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Arthur Charles Fox-Davies.

Heraldic badges

. (page 6 of 8)

howse of Herforth ") ; (3) a red rose barbed
and seeded proper ("for the howse of Lan-'
caster ") ; (4) an heraldic antelope statant
argent, ducally gorged and chained or, armed
tufted and unguled of the last. Motto —
" Dieu et mon Droyt " [all the foregoing
from Standards — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms] ;
(5) a fire-beacon [Sir Wm. Segar ; also
frieze in chantry] ; (6) an heraldic ante-
lope lodged [Standard]. (The swan, the
antelope lodged, both chained to the fire-
beacon and conjoined into one device, are
on his tomb in Westminster Abbey) ; (7)
a fox tail [Planche] ; (8) ostrich feather
argent [Planche].

Henry VI. Badges — (i) a spotted panther
passant guardant [Harl. MS.] ; (2) two
ostrich feathers in saltire, one silver, the
other gold [Burke, Boutell, Cussans, and
Woodward] ; (3) a chained antelope [Bou-
tell] ; (4) (?) an eagle.

"The Cornysshe chawghe (Trevilian) ofFt w* his trayne
Hath made our egull blynde."

[Political Poem, 1449 — "Excerpta Historica."]
no



A List of Badges



Queen Margaret of Anjou. Badge — a daisy
with the motto, " Humble et loiall."

Henry VI L Colours — argent and vert [Stan-
dard— MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms]. Badges— {i)
The red dragon of Cadwalladar [Burke and
Woodward.] (N.B. — This badge was not
originally, as now, shown passant upon a
green mount. The mount, no doubt, ori-
ginated from the fact that the red dragon
was used upon a standard of the livery
colours (Tudor), white and green. Wood-
ward refers to another standard, in which
the red dragon is inflamed and the field
seme of flames. The dragon, according
to early Welsh tradition, was of "ruddy
gold," and is to be found both red and gold.)

(2) A gold portcullis [Standard — MS.
I. 2, Coll. Arms], with the motto "Altera
securitas." (Woodward suggests the trans-
lation of the motto, " Two-door," or a second
door, as a pun on the name Tudor.) (Vide
Fig. 19.)

(3) The Tudor rose. (This was vari-
ously represented. Burke and Woodward
both mention the forms (^) quarterly argent
and gules, and (f) a white rose superimposed
upon a red rose ; whilst Woodward also

III



Heraldic Badges



mentions {c) per pale argent and gules. On
one of this king's standards (MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms) both red roses barbed and
seeded proper, and white roses barbed and
seeded proper, are found, as also " a red
rose surmounted of a white rose with two
buds slipped vert," and " a red rose sur-
mounted of a white rose encircled by rays
of the sun gold.")

(4) The Royal Crown, in or above a
bush of hawthorn, combined with the Royal
Cypher. (Woodward, who recites the story
that after the battle of Bosworth the golden
circlet of King Richard's helm was found
in a hawthorn bush, and with this Lord
Stanley crowned King Henry on the battle-
field.)

(5) Flames of fire [Standard — MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms].

(6) A white greyhound, collared gules
[Standard— MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

(7) A fleur-de-lis or [Standard — MS. I.
2, Coll. Arms].

(8) A dun cow [a yellow standard charged
with a dun cow is mentioned in Hall's
'' Chronicle "].

(9) A falcon standing on a fetterlock
[Cussans].

112




Fig. 37.

A design from "Prince Arthur's Book,''' showing {a) the Cross of
St. George ; (Jb) the crowned Tudor rose 5 {c) the dragon j
{d) the "sun-burst"; {e) the crowned portcullis,- (/) the
fleur-de-lis; {g) the greyhound.



1. NEW
Lie



LIB



.DEN FOUNDATIONS I



A List of Badges



(lo) The ^'sun-burst" [vide Fig. 19).

Henry VIII. Colours — argent and vert. Badges
— (i) a red rose [Burke] ; (2) the Tudor
roses [Standard] (a rose gules, surmounted
of another argent, on a stalk with two buds
proper. Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms) ;
(3) a fleur-de-lis or [Standard — MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms] ; (4) a portcullis or [Burke,
Woodward] ; (5) a red dragon [Standard —
MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms] ; (6) a silver cock
with red comb and wattles [Burke] ; (7) a
rose and pomegranate dimidiated [Tourna-
ment Roll] [vide Fig. 17) ; (8) flames of fire
[Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms]. MoUo —
Dieu et mon droyt.

