A Complete Guide to Heraldry by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies

247. The mention of stones brings one to the kindred subject of

5741 words  |  Chapter 42

_Catapults_. These engines of war, needless to say on a very much larger scale than the object which is nowadays associated with the term, were also known by the name _balistæ_, and also by that of _swepe_. Their occurrence is very infrequent, but for that very reason one may, perhaps, draw attention to the arms of the (English) family of Magnall: "Argent, a swepe azure, charged with a stone or." _Swords_, differing in number, position, and kind are, perhaps, of this class of charge the most numerous. A single sword as a charge may be seen in the shield of Dick of Wicklow, and Macfie, and a sword entwined by a serpent in that of Mackesy. A flaming sword occurs in the arms of Maddocks and Lewis. Swords frequently figure, too, in the hands or paws of supporters, accordingly as the latter are human figures or animals, whilst they figure as the "supporters" themselves in the unique case of the French family of Bastard, whose shield is cottised by "two swords, point in base." The heraldic sword is represented as Fig. 515, the blade of the _dagger_ {287} being shorter and more pointed. The _scymitar_ follows the form depicted in Fig. 516. A _Seax_ is the term employed to denote a curved scimitar, or falchion, having a notch at the back of the blade (Fig. 517). In heraldry the use of this last is fairly frequent, though generally, it must be added, in shields of arms of doubtful authority. As such they are to be seen, amongst others, in the reputed arms of Middlesex, and owing to this origin they were included in the grant of arms to the town of Ealing. The sabre and the cutlass when so blazoned follow their utilitarian patterns. _Torches_ or _Firebrands_ are depicted in the arms and crest of Gillman and Tyson. _Barnacles_ (or _Breys_)--horse curbs--occur in some of the earlier coats, as in the arms of Wyatt ["Gules, a barnacle argent"], while another family of the same name (or, possibly, Wyot) bore: "Per fess gules and azure (one or) three barnacles argent". [Illustration: FIG. 516.--Scymitar.] [Illustration: FIG. 517.--Seax.] [Illustration: FIG. 518.--Church-bell.] [Illustration: FIG. 519.--Hawk's bell.] _Bells_ are well instanced in the shield of Porter, and the poet Wordsworth bore: "Argent, three bells azure." It may be noted in passing that in Continental armory the clapper is frequently of a different tincture to that of the bell, as, for instance, "D'Azure, à la cloche d'argent, butaillé [viz. with the clapper] de sable"--the arms of the Comtes de Bellegarse. A bell is assumed to be a church-bell (Fig. 518) unless blazoned as a hawk's bell (Fig. 519). _Bridle-Bits_ are of very infrequent use, though they may be seen in the achievement of the family of Milner. The _Torse_ (or wreath surmounting the helm) occasionally figures as a charge, for example, in the arms of Jocelyn and Joslin. _The Buckle_ is a charge which is of much more general use than some of the foregoing. It appears very frequently both in English {288} and foreign heraldry--sometimes oval-shaped (Fig. 520), circular (Fig. 521), or square (Fig. 522), but more generally lozenge-shaped (Fig. 523), especially in the case of Continental arms. A somewhat curious variation occurs in the arms of the Prussian Counts Wallenrodt, which are: "Gules, a lozenge-shaped buckle argent, the tongue broken in the middle." It is, of course, purely an artistic detail in all these buckles whether the tongue is attached to a crossbar, as in Figs. 520 and 521, or not, as in Figs. 522 and 523. As a badge the buckle is used by the Pelhams, Earls of Chichester and Earls of Yarborough, and a lozenge-shaped arming buckle is the badge of Jerningham. _Cups_ (covered) appear in the Butler arms, and derived therefrom in the arms of the town of Warrington. Laurie, of Maxwelltown, bear: "Sable, a cup argent, issuing therefrom a garland between two laurel-branches all proper," and similar arms are registered in Ireland for Lowry. The Veronese family of Bicchieri bear: "Argent, a fess gules between three drinking-glasses half-filled with red wine proper." An uncovered cup occurs in the arms of Fox, derived by them from the crest of Croker, and another instance occurs in the arms of a family of Smith. In this connection we may note in passing the rare use of the device of a _Vase_, which forms a charge in the coat of the town of Burslem, whilst it is also to be met with in the crest of the family of Doulton: "On a wreath of the colours, a demi-lion sable, holding in the dexter paw a cross crosslet or, and resting the sinister upon an escutcheon charged with a vase proper." The motto is perhaps well worth recording; "Le beau est la splendeur de vrai." [Illustration: FIG. 520.--Oval buckle.] [Illustration: FIG. 521.