The House of Lilburn are an ancient family historically seated as Lords of the Manor in Northumberland, United Kingdom. The family name Lilburn derives from the original home of the family, Lilburn, Northumberland. Furthermore, the etymology of the name itself, a combination of the words lily and burne, derives from the nature of the Lilburn area, which is described as being by the 'stream where the lillies grow'.
Coat of arms
The heraldic blason for the Lilburn coat of arms is a cendree field, with three bougets argent. The colours can vary slightly and some versions can be found in which the bougets are simplified with three ordinary fusils. The use of ordinaries demonstrates how the House of Lilburn is one of the first and most ancient names of England. The use of simple and easily recognisable shapes is typical of early heraldry, after which shields were blazoned with increasingly complicated shapes and a variety of charges.
Family history
When the house was founded is unknown, yet the Lilburn name predates the Norman Conquest of England. The Lilburn family name can be found carved into ancient gravestones in the vicinity of West Lilburn Tower, Lilburn, and Lindisfarne, near the medieval priory. The House of Lilburn is said to have been called to arms during the Crusades. In a 14th-century church's graveyard, near West Lilburn Tower, a number of tombs allegedly belong to the Knights Templar, among which some bear the Lilburn name. In the 17th century John Lilburne and most of his family were key figures in the English Civil Wars.
Family seat
The House of Lilburn's origine can be traced back to Lilburn, a pre 7th century town located in the Northern reaches of Northumberland, East of the Cheviot Hills. It is recorded in the Domesday Book, referred to with the spelling of Lilleburne. The medieval manors of West and East Lilburn were purchased separately and subsequently united by John Clennell of the Clennell family of Clennell Hall about 1700. In the 1820s the estate was passed on to the Collingwood family of Cornhill, for whom Lilburn Tower was built as a private residence. In the 1970s the private mansion and all its 40 acres on which stood West Lilburn Tower, were sold to the Davidsons. Located where the ancient town of Lilburn was founded, the ruinous remains of West Lilburn Tower, the nearby pele tower and the 14th century church still stand and are scheduled as an Ancient Monument and protected as Listed Buildings.
Prominent historical members of the family include:
Alexander de Lilleburna of Northumberland
Robert de Lilburn in 1245 was one of twenty-four knights who surveyed the Scottish-English boundaries.
Sir John de Lilburn was the nephew and heir of Christine de Lilburn, through whom he inherited “livery of the manor of Lilburn as one knight’s fee” on October 26, 1324. He was knighted at the King’s Court at Christmas 1315 and a few months after was appointed Constable of Mitford Castle. He added considerably to his lands, including the barony of Stamford and Dunstanburgh, and was appointed Constable of Dunstanburgh Castle in 1323, where he built the famous Lilburn tower, part of which is still standing. He was Commissioner of Array in Northumberland in 1325 and sheriff of Northumberland in from 1327 to 1329. Sir John married Lady Constance de Lilburn in 1319 and their daughter, also named Constance, married Alan de Heaton of the Heaton family in 1350. In a second marriage, to Lady Beatrice de Beauchamp, in 1328 John de Lilburne II was born, who was also knighted.
The identity of his father, on the other hand, is uncertain: evidence in a pedigree following visitations in 1575, 1615 and 1666 would suggest he was William de Lilburn, son of Sir William de Lilburn, Lord Warden of the Middle Marches; other genealogical documentation from Northumberland, studying the family from the Vieuxpont side, shows that Sir John de Lilburn could be the son of a Roger de Leybourne of the Leybourne variant of the Lilburn name, historically associated with the county of Kent.
*William de Lilburne "received by grant of Robert Ogle of Bothell the manors of Thickley Punchardon and Shildon, o Durham and all messuages, lands etc there"
**Bartholomew Lilburne attended the Field of the Cloth of Gold and is said to have had made a family armour, the whereabouts of which are currently unknown.
***John Lilburne, son of the above Bartholomew Lilburne, took part in the Rising of the North
****John Lilburne, or John Freeborn, grandson of the above, was a political Leveller and one of the leading figures of the English Civil Wars
****Robert Lilburne, English soldier, brother of the above John Lilburne, signatory to the death warrant of King Charles I in 1649
Prominent contemporary members:
Tim Lilburn, Canadian poet
Douglas Lilburn ONZ, New Zealand composer
The actor Tom Goodman-Hill, who played John Lilburne in Channel 4's drama The Devil's Whore, is a sixteenth-generation descendant of John Lilburn's uncle, Joseph.
First settlers in other continents
In the United States of America:
Jane Lilburne Susan Rogers, who married Isham Randolph of Virginia in 1717 and emigrated to Virginia about that time. She was the maternal grandmother of Thomas Jefferson.
Thomas Lilburn, who arrived in New York City in 1820
In Australia:
John Lilburn, who landed in Adelaide in 1850, aboard the Princess Helena