Katharine of Arragon, Badges — (i) a
pomegranate ; (2) a sheaf of arrows silver ;
(3) the two foregoing dimidiated into one
device.

Anne Boleyne. Badge' — a silver falcon
[Burke], a falcon with crown and sceptre
[Woodward and Boutell] ; a falcon argent,
on the stump of a tree erased or, holding
a sceptre of the last and before him, issuing
from the stump, a bunch of flowers argent
and gules, stalked vert [Cussans],

Jane Seymour, Badge — a phoenix [Burke],
113 H



Heraldic Badges



a phoenix rising from a castle between two
Tudor roses [Boutell].

Anne of Cleves. Badge — a black lion
charged on the shoulder with a gold escar-
buncle [Burke].

Katharine Parr. Badge — a maiden's head
issuing from a Tudor rose [Burke] ; the
head crowned [Cussans].

Herbert. Vide Pembroke and Chamberlain
(Lord).

Hereford, Earl of (Humphrey de Bohun, d.
1322). Badge — a swan [Doyle].

Hereford, Viscount (Walter Devereux, d. 1 558).
Badges — ( i ) a " French wife's " hood argent ;
(2) a horseshoe or [Doyle].

Heron, John, "Chevalyer,Tresorier de la Cham-
bre du Roy." Colours — red. Badges (i) a
falcon argent, charged with three bars sable,
on the first one, on the second two, and on
the third three bezants, preying on a par-
tridge or ; (2) a heron's head erased argent,
beaked and ducally gorged or. Motto — Verite
le demonstre [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll.
Arms].

Holand. Vide Exeter.

Hopton, " Mayster." Colours — gules. Badge

114



A List of Badges



— a griffin passant argent, wings erect or,
beaked and tufted of the last, grasping in
the dexter claw a pellet. Motto — " Leyalte
sansein " [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Howard. Vide Arundel, Nottingham, Norfolk,
and Stafford.

Howard. Badge — white lion [Woodward].

Howgan, " Mayster." Colours — or and sable.
Badges — (i) a cockatrice gules ; (2) a mart-
let [Standard— MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Howth, Lord (The Lord Hawth of Irland).
Colours — four stripes argent and gules.
Badge — a wolf statant of a " dark tawny,"
with fins along the back belly and upon the
hind legs of a " water colour " [Standard
MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].

Hungerford. Vide Hastings.

Hungerford, Lord. Badge — a sickle [tomb in
Salisbury Cathedral].

Hungerford, Sir John. Colours — red and green.
Badges — (i) a sickle erect argent, handle
gules, banded or, charged on the blade with
a mullet ; (2) three sickles as foregoing,
interlaced round a mullet [Standard — MS.
L 2, Coll. Arms].

Hunsdon. Badge — swan [Woodward].

115



Heraldic Badges



Huntingdon, Earl of (George Hastings, d.
1545). Colours — purple and blue. Badges
— (i) three sickles entwined argent, the
handles outward gules ; (2) a sickle as
above ; (3) a sickle as above and a garb
argent, conjoined by a cord in fret or.
[MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms]. Motto — La me
tiendra. (Vide Fig. 39.)

Huntingdon, Earl of (Francis Hastings, d.
1560). Livery — blue [H. Machin, "Diary,"

P- 13]-

Huntingdon, Earl of (George Hastings, d.
1604). Livery — 1601, "A blew coat with
a Cognizance, being a Bull's head set
upon the sleeve of the same " [Hey wood
Townshend, "Hist. Collections," p. 286].

Huntingdon, Earl of (Henry Hastings, d.
1595). Colours — russet and blue [Doyle],

Hussey, Lord. Colours — gold and green.
Badge — a hind lodged and regardant argent,
collared and chained or [Standard — MS. L
2, Coll. Arms].

Ichyngham, "Mayster." Colours — gold. Badge
— a hawk's lure per fesse azure and argent,
the azure fretty argent, the string of the
last [Standard — MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].

