A Complete Guide to Heraldry by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies

1615. The introduction of the open full-faced helmet as indicative of

2956 words  |  Chapter 44

knight or baronet is known to date from about the period of the Restoration. Whilst these fixed rules as to helmets are still scrupulously adhered to by English heralds, Lyon King of Arms would seem to be inclined to let them quietly lapse into desuetude, and the emblazonment of the arms of Sir George Duff-Sutherland-Dunbar, Bart., in the Lyon Register at the recent rematriculation of his arms, affords an instance in which the rules have been ignored. Some of the objections one hears raised to official heraldry will not hold water when all facts are known; but one certainly thinks that those who object to the present helmet and its methods of usage have ample reason for such remarks as one frequently sees in print upon the subject. To put it mildly, it is absolutely ridiculous to see a helmet placed affronté, and a lion passant looking out over the side of it; or to see a helmet in profile with the crest of a man's head {320} affronté placed above it, and as a consequence also peeping over the side. The necessity for providing a resting-place for the crest other than unoccupied space has also led to the ridiculous practice of depicting the wreath or torse in the form of a straight bar balanced upon the apex of the helmet. The rule itself as to the positions of helmets for the varying ranks is officially recognised, and the elaboration of the rule with regard to the differing metals of the Royal helmet and the helmets of peers and knights and baronets is officially followed; though the supposed regulation, which requires that the helmet of an esquire or gentleman shall be of steel alone is not, inasmuch as the helmet painted upon a grant is _always_ ornamented with gold. These rules in England only date from the times of the Stuarts, and they cannot be said to be advantageous from any point of view; they are certainly distinctly harmful from the artistic standpoint. It is plainly utterly impossible to depict some crests upon a profile helmet, and equally impossible to display others upon an affronté helmet. In Scotland the crests do not afford quite such a regular succession of glaring examples for ridicule as is the case in England. No need is recognised in Scotland for necessarily distinguishing the crest of one family from that of another, though proper differences are rigidly adhered to with regard to the coats of arms. Nevertheless, Scotland provides us with many crests which it is utterly impossible to actually carry on an actual helmet, and examples of this kind can be found in the rainbow which floats above the broken globe of the Hopes, and the coronets in space to which the hand points in the crest of the family of Dunbar of Boath, with many other similar absurdities. In England an equal necessity for difference is insisted upon in the crest as is everywhere insisted upon with regard to the coat of arms; and in the time of the late Garter King of Arms, it was rapidly becoming almost impossible to obtain a new crest which has not got a row of small objects in front of it, or else two somethings, one on either side. (Things, however, have now considerably improved.) If a crest is to be depicted between two ostrich feathers, for example, it stands to reason that the central object should be placed upon the centre of the helmet, whilst the ostrich feathers would be one on either side--that is, placed in a position slightly above the ears. Yet, if a helmet is to be rigidly depicted in profile, with such a crest, it is by no means inconceivable that the one ostrich feather at the one side would hide both the other ostrich feather and the central object, leaving the crest to appear when properly depicted (for example, if photographed from a profile view of an actual helmet) as a single ostrich feather. Take, for instance, the Sievier crest, which is an estoile between two ostrich feathers. If that crest were properly depicted upon a profile helmet, the one ostrich feather {321} would undoubtedly hide everything else, for it is hardly likely that the estoile would be placed edge-forwards upon an actual helmet; and to properly display it, it ought to take its place upon an affronté helmet. Under the present rules it would be officially depicted with the estoile facing the side, one ostrich feather in front over the nose, and the other at the back of the head, which of course reduces it to an absurdity. To take another example, one might instance the crest of Sir William Crookes. It is hardly to be supposed that a helmet would ever have been borne into a tournament surmounted by an elephant looking out over the side; it would most certainly have had its head placed to the front; and yet, because Sir William Crookes is a knight, he is required to use an affronté helmet, with a crest which most palpably was designed for use in profile. The absurd position which has resulted is chiefly due to the position rules and largely a consequence of the hideous British practice (for no other nation has ever adopted it) of depicting, as is so often done, a coat of arms and crest without the intervening helmet and mantling; though perhaps another cause may have had its influence. I allude to the fact that an animal's head, for example, in profile, is considered quite a different crest to the same animal's head when placed affronté; and so long as this idea holds, and so long as the rules concerning the position of the helmet exist, for so long shall we have these glaring and ridiculous anomalies. And whilst one generation of a family has an affronté helmet and