04.04.2013 Views

Jun-09 Issue (Page 1) - The Heraldry Society

Jun-09 Issue (Page 1) - The Heraldry Society

Jun-09 Issue (Page 1) - The Heraldry Society

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

ISSN 0437 2980<br />

THE HERALDRY<br />

THE OFFICIAL NEWSLETTER<br />

OF THE HERALDRY SOCIETY REGISTERED AT STATIONERS HALL<br />

GAZETTE<br />

THE SHIELD OF PRINCE WILLIAM OF WALES<br />

NEW SERIES 113<br />

September 20<strong>09</strong><br />

To contact the Membership Secretary, Ingrid Phillips, write to PO Box 772, Guildford, GU3 3ZX<br />

1


2<br />

HM the Queen has appointed Mrs Caroline<br />

Susan Reynolds of Leighton Hall as the High<br />

Sheriff of Lancashire for 20<strong>09</strong>. Mrs Reynolds<br />

worked for the BBC World Service until 1975<br />

when she took over the management of<br />

Leighton Hall near Carnforth, which she runs<br />

with her husband a member of the Gillow family<br />

of furniture fame. She is involved with several<br />

charities and has a wide range of artistic<br />

interests. Mrs Reynolds was sworn in on April<br />

7th when her shield of arms illustrated on the<br />

right was placed in the Shire Hall. <strong>The</strong> gothic<br />

pinnacles allude to Leighton Hall. Unlike<br />

previous ladies holding this office, there is no<br />

indication of her husband’s armorial bearings.<br />

Note that her arms are on a shield and not a<br />

lozenge or cartouche. <strong>The</strong> official blazon reads:<br />

Vert on a chevron between three doves each<br />

supporting with the dexter foot a gothic pinnacle<br />

or three roses gules barbed and seeded proper.<br />

HIGH SHERIFF FOR LANCASHIRE<br />

THE ARMS OF AN ARCHDEACON<br />

We do not often show the arms<br />

of an Archdeacon - in fact this<br />

may be a first! Those illustrated<br />

belong to <strong>The</strong> Venerable Peter<br />

Delaney MBE, who retired in<br />

<strong>Jun</strong>e as Archdeacon of London.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Bishop of London then<br />

bestowed upon him the title of<br />

Archdeacon Emeritus. He<br />

continues his ministry as priestin-charge<br />

of the church of St<br />

Stephen Walbrook in the City of<br />

London.<br />

<strong>The</strong> arms were granted in <strong>Jun</strong>e<br />

2001, the agent being Hubert<br />

Chesshyre. <strong>The</strong> blazon is as<br />

follows: Argent a cross voided<br />

throughout in dexter chief a<br />

Rustre Gules over all in centre<br />

point an Olive Wreath Vert<br />

enclosing a plate charged with a<br />

lily slipped and leaved also Vert.<br />

For a crest: Beneath a heraldic<br />

Dolphin embowed Vert finned<br />

Gules a cushion Argent fretted<br />

and tasselled Gules.<br />

Items for inclusion in the Gazette post to the Editor, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette, at the address given on page 1 or by e-mail to<br />

gazette@theheraldrysociety.com


APPOINTMENT OF GARTER<br />

It was announced recently<br />

that HM <strong>The</strong> Queen had been<br />

pleased to appoint Thomas<br />

Woodcock Esq LVO, currently<br />

Norroy and Ulster King of<br />

Arms, to be the successor to<br />

Peter Gwynn Jones Esq CVO<br />

as Garter Principal King of<br />

Arms, when the latter retires<br />

at the end of March 2010. Mr<br />

Woodcock has worked in the<br />

College of Arms since 1975<br />

and has been Norroy and<br />

Ulster King of Arms since<br />

1997.<br />

Since the third King of Arms,<br />

Hubert Chesshyre Esq LVO<br />

currently Clarenceux King of<br />

Arms, is also due to retire next<br />

year this will mean there<br />

should be two further<br />

appointments as territorial<br />

Kings of Arms with effect from<br />

2010. We look forward to the<br />

continuance of our friendly<br />

relations with the College<br />

under its new senior<br />

management team.<br />

HERALDIC WEEKEND 2010<br />

<strong>The</strong> Congress Committee has<br />

great pleasure in announcing that<br />

the <strong>Society</strong>’s next<br />

Heraldic Congress<br />

is to be held at<br />

from Thursday 12th to<br />

Sunday 15th August 2010.<br />

Full details together with application<br />

forms will be sent out<br />

during December 20<strong>09</strong>.<br />

NOTE THESE DATES IN YOUR<br />

DIARIES NOW!<br />

A RARE TABARD<br />

This tabard with the arms of<br />

Queen Anne has been<br />

advertised for sale by a<br />

London dealer. Anyone with a<br />

spare £20K available?<br />

Items for inclusion in the Gazette: post to the Editor, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette, at the address given on page 1<br />

or by e-mail to gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

3


4<br />

NEW GARTER KNIGHTS SHIELDS FOR ST GEORGE’S HALL<br />

<strong>Society</strong> member Baz Manning has recently completed new shields for the latest three Garter<br />

Knights. It is the tradition to add the shields of new Knights to the magnificent collection in St<br />

George’s Hall, Windsor Castle, which consequently contains the finest collection of heraldry in<br />

the country. <strong>The</strong>se photographs were taken before the shields were delivered to Windsor Castle.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are reproduced here by kind permission of the Royal Household, Windsor Castle.<br />