116



A List of Badges



India. Badges — the Star of India (as the Star
of that Order of Knighthood) ; the lotus
flower [there is no official authority for
either as a badge].

Inglefield (Sir Thomas Ingelfeld). Badge — an
eagle displayed with two heads per pale
gules and azure [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll.
Arms].

Ireland. Badges — (i) the shamrock (trefoil
slipped) vert, crowned [Royal Warrant]
(Fig. 4) ; (2) the harp crowned [Royal
Warrant] (Fig. 5).

James I. Badges — (i) the Tudor rose [Burke] ;
(2) the fleur-de-lis [Burke] ; (3) the harp
(Ireland) [Burke] ; (4) the thistie (Scotland)
[Burke] ; (5) a Tudor rose dimidiated
with a thistle and surmounted by a Royal
crown [Burke], with the motto " Beati paci-
fici " [Cussans].

James II. (of Scotland). Badge — annulet [Great
Seal].

James III. (of Scotland). The first Scottish
King to use the badge of the thistle.

James III. (of Scotland). Badge — fleur-de-lis
[Great Seal].

James IV. (of Scotland). Badges — trefoil [Great

117



Heraldic Badges



Seal] ; mullet [Privy Seal] ; crescent [Privy-
Seal].

John (King). Badges — (i) a crescent sur-
mounted by a star [Silver penny] {vide
Fig. i8); (2) the broom plant [Cussans].
(Vide Fig. 15.)

Kent, Countess of (Joan the Fair Maid of
Kent). Badge — a white hind lodged ['' the
Whyte Hynd by the fayre mayden of
Kent " [Harl. MS. 304, fol. 12].

Kent, Earl of (William Neville, Lord Faucon-
berg, d. 1463). Colours — white and blue.
Badge — " an hangulhooke " "ye fyshoke "
[Doyle].

" The Fissher hath lost his Hangulhook.''

[Political Poem, 1449 — " Excerpta Historica."]

Kent, Earl of (The Lord Gray). Colours — gules.
Badge — a wyvern with wings endorsed or
[Standard— MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].

Kent, Earl of (George Grey). Badge — 1475,
" blak ragyd staffe " [MS. Coll. Arms, 2nd
M. 16] ; "a ragged staff in bend sinister
sable." Motto — " De bon vouloir.'' Colour
— scarlet [Doyle].

Kent, Earl of. Badge — a bear argent [Cus-
sans],

118



A List of Badges



Kirkham (" Syr John Kerkh'm of Blakedon,
Devon"). Co/ours — gules. Badge — a lion's
head erased argent. Motto — Ever to be
trew [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Knowles. Badge — an elephant [Cussans].

Kyngeston, Sir William. Co/ours — azure and
or. Badge — a goat argent rearing against
and browsing on a tree eradicated vert
[Standard MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Lacy. Badge — the Lacy knot [Planche]. (Vide
Fig. 26.)

Lamont {Clan). Badge — crab-apple tree [Cus-
sans].

Lancaster, Earl of (Edmund Crouchback).
Badge — the red rose [Tomb, according to
Camden].

Lancaster, Duke of (Henry, d. 1361). Badges —
(i) the rose [Seal] ; (2) a red rose crowned
[Harl. MS. 4632] ; (3) a fox-tail proper
[Harl. MS. 4632] ; (4) the ostrich feather
the pen ermine [Harl. MS. 4632]. Colours —
white and blue.

Lancaster, Duke of (John of Ghent). Colours
— white and blue [Doyle]. Badges — (i)
an ostrich feather ermine [Doyle] ; (2)
an ostrich feather argent [Doyle] ; (3) a

119



Heraldic Badges



padlock [Planche] ; (4) an eagle standing
on a fetterlock [Doyle] ; (5) a red rose
[Camden. The will of the Duke mentions
his bed powdered with roses] ; (6) a white
falcon holding a padlock in its beak [Wood-
ward]. (A roundle sable, charged with three
ostrich feathers ermine appeared in a window
of Old St. Paul's opposite the tomb of John
of Gaunt.)

