated by the Committee for Privileges in 1891, which accepted proof of the 1785 marriage, retroactively legitimizing all the children of Frederick Augustus and Mary; Randal thereby succeeded as 8th Earl.[12][14] Randal Mowbray Thomas Berkeley (1865–1942) was a physical chemist elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1907, focused on scientific pursuits and estate duties but died unmarried and without issue on 15 January 1942, causing the earldom and associated Viscountcy of Dursley to become extinct.[12] The Barony of Berkeley, held by writ, continued in a separate female line after the earldom's extinction.[12]Other Associated Titles
In addition to the primary barony and the earldom held by the direct line, several other titles were associated with members of the Berkeley family, often granted as rewards for political allegiance or service but proving short-lived due to lack of heirs or political changes. One notable example is the viscountcy created for William de Berkeley, 2nd Baron Berkeley (by writ), on 21 April 1481 by King Edward IV, elevating him to Viscount Berkeley in recognition of his support during the Wars of the Roses. This title, along with the associated Irish viscountcy of Catherlough granted between 1481 and 1485, became extinct upon William's death on 14 February 1492 without surviving male issue.[1][15] Further advancements followed under subsequent monarchs. In 1483, King Richard III created William Earl of Nottingham on 28 June, honoring his loyalty and his claim as coheir to the Mowbray estates through his mother, Isabel Mowbray; this earldom also lapsed with his death in 1492. Under King Henry VII, William received the office of Earl Marshal for life on 19 February 1485/86 and was elevated to Marquess of Berkeley on 28 January 1488/89, a marquessate that reflected his continued service but similarly extinguished without heirs in 1492, reverting the family to the baronial dignity held by his brother Maurice.[1][15] In a separate branch of the family, descending from Sir Maurice Berkeley (d. 1581), a cadet line produced the title Baron Berkeley of Stratton, created in 1658 for John Berkeley (1602–1678) in the Peerage of England for his Royalist service during the Civil War; this barony passed to his son Charles Berkeley, 2nd Baron (1662–1681), who died young without issue, leading to its succession through siblings but no elevation to an earldom such as Nottingham in that line. More recently, in the direct baronial line, Anthony Fitzhardinge Gueterbock, 18th Baron Berkeley (b. 1939), was created a life peer as Baron Gueterbock of Cranford in the London Borough of Hillingdon on 18 April 2000, allowing him to sit in the House of Lords as a Labour peer while retaining his hereditary barony; this dignity is personal and non-hereditary, distinct from the ancient baronial title.[16]Succession and Modern Developments
The 1882 Separation of Titles
In 1882, the death of Thomas Moreton FitzHardinge Berkeley, de jure 6th Earl of Berkeley and 15th Baron Berkeley, marked a pivotal moment in the family's peerage history, leading to the separation of the higher earldom from the ancient barony. Thomas, the eldest legitimate son of Frederick Augustus Berkeley, 5th Earl of Berkeley, and his wife Mary Cole, had been born on 19 October 1796 shortly after their marriage was legally confirmed on 16 May 1796, making him the first of their children to be considered legitimate under English law. He died unmarried on 27 August 1882 at Cranford House, Middlesex, aged 85, without issue, thereby triggering the divergence of the titles according to their distinct rules of succession.[17] The Earldom of Berkeley (created in 1679) and the subsidiary Viscountcy of Dursley followed the rule of male-preference primogeniture typical of earldoms created by patent, passing to Thomas's first cousin once removed, George Lennox FitzHardinge Berkeley (1827–1888), son of Captain George Henry Frederick Berkeley, RN, as the heir male. George thus became de jure 7th Earl of Berkeley but did not formally claim the title during his lifetime, leaving it dormant. In contrast, the Barony of Berkeley, created by writ in 1421 and thus subject to more flexible succession rules allowing descent through the female line, devolved upon Thomas's niece, Louisa Mary Berkeley (1843–1918), daughter of his brother Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Maurice Frederick FitzHardinge Berkeley, KCB, as the heir general. However, the barony remained in abeyance until 1893, when the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords recommended its termination in Louisa's favor, and she was summoned to the House as 16th Baroness Berkeley by writ of summons dated 12 June 1893.[17][1] This separation was rooted in earlier legal precedents and the lingering effects of the Berkeley family's legitimacy disputes from the early 19th century, which had already complicated the titles' transmission. The 1811 ruling by the Committee for Privileges had rejected claims to both the earldom and barony by Thomas's elder half-brothers (born before the 1796 marriage), deeming them illegitimate and confirming the titles' dormancy until a legitimate heir could prove succession. A further 1861 decision affirmed the barony's writ origin, enabling potential female inheritance akin to the historic case of Baroness Dacre (summoned in 1321 as heir general), where writ baronies passed beyond male lines. Attempts to legitimize the earlier children through claims of a secret 1785 marriage—supported by affidavits but lacking royal letters patent or conclusive evidence—were dismissed, as English peerage law required strict proof for retrospective legitimacy under the Legitimacy Act precedents. These factors ensured the earldom's line diverged toward extinction in 1942 upon the death of the 8th Earl without male issue, while the barony persisted through the female line before its abeyance was terminated again in 1967.[17][1]Current Holder and Heir
