The Marshal family was a noble family of Anglo-Norman origins. Their name, Marshal, derives from the Frankish term for “a person who tended horses”. By 1066 the term was used for a position in royal and aristocratic households.
The first known member of the Marshal family is Gilbert Giffard, who is of unknown origin. He would become a tenant of Glastonbury manor in Winterbourne Monkton in Wiltshire, and held a position as a marshal to the king of England. The surname "Giffard" is a common Norman sobriquet, and it means "chubby-cheeks". While it is unlikely that Gilbert was related to Walter Giffard, he may have been related to the Giffards of Brimpsfield. It's worth noting that, according to the History of William Marshal, there were two men named Gilbert: Gilbert Giffard and Gilbert Marshal, and the first was the latter's son or son in law. David Crouch says that the History is not always to be trusted, but that this option could be chronologically possible. Thomas Asbridge and N.E. Stacy, as well as other authors, mention Gilbert (Giffard) as a single person and as John Marshal's father.[1][2][3]
When Gilbert died, his son, John Marshal (I), took his position. John fought for Empress Matilda (Daughter of Henry I) in her unsuccessful struggle to gain the throne from her cousin, King Stephen, during the Anarchy. After John the title of marshal (later Earl Marshal) became honorific and hereditary[2]
John’s first son was John Marshal (II), who inherited his position as marshal and retained it until his death in 1194. He only had one known son, also called John Marshal (III), but he was illegitimate, so the title went to John (II)‘s brother instead.[4] The position of marshal will be later claimed by a descendant of this illegitimate line, William Marshal, 1st Baron Marshal.[5]
After William died in 1219,[6] the titles of marshal and Earl of Pembroke eventually passed on to all of his sons, as none of them had any legitimate issue: William, Richard, Gilbert, Walter and Ansel. After Ansel’s death, the title of Earl of Pembroke became extinct (but it was re-created in 1247), and the title of marshal was given to his sister Maud’s husband, Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk. The current Duke of Norfolk still holds the title.[7]
The historian Matthew Paris addresses the rapid extinction of the Marshal lineage to a curse bestowed upon the family by the bishop of Ferns, Albin O'Molloy, after unjust exactions on his diocese levied by William Marshal the elder. Paris claims that when Ansel and his brothers were in their prime, their mother Isabel had foretold that “all would be earls of the same county”.[7]
Another of William’s titles, Earl Marshal of Ireland, was not held by his children, but by the previously mentioned John Marshal (III), his nephew. The title remained in this line of the family until the death of John Marshal, 2nd Baron Marshal, when it was given to his sister Hawyse’s husband, Robert Morley, 2nd Baron Morley, in absence of any other house members.[7]
^Great Britain. Court of Chancery; Hardy, Thomas Duffus; England. Sovereign (1199-1216 : John); Great Britain. Record Commission (1837). Rotuli chartarum in turri Londinensi asservati. Boston Public Library. London : Printed by G. Eyre and A. Spottiswoode.((cite book)): CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
Sir Harris Nicolas, Nicolas (1825). A synopsis of the peerage of England: exhibiting, under alphabetical arrangement, the date of creation, descent and present state of every title of peerage which has existed in this country since the conquest. Unknown publisher.
Leckie Jarman, Thomas (1930). William Marshal First Earl Of Pembroke And Regent Of England 1216 1219. B. Blackwell.