Lancaster, Duke of (Henry IV.). Badges — (i)
an ostrich feather erect wound about four
times by a scroll inscribed " So-ve-rey-gne,"
beginning at the lower end ; (2) the letter
S ; (3) a swan argent, ducally collared and
chained or (for Bohun) ; (4) an antelope or ;
(5) a rose gules ; (6) a blazing cresset or
fire-pot [Doyle]. Vide Henry IV.

Lancaster, Duke of (Henry V.) Badges — 1401
(i) a swan [R. Pari., p. 478] ; (2) an ostrich
feather erect argent with a small scroll across
the lower part of the quill inscribed " Ich
dien " [Doyle]. (These two were some-
times conjoined, the feather being held in
the beak, and two in this form are some-
times quoted as his supporters.)

Lancaster Herald. Badge — a rose gules,
crowned. (In use.)

120



A List of Badges



Langford, Sir Nicholas. Badge — two wings
silver [MS. Coll. Arms. 2nd M. i6].

Latimer, Lord. Badge — a human heart. Motto
— A Dieu et a ma fiancee [Woodward].

Laware, Alphyn, The Lord. Colours — gules
and azure. Badges — (i) a male griffin ;
(2) a crampet or (Lord de la Warr)
[Standard— MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].

La Zouche. Badge — falcon [Woodward].

Leicester, Earl of (Robert Fitzpernell). Badge
— a cinquefoil ermine (probably a pimpernel
flower alusive to his mother's name) [Seal].

Leicester, Earl of (Simon de Montfort). Banner
— per pale indented argent and gules (some-
times stated to pertain to the Honour of
Hinckley) [Roll, temp. Henry III.].

Leicester, Earl of (Robert Dudley). Badge — a
ragged staff argent. Colours — or and blue
[MS. Harl. 2076].

Lincoln, Earl of (Edward Clinton, d. 1585).
Badge — an anchor erect argent, the stock
flukes and two ropes extended in curves out-
wards and down each side or [MS. Harl.
2076] {} if this is not merely his official
badge as Lord High Admiral. Compare
with present Admiralty flag). Livery —

121



Heraldic Badges



1552, "Cottes blake & brodered with
whyt" [Hen. Machyn, "Diary,'* p. 20].

Lisle. Colours — blue. Badges — (i) a hart
lodged argent, attired ducally gorged and
chained or, within a circular wreath white
and gold set round with lilies, some full
blown, others in bud ; (2) a lily slipped.
Motto — En bon heure puisse [Standard —
MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Lisle, Viscount (Edward Grey, d. 1492).
Badge — 1475, "Lyon sylv. showyng hole-
face, crouned gold, enarmed azur " [MS.
Coll. Arms, 2nd M. 16].

Lisle, Viscount (Sir Charles Brandon). Colours
— four stripes gules and argent. Badges —
(i) on a rock azure, an eagle or, wings
elevated azure, outer feathers or, beaked
and legged purpure, holding in the dexter
claw a bird or ; (2) a lion's head erased or,
gutte de larmes [Standard — MS. L 2, Coll.
Arms].

Lisle, Viscount (Arthur Plantagenet, d. 1542).

Colours — blue and purple (four stripes).

[MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].
Loveday. Colours — or and argent. Badge —

a wolf courant [Standard — MS. L 2, Coll.

Arms].

122



A List of Badges



Lovel, Viscount (Francis Lovel, d. 1487).
Badge — a square-cornered padlock [MS.
Ashmole, 1 121].

Lucy (" Mayster Lusey "). Co/ours — azure.
Badge — a lucy erect argent. Motto — By
trwt be delegence [Standard — MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms].

MacAllister {Clan), Badge — five-leaved heath
[Cussans].

Macdonald {Clan). Badge — bell-heath [Seton].

Macfarlane {Clan). Badge — cloudberry bush.

MacDonnell {Clan), Badge — mountain heath
[Cussans].

MacDougal {Clan), Badge — cypress [Cussans].

MacGregor {Clan), Badge — pine [Seton].

Macintosh (Clan), Badge — box (Cussans).

MacKay {Clan), Badge — bull-rush [Cussans].

MacKenzie [Clan), Badge — deer grass [Cus-
sans].

MacKinnon (Clan), Badge — St. John's wort
[Cussans],

MacLachlan {Clan), Badge — mountain ash
[Cussans].