--Circular buckle.] [Illustration: FIG. 522.--Square buckle.] [Illustration: FIG. 523.--Lozenge-shaped buckle.] The arms of both the city of Dundee and the University of Aberdeen afford instances of a _Pot of Lilies_, and _Bowls_ occur in the arms of Bolding. PLATE V. [Illustration] {289} Though blazoned as a _Cauldron_, the device occurring in the crest of De la Rue may be perhaps as fittingly described as an open bowl, and as such may find a place in this classification: "Between two olive-branches vert a cauldron gules, fired and issuant therefrom a snake nowed proper." The use of a _Pitcher_ occurs in the arms of Bertrand de Monbocher, who bore at the siege of Carlaverock: "Argent, three pitchers sable (sometimes found gules) within a bordure sable bezanté;" and the arms of Standish are: "Sable, three standing dishes argent." The somewhat singular charge of a _Chart_ appears in the arms of Christopher, and also as the crest of a Scottish family of Cook. [Illustration: FIG. 524.--Chess-rook.] [Illustration: FIG. 525.--Crescent.] [Illustration: FIG. 526.--Increscent.] _Chess-Rooks_ (Fig. 524) are somewhat favourite heraldic devices, and are to be met with in a shield of Smith and the arms of Rocke of Clungunford. The _Crescent_ (Fig. 525) figures largely in all armories, both as a charge and (in English heraldry) as a difference. Variations, too, of the form of the crescent occur, such as when the horns are turned to the dexter (Fig. 526), when it is termed "a crescent increscent," or simply "an increscent," or when they are turned to the sinister--when it is styled "decrescent" (Fig. 527). An instance of the crescent "reversed" may be seen in the shield of the Austrian family of Puckberg, whose blazon was: "Azure, three crescents, those in chief addorsed, that in base reversed." In English "difference marks" the crescent is used to denote the second son, but under this character it will be discussed later. Independently of its use in conjunction with ecclesiastical armory, the _Crosier_ (Fig. 528) is not widely used in ordinary achievements. It does occur, however, as a principal charge, as in the arms of the Irish family of Crozier and in the arms of Benoit (in Dauphiny) ["Gules, a pastoral staff argent"], while it forms part of the crest of Alford. The term "crosier" is synonymous with the pastoral or episcopal staff, and is independent of the cross which is borne _before_ (and not _by_) {290} Archbishops and Metropolitans. The use of pastoral staves as charges is also to be seen in the shield of Were, while MacLaurin of Dreghorn bears: "Argent, a shepherd's crook sable." The _Palmer's Staff_ (Fig. 529) has been introduced into many coats of arms for families having the surname of Palmer, as has also the palmer's wallet. [Illustration: FIG. 527.--Decrescent.] [Illustration: FIG. 528.--Crosier, or pastoral staff.] [Illustration: FIG. 529.--Palmer's staff.] [Illustration: FIG. 530.--Shuttle.] [Illustration: FIG. 531.--Woolpack.] [Illustration: FIG. 532.--Escarbuncle.] _Cushions_, somewhat strangely, form the charges in a number of British shields, occurring, for example, in the arms of Brisbane, and on the shield of the Johnstone family. In Scottish heraldry, indeed, cushions appear to have been of very ancient (and general) use, and are frequently to be met with. The Earls of Moray bore: "Argent, three cushions lozengewise within a double tressure flory-counterflory gules," but an English example occurs in the arms of Hutton. _The Distaff_, which is supposed to be the origin of the lozenge upon which a lady bears her arms, is seldom seen in heraldry, but the family of Body, for instance, bear one in chief, and three occur in the arms of a family of Lees. _The Shuttle_ (Fig. 530) occurs in the arms of Shuttleworth, and in those of the town of Leigh, while the shield of the borough of Pudsey affords an illustration of shuttles in conjunction with a woolpack (Fig. 531). _The Escarbuncle_ (Fig. 532) is an instance of a charge having so developed by the evolution of an integral part of the shield itself. In {291} ancient warfare shields were sometimes strengthened by being bound with iron bands radiating from the centre, and these bands, from the shape they assumed, became in course of time a charge in themselves under the term escarbuncle. The crest of the Fanmakers' Company is: "A hand couped proper holding a _fan_ displayed," while the chief charge in the arms is "... a fan displayed ... the sticks gules." This, however, is the only case I can cite of this object. The _Fasces_ (Fig. 533), emblematic of the Roman magisterial office, is very frequently introduced in grants of arms to Mayors and Lord Mayors, which no doubt accounts for its appearance in the arms of Durning-Lawrence, Knill, Evans, and Spokes. [Illustration: FIG. 533.--Fasces.] [Illustration: FIG. 534.--Fetterlock.] [Illustration: FIG. 535.