Baron Morley is an abeyant title in the Peerage of England. On 29 December 1299 William de Morley, lord of the manor of Morley Saint Botolph in Norfolk, was summoned to parliament and was thereby deemed to have become Baron Morley. At the death of the sixth baron in 1443, the barony was inherited by his daughter Alianore de Morley, the wife of Sir William Lovel, who was summoned to parliament as Baron Morley jure uxoris and died in 1476, shortly before her. It was then inherited by their son Henry Lovel, following whose death in 1489 it came to his sister Alice Lovel, who was married to Mr Parker. The title was thenceforward held by her descendants the Parker family until 1697, when on the death of the fifteenth baron without children, the barony fell into abeyance.
Unrelated Earldom of Morley (1815)
It can be no coincidence that in 1815 John Parker, 2nd Baron Boringdon, of Saltram House in Devon, of the apparently unrelated Parker family which originated from humble origins in North Molton in Devon, on his elevation to the dignity of an earl in 1815, chose the title Earl of Morley, ostensibly referring to his recent purchase of the relatively minor manor of Morley in Devon, midway between Totnes and Kingsbridge. It had become common in the 19th. century for members of the post-mediaeval nobility when elevated further in the peerage to adopt defunct mediaeval titles which bore some ostensible link to the family, thus lending it an air of great antiquity. Such actions were often adopted in all innocence based on erroneous pedigrees produced by genealogists overly eager to please their patrons. An example is the Russell family, Dukes of Bedford, of which a younger son when himself elevated to the peerage adopted the title "Baron Russell of Kingston Russell", an ancient Dorset manor with which his family had in fact no connection.
Barons Morley (1299)
William Morley, 1st Baron Morley
Robert Morley, 2nd Baron Morley "having married Hawyse, sister and heir to John le Mareschall, of Hengham, in had livery of the lands of her inheritance, the 10th of Edward II. Which Hawyse held the office of marshal of Ireland by descent."
William Morley, 3rd Baron Morley "the 38th of Edward III. had licence to travel beyond sea, as also to grant his office of mareschall of Ireland, to Henry de Ferrers, to hold so long as he behaved himself well therein."
Thomas Morley, 4th Baron Morley
Thomas Morley, 5th Baron Morley
Robert Morley, 6th Baron Morley
Alianore Lovel, 7th Baroness Morley née de Morley
*Sir William Lovel, 7th Baron Morley, Baron Morley in her right.