Baron Grandison

[1] The family originated in what is now the Swiss canton of Vaud by the name of Grandson, the anglicised Grandison was a shortening of the Latin form Grandisono.

The family origins lay in the grant of land by Lake Neuchâtel during the last years of the Second Kingdom of Burgundy.

From Catherine de Grandson through the Montacute and Mortimer families and Richard, Earl of Cambridge, grandfather of Edward IV.

From Mabel de Grandson through the Beauchamp and Beaufort families to Henry VII, founder of the Tudor dynasty.

[3] In 1858,[4][5][6] after five centuries in abeyance, Sir Henry Paston-Bedingfeld, 6th Baronet of Oxburgh Hall (eldest son of Sir Richard Bedingfeld, 5th Baronet) was declared by the Committee of Privileges to be one of the co-heirs of the Barony of Grandison "through "the families of Paston, Tuddenham, Patteshull, and Grandison, heir to Dame Katherine Tuddenham, in whom one-fourth of a third of the representation of the Barony of Grandison had vested.

Arms of Otto Grandison, Baron Grandison: Paly of six argent and azure, on a bend gules three escallops or
Arms of Grandison: Paly of six argent and azure, on a bend gules three eagles displayed or
Othon de Grandson from an altar screen from the Cathedral in Lausanne now displayed in the Bern Historic Museum.
Arms of Grandison sculpted on an oriel window at Oxburgh Hall , Norfolk.