GREATER MANCHESTER HERALDRY SOCIETY<br />

15th ANNUAL HERALDRY DAY<br />

HEMSLEY HALL, SALFORD<br />

(opposite the university)<br />

Thursday October 8th 20<strong>09</strong><br />

10.30am until 4.00pm<br />

Speakers will be:<br />

Keith Lovell FHS <strong>The</strong> art of cartography<br />

and the herald<br />

Peter Marshall <strong>Heraldry</strong> at Combermere<br />

Abbey<br />

Stephen Slater FHS An heraldic journey in<br />

Austro-Hungary<br />

John Titterton Lancs & Cheshire<br />

heraldry in the Adlington Roll<br />

Tickets are £15.00 inclusive of buffet<br />

luncheon and secure parking.<br />

Apply to the <strong>Society</strong> Treasurer<br />

Mr. D. Eccles,<br />

14, Ivy Bank Close,<br />

Bolton BL1 7EF<br />

(Cheques payable to GMHS please)<br />

Visit the website at www.theheraldrysociety.com


A NEW DEACON<br />

Michael and Ingrid after the Service (photo by Kitty Phillips)<br />

On 27th <strong>Jun</strong>e Michael Phillips was ordained as a Deacon of the Roman Catholic Church. Michael<br />

is a previous Programme Secretary of the <strong>Society</strong> and husband of our Membership Secretary<br />

Ingrid Phillips. <strong>The</strong> ceremony took place in the churchyard of their church of St Edward the<br />

Confessor at Sutton Park, Guildford, on a beautiful Saturday morning, before a large gathering of<br />

fellow-worshippers, family, and friends. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Society</strong> was represented by the Hon.Secretary and<br />

past Chairman Dr Malcolm Golin and his wife. We offer our congratulations to Michael and wish<br />

him well in his ministry. Similar good wishes go to Ingrid for her new role as Deacon’s wife.<br />

QUEEN CHARLOTTE COMES HOME<br />

A happy reunion took place in July at Kew.<br />

<strong>The</strong> hatchment of Charlotte of Mecklenburg-<br />

Strelitz, Queen Consort of King George III, was<br />

hung in the Palace where she died nearly two<br />

centuries ago, in 1818. Some years ago the<br />

canvas was dumped in a skip, when<br />

renovations were carried out in the nearby<br />

parish church of St Anne on Kew Green. By<br />

remarkable good fortune, it was rescued by our<br />

member Peach Froggatt, as our picture shows.<br />

She has now restored it to its full glory. For a<br />

full account and a recent picture, see the latest<br />

issue of Seaxe, from the Middlesex <strong>Heraldry</strong><br />

<strong>Society</strong>.<br />

Deadline for contributions to the next issue is 1st November<br />

5


6<br />

Even more geometric are the<br />

Arms of Sir Martin Charles<br />

Nourse. Gules two Barrulets<br />

Or each interlaced with a<br />

Chevronel and a Chevronel<br />

reversed Argent. <strong>The</strong>se Arms<br />

are in fact based on earlier<br />

Arms of his maternal ancestry<br />

to which of course he was not<br />

entitled. <strong>The</strong> earlier Arms<br />

were A Fess between two<br />

Chevronels. You will note that<br />

I have made a variation on<br />

this theme which I hope you<br />

will consider effective. <strong>The</strong><br />

Crest shows a millrind taken<br />

from the Arms of Lincoln’s Inn<br />

as an allusion to Sir Martin’s<br />

position as Treasurer of that<br />

Inn. It is combined not with<br />

an ordinary leopard but with<br />

an Asian leopard cat.<br />

Lest you think that all Arms<br />

are geometric, let me rectify<br />

this with the Arms of Sir<br />

HERALDRY OF RECENT KNIGHTS pT 3<br />

This is the concluding part of an address given by Peter Ll Gwyn-Jones, Garter Principal King of Arms, at<br />

Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, on 6th September 2008. Previous parts were in the Gazette issues of December<br />

2008 and March 20<strong>09</strong>.<br />

Trevor Holdsworth which you<br />

may consider rather more<br />

traditional with the basic<br />

formation of On a Fess<br />

between ... <strong>The</strong> Fess is an<br />

allusion to Bradford, which is<br />

in turn a contraction of a<br />

broad ford. <strong>The</strong> swans’ heads<br />

provide an allusion to music -<br />

swan song. White roses for<br />

Yorkshire and a traditional<br />

griffin is suitable for one who<br />

was a chartered accountant,<br />

mediaeval accounts of the<br />

griffin stating that it was the<br />

Visit the website at www.theheraldrysociety.com<br />

guardian of mighty mounds of<br />

gold. You will see that it is<br />

holding a sword because I<br />

suggested that this was<br />

something of a pun on his<br />

surname, hold sworth. I am<br />

not sure that I can convince<br />

myself of this; but I seem to<br />

have convinced the grantee.<br />

Lord King of Wartnaby, when<br />

he was knighted, had piles to<br />

represent his interest in<br />

backgammon and Lord<br />

Sterling of Plaistow, when he<br />

received his knighthood, had<br />

black and white checks for<br />

chess, charged with three red<br />

lyres to represent his interest<br />

in music.<br />

Sir David Seale requested<br />

consideration be given to<br />

include an allusion to racing,<br />

pointing out that his racing<br />

colours consisted of black with<br />

red sleeves and a black cap.<br />

He also wished to include<br />

horseshoes or racing plates.