MacLean(C/<2«). Badge — blackberry [Cussans].

123



Heraldic Badges



MacLeod [Clan). Badge — red whortleberries
[Cussans].

MacNab (Clan), Badge — rose buckberries
[Cussans].

MacNeil (Clari), Badge — sea ware [Cussans].

MacPherson {Clan), Badge — variegated box
[Cussans].

MacQuarrie {Clan), Badge — black thorn
[Cussans].

MacRae {Clan), Badge — fir club moss [Cus-
sans].

Mainwaring. Badge — an ass's head sable
[Cussans].

Mainwaring, John " de Pevyr in com Chester
Armiger." Colours — gules and or. Badge
— a scythe argent. Motto — A la confucion
des Ennemis [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll.
Arms].

Manners. Vide Roos and Rutland.

March, Earl of (Roger Mortimer, d. 1360.
Badge — a rose argent. [MS. Ashm. 1121,

P- ^3S\'

March, Earl of (Roger Mortimer, d. 1398).
Colours — red and white [Doyle].

Markham (" Mayster Marcam "). Colours —

124



A List of Badges



azure. Badge — a Hon of St. Mark, tail
twisted round the leg and reflected over
the back or, supporting in his fore paws
a lyre (? horse hames) unstringed of the
last [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Marmion. Badge — an ape passant argent,
ringed and chained gold [Harl. MS., No.

Mary I., Queen. Badges — (i) "The Tudor
rose and the Pomegranate knit together "
[Burke] {vide Fig. 17) ; (2) winged Time
drawing Truth from a Pit, with the motto,
" Veritas temporis filia " [First Great Seal] ;
(3) a sheaf of arrows dimidiated with the
Tudor rose on a ground of green and blue
[Burke] ; (4) a crowned rose [Burke] ; (5)
a red rose within a white one, impaled by
dimidiation with a sheaf of arrows or, tied
with a golden knot upon a semi-circular
field argent and vert, the whole surrounded
with rays and ensigned with an open crown
or [Woodward] ; (6) an altar, thereon a
sword erect with the motto, " Arae et regni
custodia " [''Antiquarian Discourses," by
Sir Richard Cotton, vol. i. p. 112.]



Mary, Queen (of Scotland). Badge — crowned
thistle.



125



Heraldic Badges



Massyngberd, Sir Thomas, of Gunby, Co. Lines.
Colours — four stripes, red and gold. Badge
— two arrows in saltire argent [Standard —
MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Mauleverer. Badge — a greyhound [Wood-
ward].
Menzies {Clan). Badge — ash [Cussans].

Montacute. Badge — talbot [Woodward].

Montacute, Lord. Badge — a buck [Woodward] ;
a roebuck [Cussans].

Montagu, Baron (Henry Pole, d. 1539). Colours
— blue and red, four stripes [Doyle].

Montford, Sir Simon. Badge — fleur-de-lys
gold [MS. Coll. Arms, 2nd M. 16].

Montgomery, Sir Thomas. Badge — a fleur-de-
lis [Seton].

Mordaunt, " Mayster " John. Badge — an eagle's
head erased argent, ducally gorged gules,
charged with three estoiles sable, holding in
the beak a cinquefoil argent slipped vert.
Motto — Lucem tuam da Nobis [Standard —
MS. L 2, Coll. Arms].

Morley, Lord. Badge — bear's head muzzled
[Woodward].

Mortimer. Vide March.

126



A List of Badges



Mortimer. Badge — a wolf argent.
Mowbray. Vide Norfolk.

Mowbray. Badge — mulberry (leaf and fruit)

[Woodward].
Mowbray, Segrave and Stourton, Lord. Vide

Stourton.

Munford. Badge- — a fleur-de-lis gules [Cus-
sans.]

Murray {Clan), Badge — Juniper [Seton].

Mylton ("Mayster"). Colour — gules. Badges —
(i) a snake coiled proper ; (2) a trefoil
slipped argent, the leaves inscribed with the
letters A. B. C. [Standard— MS. I. 2, Coll.
Arms].

Nevill. Vide Abergavenny, Kent, Warwick.

Nevill. Badge — a galley sable [Woodward].

Neville. Badge — dun bull [Woodward, Cus-
sans].

