Esneval A likely brother of the 1st Earl of Surrey, another Rodulf, held lands that had been held by his father in the
Pays de Caux and near Rouen. By 1172, these lands were in possession of Robert d'Esneval as a part of the barony of Esneval, and it is supposed that the family d'Esneval may derive from an heiress of this Rodulf's line.
Whitchurch Among the holdings of William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey was some land in
Whitchurch, Shropshire, and this likely led to his kin becoming its early lords. A William fitz Ranulf is recorded as the lord of Whitchurch, first appearing in 1176, and was ancestor of a family that sometimes were called de Warenne, along with de Whitchurch, de Blancminster, and de Albo Monasterio.
Robert Eyton considered it likely that Ralph de Warenne, son of
William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey, was the father of this William, and that Ralph had likely been lord before William fitz Ranulf. It is known that Ralph de Warenne had a son named William, who confirmed and expanded a donation of
Norfolk land that his father had made to
Lewes Priory, and that the Whitchurch heirs likewise maintained an association with Lewes. Writing in 1923, William Farrer agreed. However, in a later publication Charles Travis Clay elaborated on Farrer's original work and drew attention to a Domesday tenant of William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey, named Ranulf
nepos (nephew). It does not specify of whom he was nephew, but Clay suggests it was his feudal overlord, Earl William. This Ranulf
nepos held Middleton, Suffolk, which was later owned by William fitz Ranulf, Lord of Whitchurch, leading Clay to speculate that the Warennes of Whitchurch may instead have descended from this Domesday tenant rather than from the son of the 2nd Earl. William, son of William fitz Ranulf of Whitchurch, left a sole daughter and heiress, from whom the Whitchurch inheritance passed to Robert l'Estrange. Eyton suggested that Griffith de Warenne, the 13th century founder of the Warrens of
Ightfield, Shropshire, was son of William fitz Ranulf de Warenne of Whitchurch.
Wormegay Reginald de Warenne, younger brother of the 3rd Earl, married the heiress of
Wormegay, Norfolk. His son
William de Warenne of Wormegay was a royal justice under
Richard I and
John. After his death in 1209, Wormegay passed with his daughter to the Bardolf family. == Other members of the Warenne family ==