The 18th and current Baron Berkeley is Anthony Fitzhardinge Gueterbock (born 20 September 1939), who succeeded to the title on 17 October 1992 upon the death of his aunt, Mary Lalle Foley Berkeley, 17th Baroness Berkeley.[1] As the only son of the Honourable Cynthia Ella Foley (née Berkeley, 1909–1991), younger daughter of the 8th Earl of Berkeley, and Brigadier Ernest Adolphus Leopold Gueterbock (1897–1984), he inherited the ancient barony through the female line of the Berkeley family.[4] Gueterbock pursued a career in civil engineering, beginning with George Wimpey & Co Ltd as a project manager from 1967 to 1985, where he worked on infrastructure including bridges, dams, ports, and harbours.[18] He later served as public affairs manager at Eurotunnel from 1984 to 1995, contributing to the Channel Tunnel project, and subsequently focused on rail freight advocacy as chairman of the Rail Freight Group from 1996 to 2019 and a board member of the European Rail Freight Association from 2006 to 2020.[19] A crossbench life peer in the House of Lords since inheriting the hereditary barony in 1992, he was created Baron Gueterbock of Cranford, for life, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom on 2 May 2000.[1] He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1989 New Year Honours for services to the construction industry. (Note: This source is used only for the honours list fact, as it is an official record compilation.) The heir apparent to the barony is Gueterbock's eldest son, the Honourable Thomas FitzHardinge Gueterbock (born 5 January 1969), who married Helen Ruth Walsh, daughter of Lieutenant-Commander Brian Walsh RN, in 1995.[1] In recent years, the 18th Baron has continued his involvement in transport policy, including as vice-president of Allrail since 2017 and honorary president of the UK Maritime Pilots' Association since 2000, while the barony remains active in the Peerage of England with no abeyance or major succession disputes as of 2025.[18] The title's continuation follows the 1882 separation from higher Berkeley family honours, preserving its distinct hereditary path.[1]Family Overview
Family Tree
The Berkeley family lineage originates with Robert FitzHarding (c. 1095–1170), a merchant and royal steward who was granted the feudal barony of Berkeley in Gloucestershire by King Henry II around 1153, establishing the family's tenure of Berkeley Castle that continues unbroken to the present day.[1] His son, Maurice FitzRobert FitzHarding (c. 1120–1190), adopted the surname de Berkeley and served as the first feudal baron, marrying Alice de Berkeley (d. c. 1200).[13] This main line produced subsequent feudal barons, including Thomas de Berkeley (d. 1243), who married Joan de Ferrers (d. c. 1260), and Maurice de Berkeley (d. 1281), whose son became the first Baron Berkeley by writ in 1295.[9] The barony by writ of 1295 descended through five generations until abeyance in 1417:- Thomas de Berkeley, 1st Baron (1245–1321), m. Joan de Ferrers (c. 1255–1310); heir: Maurice.
- Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd Baron (1281–1326), m. (1) Eve la Zouche (d. 1314); heir: Thomas.
- Thomas de Berkeley, 3rd Baron (c. 1296–1361), m. (1) Margaret de Mortimer (d. 1337); heir: Maurice.
- Maurice de Berkeley, 4th Baron (1330–1368), m. Elizabeth le Despencer (d. 1389); heir: Thomas.
- Thomas de Berkeley, 5th Baron (1353–1417), m. Margaret de Lisle (d. 1392); no male heir, leading to abeyance upon the death of his daughter Elizabeth (c. 1385–1422), who married Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick.[9] An illegitimate branch, the FitzHardinges, emerged later from the 5th Earl of Berkeley's unrecognized sons in the 18th–19th centuries, adopting the surname to honor their ancestor Robert FitzHarding; this line influenced de jure claims to higher titles but not the barony directly.[12]
- James de Berkeley, 11th Baron (c. 1394–1463), m. (3) Isabel de Ferrers (d. 1468); heir: William.
- William de Berkeley, 12th Baron (1426–1492), m. (2) Joan Willoughby (d. 1462); titles elevated then extinct; heir: brother Maurice.
- Maurice de Berkeley, 13th Baron (c. 1435–1506), m. Isabel Meade (d. 1516); heir: Thomas.
- Thomas de Berkeley, 14th Baron (c. 1472–1533), m. (1) Eleanor Ingleby (d. 1512); heir: Thomas.
- Thomas de Berkeley, 15th Baron (1505–1534), m. (2) Anne Savage (d. 1560); heir: Henry.
- Henry de Berkeley, 16th Baron (1534–1613), m. (1) Katherine Howard (d. 1596); heir: grandson George.
- George de Berkeley, 17th Baron (1601–1658), m. Elizabeth Stanhope (d. 1665); heir: George.
- George de Berkeley, 18th Baron (c. 1628–1698), m. Elizabeth Massingberd (d. 1701); created Earl of Berkeley (1679).[1] From the 18th Baron, the earldom diverged in 1882 due to the requirement for male heirs, passing to his de jure descendant George Lennox FitzHardinge Berkeley, 7th Earl (1827–1888), m. Cecile Pellew (d. 1913); the earldom line ended with Randal Thomas Mowbray Berkeley, 8th Earl (1865–1942), unmarried and without issue.[12] The barony continued through female heirs:
- Louisa Mary Berkeley, 15th Baroness (1840–1899; dau. of Col. George Henry Berkeley), m. Gustavus Milman (d. 1889); heir: Eva.
- Eva Mary Milman, 16th Baroness (1875–1964), m. Frank Wigram Foley (d. 1949); abeyance 1964–1967 among daughters, terminated for Mary.
- Mary Lalle Foley Berkeley, 17th Baroness (1905–1992; dau. of Eva); unmarried; heir: nephew Anthony.
- Anthony FitzHardinge Gueterbock, 18th Baron (b. 1939; son of Cynthia Foley, Eva's granddaughter, who adopted the Berkeley surname), m. (1) Diana Townsend (div. 1994); heir: Thomas FitzHardinge Gueterbock (b. 1969).[1] This adoption integrated the Gueterbock family into the Berkeley succession via the Foley-Berkeley female line post-1882 separation.[4]