Obviously a metal needed to<br />

be introduced so I changed<br />

the red body into chevronels<br />

on an Argent field. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

chevronels may perhaps<br />

suggest arms coming from a<br />

black body; but they also<br />

provide an arrow formation<br />

suggesting speed. <strong>The</strong> Badge<br />

is composed of three spurs<br />

emanating from a central<br />

roundel.<br />

I tried to persuade Sir David<br />

to have a decorated border<br />

but without success. I have<br />

once succeeded in having a<br />

racing border for the author<br />

Dick Francis. Although not a<br />

Knight, I am here including it<br />

as unusual and probably<br />

something which you have not<br />

seen previously. I am sorry<br />

that this is something of a<br />

cheat; but I thought you<br />

might enjoy it.<br />

If people accuse me of<br />

favouring flaunches, piles and<br />

pales, I have used other<br />

charges and for example have<br />

turned to the pall as in the<br />

Arms and Crest of Sir Gordon<br />

Jackson, the pall comes from<br />

the “Y” used for cattle<br />

branding in the blue<br />

mountains of Australia.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Achievement shows that<br />

he was also a frequent<br />

traveller to China. <strong>The</strong><br />

charging of an animal Crest<br />

with a division or ordinary is<br />

not always satisfactory.<br />

Although Garter Wriothesley<br />

was particularly fond of this, I<br />

am afraid his successor does<br />

not favour it. I was put off<br />

when I designed a quarterly<br />

kangaroo in gold and black<br />

which really did not work and<br />

made the animal look as if it<br />

was dressed in a rugger<br />

jersey. Also there is a problem<br />

as to whether you allow the<br />

division line or ordinary to<br />

follow the outline of the<br />

animal or whether you treat it<br />

in a two-dimensional manner.<br />

Neither are satisfactory.<br />

Places can also provide for<br />

charges. <strong>The</strong> roses of<br />

Lancashire and Yorkshire are<br />

obvious, but in the Arms of Sir<br />

Hugh Cortazzi there is<br />

something different. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

black formations are the<br />

prows of Venetian gondolas<br />

showing his Venetian<br />

ancestry. Sir Hugh had a<br />

diplomatic career, principally<br />

concerned with Japan hence<br />

the chrysanthemum which<br />

does not have the same<br />

number of petals as the<br />

Emperor but has twenty<br />

petals taken from the<br />

chrysanthemum of the Japan<br />

<strong>Society</strong> of which he was<br />

Chairman for ten years. <strong>The</strong><br />

Supporters and Badge are the<br />

Japanese crane and what<br />

looks like a tortoise in the<br />

Crest is in fact another turtle.<br />

This is Reeve’s turtle which<br />

has a tortoise like appearance.<br />

A device taken from a<br />

company or society with<br />

which the grantee is<br />

associated is another reason<br />

for its adoption. Here are the<br />

Arms of Sir Martin Sorrell<br />

showing an interplay between<br />

east and west with a hexagon<br />

representing a diamond and a<br />

bear’s face for his Russian<br />

ancestry.<br />

E-mail the editor at gazette@theheraldrysociety.com 7


8<br />

<strong>The</strong> Crest with, perhaps<br />

inevitably, sorrel in the mouth<br />

of a goat of India taken from<br />

the Armorial Bearings of the<br />

Haberdashers’ Company.<br />

Taking something from a<br />

company in this way is<br />

certainly permissible but I<br />

have to confess I was<br />

somewhat hesitant in this case<br />

as I do not know what a “goat<br />

of India” is. <strong>The</strong>re are plenty<br />

of goats in India but I do not<br />

see them being different from<br />

goats of Europe, unless we are<br />

talking about serows or gorals<br />

or tahrs which are members of<br />

the goat antelope family from<br />

the Himalayas. <strong>The</strong><br />

Haberdashers’ goat seems to<br />

have little resemblance to<br />

these creatures. However, as<br />

the Haberdashers had Goats<br />

of India as Supporters, and<br />

they were long since blazoned<br />

as such, it was difficult to<br />

refuse one as a Crest to Sir<br />

Martin.<br />

Schools, puns and business<br />

are all combined in the Arms<br />

of Sir David Varney. This is to<br />

show that I do sometimes use<br />

the fess and even purpure,<br />

which I was informed is the<br />

colour for Business in the<br />

Community.<br />

Sir David was Chairman of<br />

the Inland Revenue, hence<br />

the purse. <strong>The</strong> raven was<br />

taken from his school Badge,<br />

his wife’s family were chain<br />

makers, he spent twenty-eight<br />

years in the petroleum<br />

industry, hence the benzene<br />

rings in the form of chains. He<br />

was a man also from Catford,<br />

hence the wavy fess and the<br />

cat’s faces.<br />

I shall end with two slides,<br />

firstly, just to show that<br />

women have an important<br />

part to play in heraldry. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

has been the occasional grant<br />

to a Dame such as Dame<br />

Margaret Seward.<br />

It is the case that grants to<br />

women have greatly increased<br />

in the last fifteen or twenty<br />

years. You may have noticed a<br />

number of grants for Lady<br />

Peers in the articles in <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette and <strong>The</strong><br />