another using the same crest may have a profile one, it is useless to design crests specifically to fit the one or the other. Mr. G. W. Eve, who is certainly one of the most accomplished heraldic artists of the present time, has adopted a plan in his work which, whilst conforming with the rules to which I have referred, has reduced the peculiarities resulting from their observance to a minimum. His plan is simple, inasmuch as, with a crest which is plainly affronté and has to be depicted upon a profile helmet, he slightly alters the perspective of each, twisting round the helmet, which, whilst remaining slightly in profile, more nearly approaches the affronté position, and bringing the crest slightly round to meet it. In this way he has obtained some very good results from awkward predicaments. Mr. Joseph Foster, in his "Peerage and Baronetage," absolutely discarded all rules affecting the position of the helmet; and though the artistic results may be excellent, his plan cannot be commended, because whilst rules exist they ought to be adhered to. At the same time, it must be frankly admitted that the laws of position seem utterly unnecessary. No other country has them--they are, as has been shown, impracticable from the artistic {322} standpoint; and there can be very little doubt that it is highly desirable that they should be wholly abolished. It is quite proper that there should be some means of distinction, and it would seem well that the helmet with grilles should be reserved for peers. In this we should be following or closely approximating to the rules observed formerly upon the Continent, and if all questions of position are waived the only difficulty which remains is the helmet of baronets and knights. The full-faced open helmet is ugly in the extreme--anything would be preferable (except an open helmet in profile), and probably it would be better to wipe out the rule on this point as well. Knights of any Order have the circle of that order within which to place their shields, and baronets have the augmentations of their rank and degree. The knight bachelor would be the only one to suffer. The gift of a plain circlet around the shield or (following the precedent of a baronet), a spur upon a canton or inescutcheon, could easily remove any cause of complaint. But whilst one may think it well to urge strongly the alteration of existing rules, it should not be considered permissible to ignore rules which undoubtedly do exist whilst those rules remain in force. The helmets of knights and baronets and of esquires and gentlemen, in accordance with present official practice, are usually ornamented with gold, though this would not appear to be a fixed and unalterable rule. When two or more crests need to be depicted, various expedients are adopted. The English official practice is to paint one helmet only, and both the crests are detached from it. The same plan was formerly adopted in Scotland. The dexter crest is naturally the more important and the principal one in each case. By using one helmet only the necessity of turning the dexter crest to face the sinister is obviated. The present official method adopted in England of depicting three crests is to use one helmet only, and all three crests face to the dexter. The centre one, which is placed on the helmet, is the principal or first crest, that on the dexter side the second, and the one on the sinister the third. In Germany, the land of many crests (no less than thirteen were borne above the shield of the Margraves of Brandenburg-Anspach), there has from the earliest times been a fixed invariable practice of never dissociating a crest from the helmet which supported it, and consequently one helmet to every crest has long been the only recognised procedure. In the United Kingdom duplication of crests is quite a modern practice. Amongst the Plantagenet Garter plates there is not a single example to be found of a coat of arms with more than a single crest, and there is no ancient British example of more {323} than one helmet which can be referred to for guidance. The custom originated in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in Germany. This point is more fully dealt with in the chapter devoted to the consideration of crests, but it may be here noted that in Austria a knight may place two and a baron three helmets over his shield. The Continental practice is as follows: When the number of the helms is even, they are arranged so that all look inwards towards the centre line of the escutcheon, half being turned to the dexter, half to the sinister. If the number be uneven, the principal helm is placed in the centre affronté, the others with their crests being turned towards it; thus, some face to the dexter, some to the sinister. The crests are always turned with the helmets. In Scandinavia the centre helm is affronté; the others, with their crests, are often turned outwards. English officialism, whilst confining its own emblazonments to one helmet only, has never sought to assert that the use of two or more was either incorrect or faulty heraldry, and particularly in these later days of the revival of heraldic art in this country, all heraldic artists, following the German example, are inclined to give each crest its own helmet. This practice has been adopted during the last few years by Lyon King of Arms, and now all paintings of arms in Lyon Register which have two crests have the same number of helmets. Some of the Bath stall plates in Henry VII.'s chapel in Westminster Abbey also display two helmets. When two helmets are used, it has been customary, still following the German model, to turn them to face each other, except in the cases of the full-faced helmets of a