--Fleam.] An instance of _Fetterlocks_ (Fig. 534) occurs in the arms of Kirkwood, and also in the coat of Lockhart and the crest of Wyndham. A chain is often substituted for the bow of the lock. The modern padlock has been introduced into the grant of arms to the town of Wolverhampton. _Keys_, the emblem of St. Peter, and, as such, part of the insignia of His Holiness the Pope, occur in many ecclesiastical coats, the arms of the Fishmongers' Livery Company, and many families. _Flames of Fire_ are not frequently met with, but they are to be found in the arms of Baikie, and as crests they figure in the achievements of Graham-Wigan, and also in conjunction with keys in that of Flavel. In connection with certain other objects flames are common enough. The phoenix always issues from flames, and a salamander is always in the midst of flames (Fig. 437). The flaming sword, a device, by the way, included in the recent grant to Sir George Lewis, Bart., has been already alluded to, as has also the flaming brand. A notable example of the torch occurs in the crest of Sir William Gull, Bart., no doubt an allusion (as is his augmentation) to the skill by which he kept the torch of life burning in the then Prince of Wales during his serious illness in 1871. A flaming mountain occurs as the crest of several families of the name of Grant. {292} A curious instrument now known nearly exclusively in connection with its use by farriers, and termed a _Fleam_ (Fig. 535), occurs on the chief of the shield of Moore. A fleam, however, is the ancient form and name of a surgeon's lancet, and some connection with surgery may be presumed when it occurs. It is one of the charges in the arms recently granted to Sir Frederick Treves, Bart. _Furison._--This singular charge occurs in the shield of Black, and also in that of Steel. Furisons were apparently the instruments by which fire was struck from flint stones. [Illustration: FIG. 536.--Clarion.] [Illustration: FIG. 537.--Bugle-horn.] [Illustration: FIG. 538.--Bugle-horn stringed.] Charges in connection with music and musical instruments do not occur very frequently, though the heraldic use of the _Clarion_ (Fig. 536) and the _Harp_ may perhaps be mentioned. The bugle-horn (Fig. 537) also occurs "stringed" (Fig. 538), and when the bands round it are of a different colour it is termed "veruled" or "virolled" of that colour. _The Human Heart_, which should perhaps have been more correctly referred to in an earlier chapter, is a charge which is well known in heraldry, both English and foreign. Perhaps the best known examples of the heart ensigned with a crown is seen in the shields of Douglas and Johnstone. The legend which accounts for the appearance of this charge in the arms of Douglas is too well known to need repetition. _Ingots of silver_ occur in the shield of the borough of St. Helens, whilst the family of Woollan go one better by bearing ingots of gold. _A Maunch_ (Fig. 539), which is a well-known heraldic term for the sleeve, is, as it is drawn, scarcely recognisable as such. Nevertheless its evolution can be clearly traced. The maunch--which, of course, as a heraldic charge, originated in the knightly "favour" of a lady's sleeve--was borne from the earliest periods in different tinctures by the three historic families of Conyers, Hastings, and Wharton. Other garments have been used as heraldic charges; gloves in the arms of {293} Fletcher and Barttelot; stockings in the arms of Hose; a boot in the crest of Hussy, and a hat in the arms of Huth. Armour is frequently met with, a cuirass appearing in the crest of Somers, helmets in the arms of Salvesen, Trayner, Roberton, and many other families, gauntlets (Fig. 540), which need to be specified as dexter or sinister, in the arms of Vane and the crest of Burton, and a morion (Fig. 541) in the crest of Pixley. The Garter is, of course, due to that Order of knighthood; and the Blue Mantle of the same Order, besides giving his title to one of the Pursuivants of Arms, who uses it as his badge, has also been used as a charge. _The Mill-rind_ or _Fer-de-moline_ is, of course, as its name implies, the iron from the centre of a grindstone. It is depicted in varying forms, more or less recognisable as the real thing (Fig. 542). _Mirrors_ occur almost exclusively in crests and in connection with mermaids, who, as a general rule, are represented as holding one in the dexter hand with a comb in the sinister. Very occasionally, however, mirrors appear as charges, an example being that of the Counts Spiegel zum Desenberg, who bore: "Gules, three round mirrors argent in square frames or." [Illustration: FIG. 539.--Maunch.] [Illustration: FIG. 540.--Gauntlet.] [Illustration: FIG. 541.--Morion.] [Illustration: FIG. 542.