Coat of Arms. Strangely and<br />

somewhat inexplicably,<br />

Dames have lagged behind<br />

but this grant shows the small<br />

inescutcheon to represent a<br />

married woman. This grant<br />

was designed by Patric<br />

Visit the website at www.theheraldrysociety.com<br />

Dickinson, Richmond Herald.<br />

<strong>The</strong> grantee is concerned with<br />

dentistry, hence the indented<br />

division and the seagulls flying<br />

seaward are a pun on the<br />

surname.<br />

Lastly there is Sir John<br />

Ritblat who also had a grant<br />

for his wife. A number of<br />

grantees have decorated<br />

borders and I am showing you<br />

this elaborate grant for<br />

husband and wife with two<br />

Standards and a rather<br />

charming decorated border<br />

done by my heraldic artist<br />

Gillian Barlow and based on a<br />

mediaeval book of hours. This<br />

is not a goat of India but a<br />

chamois for skiing and<br />

another gillyflower for Jill, his<br />

wife’s name.


THE AUTUMN DINNER<br />

Only once every two years is there such an occasion.<br />

<strong>The</strong> members of the <strong>Society</strong> gather in full evening dress<br />

with their decorations and table banners displayed, to<br />

celebrate the boast of heraldry. <strong>The</strong> venue is candlelit,<br />

with a fine display of heraldry of its own.<br />

This year we shall be dining in the magnificent<br />

Apothecaries Hall, with its Stuart panelling and display<br />

of heraldic stained glass. Our Guest of Honour will be<br />

Peter Gwynn Jones Esq CVO FSA to honour him as he<br />

prepares for retirement from the post of Garter,<br />

Principal King of Arms, at the end of March next year.<br />

Since it is so exceptional we hope that members will<br />

make a special effort to attend this event. A booking<br />

form is enclosed with this issue of the Gazette. Please<br />

complete and return it as soon as possible.<br />

Augustus Pugin (1812-52) is<br />

an architect and designer now<br />

best remembered for his work<br />

in the Gothic Revival style<br />

particularly in churches and<br />

the Houses of Parliament<br />

(most notably in the chamber<br />

of the House of Lords).<br />

Towards the end of his short<br />

but frenetically active life<br />

Pugin purchased land at<br />

Ramsgate, Kent on which he<br />

built “<strong>The</strong> Grange” to his own<br />

Victorian Gothic design as a<br />

home for himself and his<br />

family. He claimed the arms<br />

Gules on a bend Or a Martlet<br />

Sable through his French<br />

PUGIN’S HERALDRY<br />

Swiss ancestors and used this<br />

heraldic theme throughout<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Grange” from tiles on the<br />

ground floor to the banner<br />

flying from the tower.<br />

From traces hidden behind<br />

paneling, the wallpaper<br />

throughout the building has<br />

been reproduced to Pugin’s<br />

bold heraldic design with his<br />

motto En Avant (Forward - also<br />

the motto of that other<br />

designer of French origin,<br />

I.K.Brunel) repeated in the<br />

pattern in several colour<br />

combinations.<br />

In Pugin’s study where, at a<br />

desk overlooking the sea, he<br />

completed his designs for the<br />

Palace of Westminster there is<br />

a frieze of the arms associated<br />

with his patrons and other<br />

influences on his work.<br />

Visit the website at www.theheraldrysociety.com<br />

2010 lunch<br />

A date for your diary! <strong>The</strong><br />

Anniversary Lunch next year<br />

will be held at the RAF Club<br />

on Thursday 18th February at<br />

12.30 for 1 pm. A booking<br />

form will be enclosed with the<br />

December issue of the<br />

<strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette”. <strong>The</strong> Lunch<br />

provides the opportunity to<br />

renew old acquaintances in a<br />

most pleasant and informal<br />

atmosphere. It is always a<br />

most popular event, so return<br />

the booking form promptly if<br />

you can come.<br />

Pugin’s heraldry can be seen<br />

on furniture, fireplaces,<br />

portraits and stained glass - in<br />

the private chapel individual<br />

members of the family are<br />

depicted at prayer with their<br />

personal arms appropriately<br />

displayed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house was rescued by<br />

the Landmark Trust in 1997<br />

and beautifully restored to its<br />

original condition. It may be<br />

hired for holiday occupation by<br />

up to eight residents and is<br />

open to visitors by<br />

appointment on Wednesdays<br />

and occasional weekends.<br />

9


10<br />

SPEAKER LENTHALL<br />

<strong>The</strong> following letter has been received from member Baz Manning:<br />

