In 1177–81 and 1189–90, Foulbridge was a member[clarification needed] of Settrington, but it afterwards passed into the overlordship of the Percys, Earls of Northumberland, and of the Mowbrays.
John, Lord Mowbray died seised of the moiety of the manor, which must have escheated to him, in 1322, and in 1327 the demesne lands were said to have lain fallow since the Conquest.
[2] Foulbridge was probably the "manor of Snainton" about which Ingram de Boynton and the Knights of the Temple made an agreement before 1226.
[3][4][5] A claim was made by the Earl of Lancaster in 1334 that on the suppression of this order the manor had escheated to him, the liberties of the Templars having become extinguished.
[2] In 1334 the bridge and road of Pul within the forest, which were highways for "carriages, carts, drifts and packsaddles", were in decay and broken.