The Marmion family died out in the male line in 1291, on the death of
Philip Marmion, 5th
feudal baron of Tamworth, who left four daughters and co-heiresses. whose quarter share of her paternal inheritance included the manor of Scrivelsby, married Sir Thomas de Ludlow,
Margaret de Ludlow, who married Sir
John Dymoke, who thereby inherited the manor of Scrivelsby and the feudal duty of acting as King's Champion. Due to the uncertainty then surrounding the identity of the King's Champion, the ceremony was dispensed with for the coronation of King Edward III in 1328. However, it was soon resolved that the rightful Champion was the holder of Scrivelsby, and not the de Freville family of Tamworth. The Dymoke family survives today, still possessed of the manor of Scrivelsby and living at Scrivelsby Court, the (nominal) lord of the manor in 2022 being Henry Francis Marmion Dymoke (born 1984), 35th lord of the manor of Scrivelsby and 9th of Tetford. The duty of the King's Champion was to ride fully armed into the
coronation banquet at
Westminster Hall and challenge anyone who doubted the new monarch's right to the throne. The Champion then threw down his gauntlet to signal that he would fight to the death anyone who might dare to do so. This action was performed three times and if no challenge was received the king was presented with a gold cup of wine from which he drank a toast to the Champion, who in turn took the cup, drank the remnant and shouted "Long live your Majesties". Although feudal tenure was abolished in England by the
Tenures Abolition Act 1660, which thus abolished tenures by grand serjeanty, the traditional custom of the lord of the manor of Scrivelsby acting as King's Champion continued until the coronation of King
George IV in 1821, after which it was discontinued. ==Landmarks==