Neville was knighted sometime after 1426. In 1438, Bergavenny, as he was now styled, was a
justice of the peace for
Durham. He was a captain in the embattled
Duchy of Normandy in 1449. His eldest son Richard was one of the hostages given to the French when the English surrendered the city of
Rouen in that year. After the death of his first wife, he was
summoned to
Parliament in 1450 as "Edwardo Nevyll de Bergavenny", by which he is held to have become
Baron Bergavenny. At the time, however, this was considered to be a summons by right of his wife, and so he was considered the 3rd, rather than the 1st, Baron. In 1454, he was appointed to the
Privy Council assembled by the
Duke of York as Lord Protector, along with his more prominent Neville kinsmen. He was a
commissioner of array in
Kent in 1461, and was a captain in
Edward IV's army in the North the following year. He was again a commissioner of array in 1470, remaining loyal to Edward IV, unlike his nephew, the
Earl of Warwick. ==Ancestry==