Peter de Valognes obtained lands in Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, Hertford, Cambridge, and Lincoln and was high sheriff of Essex in 1087.
Philip de Valognes was granted by King
William the Lion of Scotland the manors of Panmure and Benvie in Angus and was appointed in around 1180 the
Chamberlain of Scotland. Philip died in 1215 and his only son
William became the Chamberlain of Scotland until his death in 1219. William had no male issue and his titles and lands were split between his three heiresses. The following is a list of castles known to have been in the ownership of the family: ;England •
Benington Castle, Hertfordshire ;Scotland •
Panmure Castle, Angus • Benvie manse, Angus •
Kilbride Castle, South Lanarkshire • Inchgall Castle The heirs of
Hamo the Steward, Sheriff of Kent, had extensive lands in Essex, Kent and Surrey at the Domesday Survey. This family is traced through the descent of one of the manors of
Titsey in Surrey, which passed from Hamo to his niece Matilda. Geoffrey de Valognes, lord of Titsey, was father of Hamon de Valognes, who was prominent as the
Justiciar of Ireland in 1196-1199 when it lay under the rule of
John, brother to
Richard I of England. Hamon was a tenant of the Honour of Gloucester, and became Sheriff of Cardiff in 1185. John entrusted
Waterford to him in 1193. (At that time Theobald Walter was
Pincerna (Butler) of Ireland, whose mother Matilda de Valoines was daughter of Theobald de Valoines the elder, Lord of Parham.) At John's accession in 1199 Hamon received lands in
Limerick, and in 1200 became
Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire and bailiff of Glamorgan. His son and heir was Hamon de Valognes the younger. ==Family of Hamo de Valoines of Parham==