William Lenthall was<br />

descended from an Agincourt<br />

knight and is the man who, as<br />

Speaker Lenthall, made<br />

political history in 1642 by<br />

refusing King Charles I<br />

demands in parliament by<br />

replying “May it please your<br />

Majesty, I have neither eyes to<br />

see, ears to hear nor tongue to<br />

speak in this place but as the<br />

House is pleased to direct me,<br />

whose servant I am here”. As<br />

many readers will know, this<br />

paved the way for the<br />

independence of the Speaker<br />

in the House of Commons.<br />

Lenthall was called to the bar<br />

at Lincoln's Inn in 1616 and<br />

made a bencher in 1633. He<br />

became an MP in 1640.<br />

Lincoln's Inn has two stained<br />

glass examples of his arms,<br />

one in their chapel sable five<br />

lozenges conjoined in bend<br />

argent in sinister chief a<br />

crescent for difference or<br />

surmounted by another azure,<br />

and one in the Great Hall sable<br />

six lozenges conjoined in bend<br />

or. His shield is also among<br />

the exhaustive series of<br />

shields on oak panels<br />

recording the arms of all the<br />

speakers in Speaker's House<br />

within the Palace of<br />

Westminster. Here it is<br />

painted: argent on a bend<br />

cotised sable three mullets or<br />

pierced gules. Burke records<br />

the same arms in the General<br />

Armory without the piercings<br />

for William's father stating that<br />

the Agincourt ancestor also<br />

used these arms. <strong>The</strong> Lincoln's<br />

Inn Lenthall has been<br />

confirmed to be the same man<br />

as Speaker Lenthall.<br />

Does any reader know the<br />

story behind these varied<br />

renditions and which is<br />

correct? <strong>The</strong> Great Hall<br />

version in Lincoln's Inn was<br />

done in the mid-1950s by<br />

Rupert Moore of James Powell<br />

& Sons of Whitefriars, when<br />

dozens of blitzed windows<br />

were replaced. <strong>The</strong> Inns of<br />

Court have long been a<br />

byword amongst armorists for<br />

the number of bogus arms<br />

displayed but in this case it<br />

was believed that the<br />

hundreds of arms replaced<br />

were all researched by the late<br />

Arthur Cole who is said to have<br />

taken great care over their<br />

accuracy.<br />

Baz Manning<br />

NEW PRESIDENT FOR CUHAGS<br />

E-mail the editor at gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

At the Accession Banquet in<br />

<strong>Jun</strong>e, Jacob Davis was<br />

installed as President of<br />

CUHAGS. Jacob is starting<br />

his fourth year studying<br />

maths at Trinity College,<br />

specialising in logic and set<br />

theory. He has been Under<br />

Treasurer of CUHAGS, and<br />

admits to a fascination with<br />

Excel worksheets! In due<br />

course he hopes to further his<br />

studies in the USA.


ALMANAC SEPTEMBER TO NOVEMBER 20<strong>09</strong><br />

Sep 16 <strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>The</strong> Changing Nature of Revd Prof Peter Galloway<br />

the UK Honours System<br />

30 Yorkshire <strong>The</strong> Duxbury Lecture: Keith Lovell FHS<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> of Art<br />

Oct 5 Lancashire Croston & neighbours Derrick Walkden<br />

7 Norfolk <strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> of Dereham Peter Bradbury<br />

Church - the work of<br />

Charles Elvin.<br />

21 <strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>The</strong> Mark Elvins Lecture: Revd Fr Guy Selvester<br />

Modern Trends in [USA]<br />

Ecclesiastical <strong>Heraldry</strong><br />

28 Yorkshire Chasing Million Eyres Jackie Depelle<br />

Nov 2 Lancashire Lancashire, the Black & John Mackie<br />

White County<br />

4 Norfolk How to study Norfolk heraldry Ron Fiske<br />

18 <strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> Armorial Table Carpets Keith Lovell FHS<br />

25 Yorkshire What a Canton Can Tell John Titteron<br />

Please check details of meetings with the appropriate <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

Please note that other heraldic events take place. This is not an exhaustive list. If you would<br />

like your events to appear please send details to: gazette@theheraldrysociety.com, including in<br />

the subject line - almanac entry.<br />

Please note that items for a particular issue should reach the Editor by the first of the<br />

month before, ie by 1st August for the September issue for example.<br />

MEMBERSHIP CHANGES<br />

Welcome to the following new members:<br />

Dr. K. James Bedfordshire<br />

Dr. K. Wood Surrey<br />

Mr. E. Williams Gloucestershire<br />

Rev. E. Griffiths London<br />

Dr. Nicholas Peter George Northamptonshire<br />

We regret to announce the death of<br />

member R A Humphrey.<br />

NEW VENUE<br />

Please remember that,<br />

starting in September, the<br />

<strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> lectures will<br />

be held in St George’s<br />

German Lutheran Church,<br />

Alie Street, London E1, two or<br />

three minutes walk from<br />

Aldgate East LT station.<br />

Items for inclusion in the Gazette post to the Editor, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette, at the address given on page 1 or<br />

by e-mail to gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

11


12<br />

We are pleased to report that<br />

at its July meeting Council<br />

appointed a new Editor for the<br />

“<strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette”.<br />

Dr Bernard Juby is a longstanding<br />

member of the<br />

<strong>Society</strong> with whom many will<br />

be familiar. He has previous<br />

experience of the commercial<br />

production of in-house<br />

magazines, and is used to<br />

working with the software<br />

which is the means of<br />

compiling the “Gazette”. He<br />

will start his new role with the<br />

December issue, for which the<br />

press date is 1st November. All<br />

contributions will be welcome!<br />

A NEW EDITOR FOR THE GAZETTE<br />

THE HON. SECRETARY<br />

Earlier in the year Melvyn Jeremiah indicated his intention to<br />

retire from the post of Hon.Secretary at the end of 20<strong>09</strong> when<br />

he will have occupied the post for seven years. In the March and<br />

<strong>Jun</strong>e issues of the “Gazette” those interested in succeeding to<br />

the post were asked to indicate their interest. At its July meeting<br />

Council appointed John Tunesi<br />

of Liongam as Melvyn’s<br />

successor as Hon.Secretary from<br />

the end of the year.<br />

John will be well-known to<br />

many members of the <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

He and his wife Jane organised<br />

the most successful conference<br />

at FitzWilliam College,<br />

Cambridge last year, and are<br />

even now making preparations<br />

for the next one to be held at<br />

York in 2010. We wish John well<br />

in his new role.<br />

20<strong>09</strong> PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPETITION<br />