--Mill-rind.] Symbols connected with the Sacred Passion--other than the cross itself--are not of very general use in armory, though there are instances of the _Passion-Nails_ being used, as, for example, in the shield of Procter viz.: "Or, three passion-nails sable." _Pelts, or Hides_, occur in the shield of Pilter, and the Fleece has been mentioned under the division of Rams and Sheep. _Plummets_ (or _Sinkers_ used by masons) form the charges in the arms of Jennings. An instance of a _Pyramid_ is met with in the crest of Malcolm, Bart., and an _Obelisk_ in that of the town of Todmorden. {294} The shield of Crookes affords an example of two devices of very rare occurrence, viz. a _Prism_ and a _Radiometer_. Water, lakes, ships, &c., are constantly met with in armory, but a few instances must suffice. The various methods of heraldically depicting water have been already referred to (pages 88 and 151). _Three Wells_ figure in the arms of Hodsoll, and a masoned well in that of Camberwell. The shields of Stourton and Mansergh supply instances of heraldic _Fountains_, whilst the arms of Brunner and of Franco contain Fountains of the ordinary kind. A _Tarn_, or _Loch_, occurs in the shield of the family of Tarn, while Lord Loch bears: "Or, a saltire engrailed sable, between in fess two swans in water proper, all within a bordure vert." [Illustration: FIG. 543.--Lymphad, sail furled.] The use of _Ships_ may be instanced by the arms of many families, while a _Galley_ or _Lymphad_ (Fig. 543) occurs in the arms of Campbell, Macdonald, Galbraith, Macfie, and numerous other families, and also in the arms of the town of Oban. Another instance of a coat of arms in which a galley appears will be found in the arms recently granted to the burgh of Alloa, while the towns of Wandsworth and Lerwick each afford instances of a _Dragon Ship_. The _Prow of a Galley_ appears in the arms of Pitcher. [Illustration: FIG. 544.--Rainbow.] A modern form of ship in the shape of a _Yacht_ may be seen in the arms of Ryde; while two Scottish families afford instances of the use of the _Ark_. "Argent, an ark on the waters proper, surmounted of a dove azure, bearing in her beak an olive-branch vert," are the arms borne by Gellie of Blackford; and "Argent, an ark in the sea proper, in chief a dove azure, in her beak a branch of olive of the second, within a bordure of the third" are quoted as the arms of Primrose Gailliez of Chorleywood. Lastly, we may note the appropriate use of a _Steamer_ in the arms of Barrow-in-Furness. The curious figure of the lion dimidiated with the hulk of a ship which is met with in the arms of several of the towns of the Cinque Ports has been referred to on page 182. _Clouds_ form part of the arms of Leeson, which are: "Gules, a chief nebuly argent, the rays of the sun issuing therefrom or." The _Rainbow_ (Fig. 544), though not in itself a distinctly modern charge, for it occurs in the crest of Hope, has been of late very frequently granted as part of a crest. Instances occur in the crest of {295} the family of Pontifex, and again in that of Thurston, and of Wigan. Its use as a part of a crest is to be deprecated, but in these days of complicated armory it might very advantageously be introduced as a charge upon a shield. An unusual device, the _Thunderbolt_, is the crest of Carnegy. The arms of the German family of Donnersperg very appropriately are: "Sable, three thunderbolts or issuing from a chief nebuly argent, in base a mount of three coupeaux of the second." The arms of the town of Blackpool furnish an instance of a thunderbolt in dangerous conjunction with windmill sails. [Illustration: FIG. 545.--Estoile.] [Illustration: FIG. 546.--Mullet (Scottish star).] [Illustration: FIG. 547.--Mullet pierced (Scottish spur-revel).] _Stars_, a very common charge, may be instanced as borne under that name by the Scottish shield of Alston. There has, owing to their similarity, been much confusion between _stars_, _estoiles_, _and mullets_. The difficulty is increased by the fact that no very definite lines have ever been followed officially. In England stars under that name are practically unknown. When the rays are wavy the charge is termed an estoile, but when they are straight the term mullet is used. That being so, these rules follow: that the estoile is never pierced (and from the accepted method of depicting the estoile this would hardly seem very feasible), and that unless the number of points is specified there will be six (see Fig. 545). Other numbers are quite permissible, but the number of points (more usually in an estoile termed "rays") must be stated. The arm of Hobart, for example, are: "Sable, an estoile of eight rays or, between two flaunches ermine." An estoile of sixteen rays is used by the town of Ilchester, but the arms are not of any authority. Everything with straight points being in England a mullet, it naturally follows that the English practice permits a mullet to be plain (Fig. 546) or pierced (Fig. 547). Mullets are occasionally met with pierced of a colour other than the field they