The Feilding family have been Lords of Newnham Paddox in
Monks Kirby, Warwickshire, since 1433. They are in part descended from the Newnham family (named from the estate) who held Newnham Paddox in the 1100s and 1200s (see
history of Monks Kirby). The nineteenth century historian,
S.R. Gardiner described the first Earl of Denbigh,
William Feilding, as "the plain country gentleman who had the good luck to marry Buckingham's sister in the days of her poverty." The family of William's wife,
Susan Villiers, had also been minor midlands gentry until her brother,
George Villiers, became the confidant and lover of
King James I. Villiers was elevated by King James to the rank of Duke of Buckingham and continued as a royal favourite during the reign of
King Charles I. Exceptionally powerful, Villiers showered preferment on his family. In 1622, not only was Feilding made Earl of Denbigh, but his second son, named George after his important uncle, was given the right to the
earldom of Desmond at the point that title reverted to the Crown. In 1660, his daughter,
Elizabeth, was created Countess of Guildford for life in her own right.
Claimed descent from the Habsburgs From around 1656, print of the
arms of the Feilding family superimposed on the
Habsburg double-headed eagle lacking one head, dedicated to the
Garter King of Arms and mocking the family's pretensions at ancestral connections to the Habsburg dynasty. ==The 1st and 2nd Earl of Denbigh and 1st Earl of Desmond (4th creation)==