<strong>The</strong> entry form for this year’s photographic competition is enclosed with this issue. Please note<br />

the rules, which have changed slightly. Entries should not bear anything on the front of the mount<br />

apart from the photograph. We look forward to receiving your entries, which should preferably<br />

have an ironic or whimsical touch to them. If you have any questions in the meantime contact<br />

the competition co-ordinator, Clive Alexander, on 0208-924 2975.<br />

E-mail the editor at gazette@theheraldrysociety.com


Visit the website at www.theheraldrysociety.com 13


14<br />

Amongst the London<br />

Guilds the Worshipful<br />

<strong>Society</strong> of Apothecaries is<br />

the only one to feature a<br />

rhinoceros in its arms. In<br />

the grant of 1617 the<br />

blazon is:<br />

Arms: Azure Apollo the<br />

inventor of physic proper<br />

with his head radiant<br />

holding in his left hand a<br />

bow and in his right hand<br />

an arrow Or supplanting a<br />

serpent Argent.<br />

Crest: A rhinoceros<br />

proper.<br />

Supporters: Two<br />

unicorns Or armed and<br />

unguled Argent.<br />

To my knowledge, no<br />

one has yet found any<br />

documentation to explain why<br />

the rhinoceros was chosen by<br />

the heralds to be the crest in<br />

the <strong>Society</strong>’s coat of arms.<br />

<strong>The</strong> rhinoceros featured in<br />

the arms is Durer’s rhino of<br />

1515. <strong>The</strong>re is an original<br />

engraving framed and on<br />

display at Apothecaries Hall on<br />

the Landing. This has a second<br />

and much smaller horn<br />

protruding from between its<br />

shoulder blades on its back<br />

which is often portrayed when<br />

the arms are drawn. Durer had<br />

not seen the living animal and<br />

worked from someone else's<br />

description of it - hence this<br />

erroneous second horn. <strong>The</strong><br />

following excerpt from T H<br />

Clarke’s book <strong>The</strong> Rhinoceros<br />

from Durer to Stubbs 1515-<br />

1799 (1986) is of note:”We<br />

know that Durer shared with<br />

many of his age in the<br />

fascination of the exotic; and<br />

we know of his close<br />

relationship with the<br />

THE APOTHECARIES ARMS<br />

armourers of Nuremberg.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se two facts are answer<br />

enough as to why he made the<br />

woodcut. For the exotic, Durer<br />

wrote in his notebook after his<br />

journey to the Netherlands in<br />

1520-1, where he saw for<br />

himself a group of Mexican<br />

works of art, that they were all<br />

much fairer to behold than any<br />

marvel.<br />

Given the armoured nature<br />

of Durer’s rhino and the fact<br />

that heraldry originated with<br />

armoured knights it is<br />

tempting to conjecture that<br />

the image may thus have<br />

come to the notice of the<br />

College of Arms and was then<br />

chosen as a novelty exotic<br />

creature. Exotic beasts and<br />

oriental designs (eg<br />

chinoiserie) were in vogue in<br />

the decorative arts from the<br />

beginning of the 16th century<br />

onwards as a result of travels<br />

and voyages to the then ìweird<br />

E-mail the editor at gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

and wonderfulî foreign<br />

parts of the globe. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

were frequently used in<br />

designs for all sorts of<br />

household and other<br />

items such as household<br />

furniture and clocks.<br />

Similarly, the association<br />

with the perceived<br />

medicinal properties of<br />

the rhino horn may have<br />

influenced the herald<br />

responsible for designing<br />

the <strong>Society</strong>’s arms. It may<br />

also have been felt<br />

appropriate to blur the<br />

distinction between rhino<br />

horns and unicorn horns<br />

(in truth, narwhal tusks or<br />

teeth). This is because the<br />

two supporters in the<br />

<strong>Society</strong>’s armorial<br />

bearings are unicorns, James<br />

VI’s favoured beasts in his<br />

Scottish royal arms which he<br />

brought south on becoming<br />

James I, and both types of<br />

horns were considered useful<br />

as drugs when finely ground.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first live rhino to be seen<br />

in London was at the Belle<br />

Sauvage Inn on Ludgate Hill in<br />

1684 - only a bow's arrow<br />

from Apothecaries' Hall.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is the suggestion that<br />