are charged upon. According to the English practice, therefore, the mullet is not represented as pierced unless it is expressly stated to be so. The mullet both in England and {296} Scotland is of five points unless a greater number are specified. But mullets pierced and unpierced of six (Fig. 548) or eight points (Fig. 549) are frequent enough in English armory. The Scottish practice differs, and it must be admitted that it is more correct than the English, though, strange to say, more complicated. In Scottish armory they have the estoile, the star, and the mullet or the spur-revel. As to the estoile, of course, their practice is similar to the English. But in Scotland a straight-pointed charge is a mullet if it be pierced, and a star if it be not. As a mullet is really the "molette" or rowel of a spur, it certainly could not exist as a fact unpierced. Nevertheless it is by no means stringently adhered to in that country, and they make confusion worse confounded by the frequent use of the additional name of "spur-rowel," or "spur-revel" for the pierced mullet. The mullet occurs in the arms of Vere, and was also the badge of that family. The part this badge once played in history is well known. Had the De Veres worn another badge on that fatal day the course of English history might have been changed. [Illustration: FIG. 548.--Mullet of six points.] [Illustration: FIG. 549.--Mullet of eight points.] [Illustration: FIG. 550.--Sun in splendour.] The six-pointed mullet pierced occurs in the arms of De Clinton. The _Sun in Splendour_--(Fig. 550) always so blazoned--is never represented without the surrounding rays, but the human face is not essential though usual to its heraldic use. The rays are alternately straight and wavy, indicative of the light and heat we derive therefrom, a typical piece of genuine symbolism. It is a charge in the arms of Hurst, Pearson, and many other families; and a demi-sun issuing in base occurs in the arms of Davies (Plate VI.) and of Westworth. The coat of Warde-Aldam affords an example of the _Rays_ of the sun alone. A Scottish coat, that of Baillie of Walstoun, has "Azure, the moon in her complement, between nine mullets argent, three, two, three and one." The term "in her complement" signifies that the moon is full, but with the moon no rays are shown, in this of course differing from the sun in splendour. The face is usually represented in the full moon, {297} and sometimes in the crescent moon, but the crescent moon must not be confused with the ordinary heraldic crescent. In concluding this class of charges, we may fitly do so by an allusion to the shield of Sir William Herschel, with its appropriate though clumsy device of a _Telescope_. As may be naturally expected, the insignia of sovereignty are of very frequent occurrence in all armories, both English and foreign. Long before the days of heraldry, some form of decoration for the head to indicate rank and power had been in vogue amongst, it is hardly too much to say, all nations on the earth. As in most things, Western nations have borrowed both ideas, and added developments of those ideas, from the East, and in traversing the range of armory, where crowns and coronets appear in modern Western heraldry, we find a large proportion of these devices are studiously and of purpose delineated as being _Eastern_. With crowns and coronets as symbols of rank I am not now, of course, concerned, but only with those cases which may be cited as supplying examples where the different kinds of crowns appear either as charges on shields, or as forming parts of crests. Crowns, in heraldry, may be differentiated under the Royal or the Imperial, the Eastern or antique, the Naval, and the Mural, which with the Crowns Celestial, Vallery and Palisado are all known as charges. Modern grants of crowns of Eastern character in connection with valuable service performed in the East by the recipient may be instanced; _e.g._ by the Eastern Crown in the grant to Sir Abraham Roberts, G.C.B., the father of Field-Marshal Earl Roberts, K.G. In order of antiquity one may best perhaps at the outset allude to the arms borne by the seaport towns of Boston, and of Kingston-on-Hull (or Hull, as the town is usually called), inasmuch as a tradition has it that the three crowns which figure on the shield of each of these towns originate from a recognised device of merchantmen, who, travelling in and trading with the East and likening themselves to the Magi, in their Bethlehem visit, adopted these crowns as the device or badge of their business. The same remarks may apply to the arms of Cologne: "Argent, on a chief gules, three crowns or." From this fact (if the tradition be one) to the adoption of the same device by the towns to which these merchants traded is not a far step. One may notice in passing that, unlike what from the legend one would expect, these crowns are not of