The Marmion family served the Dukes of Normandy and came to England with William the Conqueror in 1066. William made them Barons of Tamworth and gave them land and manors in Oxfordshire.
Marmions were living in Thame by the fourteenth century. Some of the Oxfordshire family apparently used a crest with a Saracen’s head, believed to mark their involvement in the Crusades. This explains why the Rev. Lee (who wrote a history of the church) associated the Saracen’s Head Inn with the Marmion family.
Various Marmions were
fined at the St Luke’s Day assizes in the 1400s (the annual Thame trade court) for failing to pay the annual fee for trading
The dramatist
Shackerley Marmion, attended Lord William’s School in the early 1600s, and is famous for his poem Cupid and Psyche.