Durer's rhino looks armoured<br />

because the description he<br />

used was of an animal that<br />

was actually dressed in<br />

armour, and that this is also<br />

why there is a "second horn".<br />

<strong>The</strong> story and this theory is<br />

expounded in Glynis Ridley's<br />

book entitled “Clara's Grand<br />

Tour. Travels with a<br />

Rhinoceros in Eighteenth-<br />

Century Europe” (2004). <strong>The</strong><br />

Indian rhino in question (not<br />

Clara, who was a different


hino altogether) "arrived in<br />

the Tagus Estuary in May<br />

1515", a gift from Muzafar II,<br />

ruler of Gujarat, to Alfonso<br />

d'Albuquerque, Governor of<br />

Portugal's Indian territories<br />

who in turn presented it to his<br />

king, Manuel, who then<br />

planned to give it to Pope Leo<br />

X. Before he did so, "Manuel<br />

could not resist testing the<br />

truth of Pliny's assertion that<br />

the rhinoceros and the<br />

elephant were mortal<br />

enemies."<br />

Durer’s Rhino<br />

When combat was arranged<br />

Fellows<br />

Adrian Ailes<br />

Drusilla Armitage<br />

Gerard Brault<br />

Ralph Brocklebank<br />

John Campbell-Kease<br />

Hubert Chesshyre<br />

John Ferguson<br />

Stephen Friar<br />

John George<br />

Cecil Humphery-Smith<br />

Anthony Ll. Jones<br />

Keith Lovell<br />

Kenneth Mourin<br />

Edward Rothwell<br />

Michael Siddons<br />

Stephen Slater<br />

Pete Taylor<br />

Anthony Wood<br />

Thomas Woodcock<br />

the rhino failed to attack the<br />

elephant and the elephant<br />

retreated to a safe distance.<br />

<strong>The</strong> rhino was then shipped<br />

out of Lisbon in December<br />

1515 where "its likeness had<br />

already been sketched" and<br />

"reports made of its<br />

appearance on a stopover<br />

near Marseilles". In Marseilles,<br />

Francis I of France and his<br />

queen also inspected it and "a<br />

mock-battle was staged<br />

around it for royal<br />

entertainment, with oranges<br />

taking the place of<br />

cannonballs."<br />

Ridley agrees that: "It is<br />

generally agreed that Durer<br />

worked from a printed account<br />

of the animal that had found<br />

its way into the Nuremberg<br />

press," but suggests that<br />

Durer's rhino "with a dorsal<br />

horn emerging from the<br />

clearly delineated plates of the<br />

hide" was so drawn because it<br />

THE SOCIETY’S FELLOWSHIP<br />

Honorary Fellows<br />

Rev Dr John Andrew<br />

Sir Robert Balchin<br />

Graham Beck<br />

David Butterworth<br />

Mrs Ann Buttimore<br />

Ian Campbell<br />

Mrs Pat Campbell-Kease<br />

Patrick Cracroft-Brennan<br />

Martin J Davies<br />

Adrian de Redman<br />

Mrs Ann Esslemont<br />

Peter Esslemont<br />

Peter Field<br />

Mrs Muriel Gardner<br />

Peter Giles<br />

Malcolm Golin<br />

A H Hamilton-Hopkins<br />

Robert Harrison<br />

Mrs Martine Hodson<br />

"had been encased in armour<br />

presented as part of Muzafar's<br />

gift to Albuquerque". She<br />

thinks that the horn could<br />

have been part of the armour,<br />

like a pommel, similar to suits<br />

of horse armour from the<br />

same period. I think this is<br />

highly unlikely, myself, as the<br />

animal would have been<br />

encased for 7 months. Why<br />

would Muzafar have arranged<br />

this when neither he nor<br />

Albuquerque had any<br />

intention of making the beast<br />

fight an elephant? And if it had<br />

been wearing armour, why<br />

didn't the French use<br />

cannonballs?! In a sad twist of<br />

fate the ship went down en<br />

route off the Italian coast and<br />

the rhino drowned before the<br />

Pope set eyes on it.<br />

Michael Holmes<br />

Kay Holmes<br />

David Hopkinson<br />

David Hubber<br />

Graeme Jebb<br />

Bernard Juby<br />

Darrel Kennedy<br />

J L Kirby <strong>Jun</strong>r.<br />

David Krause<br />

Colin Lee<br />

David Lee<br />

Henry Lynn <strong>Jun</strong>r<br />

James McCready<br />

Ken Porter<br />

Major J C Riley<br />

Mary Rose Rogers<br />

Mrs Nan Taylor<br />

Adrian Turner<br />

Derrick Walkden<br />

Robert Watt.<br />

Jonus Basilisk<br />

A member has requested that a full list of the <strong>Society</strong>’s Fellows and Honorary Fellows should<br />

be published in the “Gazette”. So here it is!<br />

Items for inclusion in the Gazette post to the Editor, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette, at the address given on page 1 or by e-mail to<br />

gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

15


16<br />

National<br />

Royal <strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> of<br />

Canada<br />

www.heraldry.ca<br />

Contact:: John Wilkes, RHSC,<br />

P.O. Box 8128, Terminal T,<br />

Ottawa, ON K1G 3H9, Canada<br />

secretary@heraldry.ca<br />

Flag Institute<br />

www.flaginstitute.org<br />

Contact: Michael A Faul,<br />

44 Middleton Road, Acomb,York<br />

YO24 3AS<br />

Phone 0190433 9985<br />

info@flaginstitute.org<br />

<strong>Heraldry</strong> Australia<br />

Regular meetings in Sydney and<br />

Canberra. Occasional meetings in<br />

Melbourne. Contact:<br />

Stephen Michael Szabo,<br />

Hon. Secretary,<br />

PO Box 107 LAWSON<br />

NSW 2783 Australia<br />

heraldry_aust@optusnet.com.au<br />

<strong>Heraldry</strong> <strong>Society</strong> of Scotland<br />

www.heraldry-scotland.co.uk<br />

Meetings held at various<br />

locations. Contact: Charles<br />

Napier, 40 Morningside Drive,<br />

Edinburgh, EH10 5LZ.<br />

<strong>Society</strong> of Genealogists<br />

www.sog.org.uk<br />

14 Charterhouse Buildings,<br />

Goswell Road, London EC1M<br />

7BA Phone 0207 553 3290<br />

<strong>Society</strong> of Heraldic Arts<br />

www.heraldic-arts.com<br />

Contact: John Ferguson, Phone<br />

01737 242 945<br />

White Lion <strong>Society</strong><br />

www.whitelionsociety.org.uk<br />

<strong>Society</strong> of Friends of the<br />

College of Arms<br />

Contact: Roland Symons, 5<br />

Weatherley Avenue, Odd Down,<br />

BATH BA2 2PF<br />

This Contacts page will appear<br />

ONCE per year in the September<br />

issue of the <strong>Heraldry</strong> Gazette.<br />

Amendments will appear as<br />

individual items in intervening<br />

issues.<br />

Local<br />

CONTACTS<br />

City of Bath<br />

www.bath-heraldry.org.uk<br />

Meetings are held at Manvers<br />

Street Baptist Church Halls, Bath.<br />

2.30 pm. Secretary: John Uncles,<br />

18 High Green, Easton, Wells,<br />

Somerset BA5 1EG. Phone: 01749<br />

870158<br />

Birmingham and Midland<br />

<strong>The</strong> Group meets on 4th Tuesday<br />

(except Aug & Dec) at 7.15 pm in<br />

the Kingsley-Norris Room,<br />

Birmingham & Midland Institute.<br />

Contact: Adrian de Redman,<br />

Phone 0121-608 5496.<br />

Cambridge University<br />

www.cam.ac.uk/societies/cuhags/<br />

Contact: Derek Palgrave,<br />

Crossfield House, Stanton,<br />

IP31 2DY<br />

DerekPalgrave@btinternet.com<br />

Cheshire<br />

<strong>The</strong> group meets at Townley<br />

Street Sunday School, Macclesfield<br />

at 2.30 pm. Contact: Mr Harold<br />

Storey 2 Orchard Close, Cheadle<br />

Hulme SK8 7ET<br />

Phone 0161 4853786<br />

Chilterns<br />

<strong>The</strong> group meets at various<br />

locations. Contact: John Allen,<br />

Phone 0118 947 8712<br />

Greater Manchester<br />

www.greatermanchesterheraldrysociety.co.uk<br />

Contact: Alan Fennely,<br />

16 Paderborn Court,<br />

Bolton, BL1 4TX<br />

Phone 01204 532915<br />

Lancashire<br />

http://members.aol.com/lancsheraldry<br />

<strong>The</strong> group meets on the first<br />

Monday of each month at St<br />

Stephen’s Parish Centre,<br />

Broadgate, Preston at 7.30 pm.<br />

Contact: Chris Ward, 87 Palmer<br />

Road, Blackburn BB1 8BS<br />

Phone 01254 53866<br />

chrisward1@btinternet.com<br />

E-mail the editor at gazette@theheraldrysociety.com<br />

Merseyside<br />

Philip Jackson, 38 Heygarth Road,<br />

Eastham, Cheshire, CH62 8AE.<br />

Phone 0151 327 3491<br />

Middlesex<br />

www.middlesex-heraldry.org.uk<br />

Meetings held at the Guide Hut,<br />

Bury Street, Ruislip. Contact: Mrs<br />

Margaret Young, 34 Farthings<br />

Close, Eastcote, Pinner, Middx,<br />

HA5 2QR, Phone 0208 868 8750.<br />

Norfolk<br />

www.norfolkheraldry.co.uk<br />

Meetings are held at United<br />

Reformed Church, Princes Street,<br />

Norwich, 7.45 pm on the first<br />

Wednesday of the month.<br />

Contact: Philippa Sims, 26c<br />

Shotesham Road, Poringland,<br />

Norfolk NR14 7LG.<br />

Somerset<br />

www.sanhs.org/SHS%20Home%20<strong>Page</strong>.htm<br />

Contact: Alex Findlater: <strong>The</strong><br />

Grammar House, <strong>The</strong> Hill,<br />

Langport, Somerset TA10 9UP;<br />

01458 250868; email<br />

alex@findlater.org.uk.<br />

Staffordshire<br />

Contact: Graham Phillips,<br />

1 Foxleigh Meadows, Handsacre<br />

Staffs WS15 4TG<br />

Phone 01543 492794<br />

graham@phillips8106.fsworld.co.uk<br />

Suffolk<br />

Contact: Donald Hunt,<br />

81a Southgate St,<br />

Bury St Edmunds, IP33 2BJ<br />

Phone 01284 763462<br />

Yorkshire<br />

www28.brinkster.com/yksheraldrysoc<br />

Meetings are held at Headingley<br />

Parish Centre, St Michaelís Road,<br />

Headingley, Leeds at 7.15pm.<br />

Contact: David Krause, 6<br />

Corrance Road, Wyke, Bradford<br />

BD12 9LH<br />

Phone 01274 679272.<br />

Any change to contact details<br />

should be notified to the Editor of the<br />

“Gazette” as soon as possible.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!