Eastern design, but of a class wholly connected with heraldry itself. The legend and device, however, are both much older than these modern minutiæ of detail. The Archbishopric of York has the well-known coat: "Gules, two keys in saltire argent, in chief a regal crown proper." {298} The reputed arms of St. Etheldreda, who was both Queen, and also Abbess of Ely, find their perpetuation in the arms of that See, which are: "Gules, three ducal (an early form of the Royal) crowns or;" while the recently-created See of St. Alban's affords an example of a celestial crown: "Azure, a saltire or, a sword in pale proper; in chief a celestial crown of the second." The _Celestial Crown_ is to be observed in the arms of the borough of Kensington and as a part of the crest of Dunbar. The See of Bristol bears: "Sable, three open crowns in pale or." The Royal or Imperial Crown occurs in the crest of Eye, while an _Imperial Crown_ occurs in the crests of Robertson, Wolfe, and Lane. The family of Douglas affords an instance of a crown ensigning a human heart. The arms of Toledo afford another case in point, being: "Azure, a Royal crown or" (the cap being gules). _Antique Crowns_--as such--appear in the arms of Fraser and also in the arms of Grant. The crest of the Marquess of Ripon supplies an unusual variation, inasmuch as it issues from a coronet composed of fleurs-de-lis. The other chief emblem of sovereignty--_the Sceptre_--is occasionally met with, as in the Whitgreave crest of augmentation. The Marquises of Mun bear the Imperial orb: "Azure, an orb argent, banded, and surmounted by the cross or." The reason for the selection of this particular charge in the grant of arms [Azure, on a fess or, a horse courant gules, between three orbs gold, banded of the third] to Sir H. E. Moss, of the Empire Theatre in Edinburgh and the London Hippodrome, will be readily guessed. Under the classification of tools and implements the _Pick_ may be noted, this being depicted in the arms of Mawdsley, Moseley, and Pigott, and a pick and shovel in the arms of Hales. The arms of Crawshay supply an instance of a _Plough_--a charge which also occurs in the arms of Waterlow and the crest of Provand, but is otherwise of very infrequent occurrence. In English armory the use of _Scythes_, or, as they are sometimes termed, _Sneds_, is but occasional, though, as was only to be expected, this device appears in the Sneyd coat, as follows: "Argent, a scythe, the blade in chief, the sned in bend sinister sable, in the fess point a fleur-de-lis of the second." In Poland the Counts Jezierski bore: "Gules, two scythe-blades in oval, the points crossing each other argent, and the ends in base tied together or, the whole surmounted in chief by a cross-patriarchal-patée, of which the lower arm on the sinister side is wanting." Two sickles appear in the arms of Shearer, while the Hungerford crest in the case of the Holdich-Hungerford family is blazoned: {299} "Out of a ducal coronet or, a pepper garb of the first between two sickles erect proper." The sickle was the badge of the Hungerfords. A _Balance_ forms one of the charges of the Scottish Corporation of the Dean and Faculty of Advocates: "Gules, a balance or, and a sword argent in saltire, surmounted of an escutcheon of the second, charged with a lion rampant within a double tressure flory counterflory of the first," but it is a charge of infrequent appearance. It also figures in the arms of the Institute of Chartered Accountants. [Illustration: FIG. 551.--Water-bouget.] Bannerman of Elsick bears a _Banner_ for arms: "Gules, a banner displayed argent and thereon on a canton azure a saltire argent as the badge of Scotland." [Illustration: FIG. 552.--Arms of Henry Bourchier, Earl of Essex, K.G.: Quarterly, 1 and 4, argent, a cross engrailed gules, between four water-bougets sable (for Bourchier); 2 and 3, gules, billetté or, a fess argent (for Louvain). (From his seal.)] _Books_ are frequently made use of. The arms of Rylands, the family to whose generosity Manchester owes the Rylands Library, afford a case in point, and such charges occur in the arms of the Universities of both Oxford and Cambridge, and in many other university and collegiate achievements. _Buckets_ and _Water-bougets_ (Fig. 551) can claim a wide use. In English armory Pemberton has three buckets, and water-bougets appear in the well-known arms of Bourchier (Fig. 552). Water-bougets, which are really the old form of water-bucket, were leather bags or bottles, two of which were carried on a stick over the shoulder. The heraldic water-bouget represents the pair. [Illustration: FIG. 553.