First creation, 1327 .
William de Burgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster was summoned to the English Parliament in 1327 and 1328, by writs addressed
Willelmo de Burgh, which, by modern law, would create a Barony of Burgh (; ). He was also summoned in 1331 as ''Comes de Ulton' '' (that is, Earl of Ulster) for a Parliament discussing Irish affairs. Insofar as these created English peerages, they later merged in the Crown when his descendant,
Edward IV, acceded to the throne in 1461.
Second creation, 1487 and 1529 Sir
Thomas Burgh of Gainsborough (; ), a distinguished Yorkist, was summoned to the Parliament of 1487 under
Henry VII of England; there is no evidence that he attended. Some three weeks later, Henry VII signed a warrant ordering a writ to be issued for him, since the King intended to raise him to the pre-eminence of Barony, but no second writ was issued, nor was a patent. He was issued writs, but did not attend Parliament, for the rest of his life, until 1496; official documents call him a knight, not a peer. His son, Sir
Edward Burgh was never summoned to the House of Lords, although he was elected to the House of Commons in his father's lifetime. In 1510, he was found a lunatic, being "distracted of memorie." His wife was
Anne Cobham, by modern doctrine
Baroness Cobham of Sterborough. In the third generation, Sir Thomas Burgh, Sir Edward's son, was summoned to the first Parliament after his father's death, and admitted on 2 December 1529. In the sixteenth century, this was treated as a new creation; Thomas, Baron Burgh, yielded precedence to the Barons
Hussey,
Windsor,
Wentworth, all created 1 and 2 December 1529. By modern law, the events of 1487 would not normally constitute a creation, for the elder Sir Thomas never sat as a peer; nevertheless, in 1916, the revived peerage was given precedence as of 1487. Sources vary, therefore, in calling the younger Sir Thomas 1st or 3rd Baron Burgh; this article calls him 1st,
de jure 3rd.
Abeyance The most prominent of the Lords Burgh,
Thomas Burgh, 3rd Baron Burgh, grandson of the baron of 1529, was
Lord Deputy of Ireland; when he died in 1597, he left four daughters, all of whom married and had children, and an infant son. When his son died at the age of eight, the barony of Burgh (according to modern law) went into
abeyance between the daughters. By this, each daughter had a quarter share of the barony, which she transmitted to her heir; none of them holds the barony unless
the Crown decides which of the four co-heirs is to have it; in this case it was not decided until 1916. (The first exercise of this power was in 1604, two years after the death of the young Baron, in the case of
Baron le Despencer.) The eldest daughter of the Lord Deputy, Elizabeth, had married
George Brooke, who was executed and attainted in 1603, for his part in the
Bye Plot against
King James I; he was heir to
Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham, who was also attainted for his part in the
Main Plot. None of this affected Elizabeth Brooke's rights, and the abeyance was eventually resolved in favour one of her descendants; but her family was not welcomed by King James or his son: William Brooke, her son, was restored in blood in 1610, but not to the Barony of Cobham; he did not request the Barony of Burgh. The second daughter, Anne, married Sir
Drew Drury; the third daughter married
Francis Coppinger, whose descendant has changed his name to de Burgh; the fourth daughter Katherine married
Thomas Knyvett, who was also (by modern law)
Baron Berners. The inheritance of the Barony of Cobham and Elizabeth Brooke's quarter of the Barony of Burgh is discussed under
Baron Cobham; this is not the Barony of Cobham of
Sterborough held by Edward Burgh's wife, above, although the families are related.
Inheritance and revival By the late eighteenth century, Elizabeth Brooke's inheritance was again united in Sir William Boothby, 4th Baronet; when he died in 1787, the quarter of the Barony of Burgh, and the heirship to Cobham, passed to his only sister, Mrs. Mary Disney. She had six daughters, three of whom had children. ==Barons Burgh, First Creation (1327)==