knight or baronet, and (with the same exception) when three helmets have been employed the outer ones have been placed to face the centre, whilst the centre one has been placed in profile, as would be the case were it standing alone. But the multiplication of English crests in number, all of which as granted are required to differ, has naturally resulted in the stereotyping of points of difference in attitude, &c., and the inevitable consequence is unfortunately that without sacrificing this character of differentiation it is impossible to allow the English heraldic artist the same latitude and freedom of disposition with regard to crests that his German confrère enjoys. These remarks apply solely to English and Irish crests, for Scottish practices, requiring no differentiation in the crests, have left Scottish crests simple and unspoiled. In England the result is that to "play" with the position of a crest frequently results in an entire alteration of its character, and consequently, as there is nothing whatever in the nature of a law or of a rule to the contrary, it is quite as usual to now find that two profile helmets are both placed to face the dexter, as placed to face each other. Another point seems also in {324} England to have been lost sight of in borrowing our methods from Germany. They hold themselves at liberty to, and usually _do_, make all their _charges on the shield_ face to the centre. This is never done in England, where all face to the dexter. It seems therefore to me an anomaly to apply one rule to the shield and another to the helmet, and personally I prefer that both helmets and all charges should face the dexter. In British heraldry (and in fact the rule is universal) no woman other than a reigning Sovereign is permitted to surmount her arms by a helmet. Woodward states that "Many writers have denied the right of ecclesiastics (and, of course, of women) to the use of helmet and crest. Spener, the great German herald, defends their use by ecclesiastics, and says that, in Germany at any rate, universal custom is opposed to the restriction. There the prelates, abbots, and abbesses, who held princely fiefs by military tenure, naturally retained the full knightly insignia." In official English heraldry, there is a certain amount of confirmation and a certain amount of contradiction of this supposed rule which denies a helmet to an ecclesiastic. A grant of arms to a clergyman at the present day, and at all times previously, after the granting of crests had become usual, contains the grant of the crest and the emblazonment shows the helmet. But the grant of arms to a bishop is different. The emblazonment of the arms is surmounted by a mitre, and the crest is depicted in the body of the patent away from and distinct from the emblazonment proper in the margin. But the fact that a crest is granted proves that there is not any disability inherent in the ecclesiastic which debars him from the possession of the helmet and crest, and the rule which must be deduced, and which really is the definite and accepted rule, is that a mitre cannot be displayed together with a helmet or crest. It must be one or other, and as the mitre is indicative of the higher rank, it is the crest and helmet which are discarded. There are few rules in heraldry to which exceptions cannot be found, and there is a painting now preserved in the College of Arms, which depicts the arms of the Bishop of Durham surmounted by a helmet, that in its turn being surmounted by the mitre of episcopal rank. But the Bishopric of Durham was, in addition to its episcopal character, a temporal Palatinate, and the arms of the Bishops of that See therefore logically present many differences and exceptions from established heraldic rules. The rules with regard to the use of helmets for the coats of arms of corporate bodies are somewhat vague and vary considerably. All counties, cities, and towns, and all corporate bodies to whom crests have been granted in England, have the ordinary closed profile helmet {325} of an esquire or gentleman. No grant of a crest has as yet been made to an English university, so that it is impossible to say that no helmet would be allowed, or if it were allowed what it would be. For some reason the arms of the City of London are always depicted with the helmet of a peer, but as the crest is not officially recorded, the privilege necessarily has no official sanction or authority. In Scotland the helmet painted upon a grant of arms to town or city is always the open full-faced helmet of a knight or baronet. But in the grant of arms to a county, where it includes a crest, the helmet is that of an esquire, which is certainly curious. In Ireland no helmet at all was painted upon the patent granting arms to the city of Belfast, in spite of the fact that a crest was included in the grant, and the late Ulster King of Arms informed me he would not allow a helmet to any impersonal arms. Care should be taken to avoid errors of anachronism when depicting helmet and shield. The shapes of these should bear some approximate relation to each other in point of date. It is preferable that the helmet should be so placed that its lower extremity reaches somewhat over the edge of the shield. The inclined position of the shield in emblazonment is borrowed from the natural order of things, because the shield hanging by its chain or shield-strap (the guige), which was so balanced that the shield should most readily fall into a convenient position when slung on the rider's shoulders, would naturally retain its equilibrium only in a slanting direction. {326}

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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