--Escallop.] For an instance of the heraldic usage of the _Comb_ the case of the arms of Ponsonby, Earls of Bessborough, may be cited. Combs also figure in the delightfully punning Scottish coat for Rocheid. Generally, however, when they do occur in heraldry they represent combs for carding wool, as in the shield of Tunstall: "Sable, three wool-combs argent," while the Russian Counts Anrep-Elmpt use: "Or, a comb in bend azure, the teeth downwards." _Escallops_ (Fig. 553) rank as one of the most widely used heraldic charges in all countries. They figured in early days outside the limits of heraldry as the badge of pilgrims going to the Holy Land, and may {300} be seen on the shields of many families at the period of the Crusades. Many other families have adopted them, in the hope of a similar interpretation being applied to the appearance of them in their own arms. Indeed, so numerous are the cases in which they occur that a few representative ones must suffice. [Illustration: FIG. 554.--Arms of Hammersmith: Party per pale azure and gules, on a chevron between two cross crosslets in chief and an escallop in base argent, three horseshoes of the first. Crest: on a wreath of the colours, upon the battlements of a tower, two hammers in saltire all proper. Motto: "Spectemur agendo."] [Illustration: FIG. 555.--Arms of the Great Central Railway: Argent, on a cross gules, voided of the field, between two wings in chief sable and as many daggers erect in base of the second, in the fess point a morion winged of the third, on a chief also of the second a pale of the first, thereon eight arrows saltirewise banded also of the third, between on the dexter side three bendlets enhanced and on the sinister a fleur-de-lis or. Crest: on a wreath of the colours, a representation of the front of a locomotive engine proper, between two wings or. [The grant is dated February 25, 1898.]] They will be found in the arms of the Lords Dacre, who bore: "Gules, three escallops argent;" and an escallop argent was used by the same family as a badge. The Scottish family of Pringle, of Greenknowe, supplies an instance in: "Azure, three escallops or within a bordure engrailed of the last;" while the Irish Earls of Bandon bore: "Argent, on a bend azure three escallops of the field." {301} _Hammers_ figure in the crests of Hammersmith (Fig. 554) and of Swindon (Plate VI.), and a hammer is held in the claw of the demi-dragon which is the crest of Fox-Davies of Coalbrookdale, co. Salop (Plate VI.). A _Lantern_ is a charge on the shield of Cowper, and the arms of the town of Hove afford an absolutely unique instance of the use of _Leg-Irons_. Three towns--Eccles, Bootle, and Ramsgate--supply cases in their arms in which a _Lighthouse_ is depicted, and this charge would appear, so far as can be ascertained, not only to be restricted to English armory, but to the three towns now named. _Locomotives_ appear in the arms of Swindon (Plate VI.) and the Great Central Railway (Fig. 555). Of a similar industrial character is the curious coat of arms granted at his express wish to the late Mr. Samson Fox of Leeds and Harrogate, which contains a representation of the _Corrugated Boiler-Flue_ which formed the basis of his fortune. [Illustration: FIG. 556.--Catherine wheel.] [Illustration: FIG. 557.--Staple.] [Illustration: FIG. 558.--Hawk's Lure.] [Illustration: FIG. 559.--Fylfot.] An instance of the use of a _Sand-Glass_ occurs in the arms of the Scottish family of Joass of Collinwort, which are thus blazoned: "Vert, a sand-glass running argent, and in chief the Holy Bible expanded proper." A Scottish corporation, too, supplies a somewhat unusual charge, that of _Scissors_: "Azure, a pair of scissors or" (Incorporation of Tailors of Aberdeen); though a Swabian family (by name Jungingen) has for its arms: "Azure, a pair of scissors open, blades upwards argent." _Barrels_ and _Casks_, which in heraldry are always known as _tuns_, naturally figure in many shields where the name lends itself to a pun, as in the arms of Bolton. _Wheels_ occur in the shields of Turner ["Argent, gutté-de-sang, a {302} wheel of eight spokes sable, on a chief wavy azure, a dolphin naiant of the first"] and Carter, and also in the arms of Gooch. The _Catherine Wheel_ (Fig. 556), however, is the most usual heraldic form. The _Staple_ (Fig. 557) and the _Hawk's Lure_ (Fig. 558) deserve mention, and I will wind up the list of examples with the _Fylfot_ (Fig. 559), which no one knows the meaning or origin of. The list of heraldic charges is very far, indeed, from being exhausted. The foregoing must, however, suffice; but those who are curious to pursue this branch of the subject further should examine the arms, both ancient and modern, of towns and trade corporations. {303}

Chapters

1. Chapter 1 2. INTRODUCTION ix 3. INTRODUCTION 4. CHAPTER I 5. 1. _Tydeus._ 6. 2. _Capaneus._ 7. 3. _Eteoclus._ 8. 4. _Hippomedon._ 9. 5. _Parthenopæus._ 10. 6. _Amphiaraus._ 11. 7. _Polynices._ 12. 1. ("Atque hic exultans--insigne decorum."--Lib. ii. lines 386-392.) 13. 2. ("Post hos insignem--serpentibus hydram."--Lib. vii. lines 655-658.) 14. 3. ("Sequitur pulcherrimus Astur--insigne paternæ."--Lib. x. lines 15. 1. _Cilo_, § 171. 16. 2. _Calliope_, § 74. 17. 1. ("Tum redire paulatim--in sedes referunt."--Cap. 28.) 18. CHAPTER II 19. CHAPTER III 20. CHAPTER IV 21. 6. bendy of six, a canton...."[5] 22. 6. paly of six within a bordure; 7. bendy of six, a canton; 8. or, a 23. CHAPTER V 24. CHAPTER VI 25. 1150. This tomb was formerly in the cathedral of Le Mans, and is now in the 26. CHAPTER VII 27. CHAPTER VIII 28. CHAPTER IX 29. 1265. (From MS. Cott., Nero, D. 1.)] 30. introduction of charges in its angles, led naturally to the arms of the 31. CHAPTER X 32. CHAPTER XI 33. CHAPTER XII 34. CHAPTER XIII 35. CHAPTER XIV 36. CHAPTER XV 37. CHAPTER XVI 38. CHAPTER XVII 39. CHAPTER XVIII 40. 1232. Garbs therefrom became identified with the Earldom of Chester, and 41. CHAPTER XIX 42. 247. The mention of stones brings one to the kindred subject of 43. CHAPTER XX 44. 1615. The introduction of the open full-faced helmet as indicative of 45. CHAPTER XXI 46. CHAPTER XXII 47. CHAPTER XXIII 48. CHAPTER XXIV 49. 1. Sir William Latimer, Lord Latimer, K.G., c. 1361-1381. Arms: gules a 50. 2. Sir Bermond Arnaud de Presac, Soudan de la Tran, K.G., 1380-_post_ 1384. 51. 3. Sir Simon Felbrigge, K.G., 1397-1442. Arms: or, a lion rampant gules. 52. 4. Sir Reginald Cobham, Lord Cobham, K.G., 1352-1361. Arms: gules, on a 53. 5. Sir Edward Cherleton, Lord Cherleton of Powis, K.G., 1406-7 to 1420-1. 54. 6. Sir Hertong von Clux, K.G., 1421-1445 or 6. Arms: argent, a vine branch 55. 7. Sir Miles Stapleton, K.G. (Founder Knight, died 1364). Arms: argent, a 56. 8. Sir Walter Hungerford, Lord Hungerford and Heytesbury, K.G., 1421-1449. 57. 9. Sir Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Stafford, 1429-1460. Arms: or, a chevron 58. 10. Sir John Grey of Ruthin, K.G., 1436-1439. Arms: quarterly, 1 and 4, 59. 11. Sir Richard Nevill, Earl of Salisbury, K.G., 1436-1460. Arms: 60. 12. Sir Gaston de Foix, Count de Longueville, &c., K.G., 1438-1458. Arms: 61. 13. Sir Walter Blount, Lord Mountjoye, K.G., 1472-1474. Arms: quarterly, 1. 62. 3. barry nebuly or and sable (for Blount); 4. vairé argent and gules (for 63. 14. Frederick, Duke of Urbino. Mantling or, lined ermine. 64. 1. That with ancient arms of which the grant specified the colour, 65. 2. That the mantling of the sovereign and Prince of Wales is of cloth 66. 3. That the mantling of other members of the Royal Family is of cloth 67. 4. That the mantlings of all other people shall be of the livery 68. 1. That in the cases of peers whose arms were matriculated before 1890 69. 2. That the mantlings of all other arms matriculated before 1890 shall 70. 3. That the mantlings of peers whose arms have been matriculated since 71. 4. That the mantlings of all other persons whose arms have been 72. CHAPTER XXV 73. introduction, but it will be noticed that no wreaths appear in some of the 74. CHAPTER XXVI 75. 1672. The official blazon of the arms is as follows: "Gules ane holy lambe 76. CHAPTER XXVII 77. CHAPTER XXVIII 78. CHAPTER XXIX 79. CHAPTER XXX 80. CHAPTER XXXI 81. CHAPTER XXXII 82. CHAPTER XXXIII 83. 1. quarterly, i. and iiii., argent, on a bend azure, three bucks' heads 84. 4. quarterly argent and gules, in the second and third quarters a fret 85. 3. Robinson, because Smith, which brought in Jones and Robinson, has been 86. CHAPTER XXXIV 87. CHAPTER XXXV 88. CHAPTER XXXVI 89. CHAPTER XXXVII 90. CHAPTER XXXVIII 91. CHAPTER XXXIX 92. 3. Ireland and the arms of Hanover were placed upon an inescutcheon." This 93. CHAPTER XL 94. CHAPTER XLI 95. CHAPTER XLII 96. 16. Your Mother's Mother's Mother's Mother. 97. 1. _Duke's Coronet_ (Ribbon of St. Patrick): Argent, a saltire gules 98. 2. _Lozenge_: Argent, a chief azure, over all a lion rampant gules, 99. 3. _Earl's Coronet_ (Ribbon of Hanoverian Guelphic Order): Quarterly 100. 4. _Lozenge_: Argent, a chevron gules, a double tressure flory and 101. 5. _Duke's Coronet_ (Garter): Quarterly, 1 and 4, barry of eight or and 102. 6. _Lozenge_ (surmounted by Earl's coronet): Gules, three mullets or, 103. 7. _Earl's Coronet_ (Garter): Quarterly of six, 1. gules, on a bend 104. 5. gules, three escallops argent; 6. barry of six argent and azure, 105. 9. _Baron's Coronet_: Per chevron engrailed gules and argent, three 106. 11. _Earl's Coronet_ (Ribbon of Thistle): Or, a fess chequy argent and 107. 12. _Lozenge_: Sable, on a cross engrailed between four eagles 108. 13. _Baronet's Badge_: Or, on a chief sable, three escallops of the 109. 15. _Shield_: Quarterly, 1 and 4, sable, a bend chequy or and gules 110. 3. gules, three legs armed proper, conjoined in the fess point and 111. 16. _Lozenge_: Quarterly, 1. or, a lion rampant gules; 2. or, a dexter 112. 25. As 17. 113. 31. _Arms_: Argent, a saltire gules. Crest: a monkey statant proper, 114. 2. upon a wreath of the colours, a porcupine proper; and as a further

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