Neville. Badge — annulet [Woodward].

Neville. Badge — a fret or [Cussans].

Neville. Badges — (i) ship [Woodward] ; (2)
ship's buoy [Woodward] ; (3) staples
[Woodward].

Newport, Sir Thomas, Bailiff of Egle. Colours

— red. Badges — (i) a stag trippant or,

127



Heraldic Badges



ducally gorged of the last ; (2) a vine
branch argent. Motto — Esperance me
grandement comforte [Standard — MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms].

Norfolk, Duke of (Mowbray). Badge — mul-
berry tree [Seton].

Norfolk, Duke of (Thomas Mowbray, Duke and
Earl of Norfolk, d. 1400). Badge — (1387)
" Pennis coronata " [J. Gower, " Chronica
tripartita : " Political Poems, I. p. 419].

Norfolk, Duke of (John Mowbray, d. 146 1).
Badges — (i) " the white lyoun — "

" The white lyon is leyde to slepe."

[Political Poems, II. p. 222.]

(2) an ostrich feather erect, a chain laid
along the quill [Seal, 1442.]

Norfolk, Duke of (John Mowbray, d. 1476).
Badge— {i^^S) ^ " whytt lyon " [MS. Coll.
of Arms, 2nd M. 16]. Livery — "Blewe
and tawny, and blew on the leffte syde and
bothe darke colors " [" Paston Letters," II.

P- 355]-
Norfolk, Duke of (John Howard). Badge —
1475, "Whytt lyon, on his sheulde, cres-
sant azur " [MS. Coll. of Arms, 2nd M. 16].

Norfolk, Duke of (Thomas Howard, d. 1524).

128



A List of Badges



Badge— \\-is, " Salet silv." [MS. Coll. of
Arms, 2nd M. i6]. Colours — argent and
gules [Doyle]. (Vide Fig. 21.)

Norreys, John, Esquire of the Body to Henry
VI. Badge — a conduit.

" The Coundite rennyth not as I wene."

[Political Poems, 1449 — "Excerpta Historica."]

Northampton, Earl of (William de Bohun, d.
1360). Colours — Black and red [Lansd.
MS. 856].

Northampton, Marquess of (William Parre, d.
1 571). Liveries — 1571, yellow and black
[H. Machyn, p. 13].

Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Percy, d.
1407). Badge — '' Cressans, as braas "
["Acts of the Privy Council," I. p. 210].

Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Percy, d.
1489). Badges — (i) a crescent argent ; (2)
a shacklebolt or, within a crescent argent
[Doyle].

Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Algernon
Percy, d. 1527). Colours — russet, yellow,
and tawny. Badges — (i) the blue lion pas-
sant (Percy) ; (2) a silver key crowned
(Poynings) ; (3) a blue bugle horn sans
strings, garnished gold (Bryan) ; (4) a

129 I



Heraldic Badges



falchion hiked or and sheathed sable (Fitz-
payne) ; (5) the silver crescent (Percy) ;
(6) the gold " locket " (or manacles)
(Percy) ; (7) a unicorn passant argent,
ducally gorged and lined or [Poynyngs] ;
(8) a boar statant argent, ducally gorged
and lined or ; (9) a leopard statant argent,
seme of torteaux and hurts, crowned or
(Percy). Motto — Esperance en Dieu
[Standards]. (Vide Fig. 30.)

Northumberland, Duke of (Dudley, K.G.).
Colours — gules. Badges — ( i ) a lion passant
guardant argent, ducally crowned or ; (2) a
staff raguly erect or. Motto — Ung Dieu,
ung Roy, servir Je doy [Standard — MS. I.
2, Coll. Arms].

Northumberland, Duke of (John Dudley, d.
1553). Standard — 1552, "Red damaske, a
whyt lyon silver, and with ragyd stayifes "
[H. Machyn, "Diary," p. 19]. Liveries —
"Cotes alle blake wellevet in-brodery the
alff, & th'odur blake in-brodery whyt &
red" [Ibid]. Badges — (i) a bear argent,
muzzled gules, collar and chain or, sup-
porting a ragged staff of the first ; (2) a
ragged staff erect argent ; (3) a cinquefoil
pierced ermine [Doyle].

130



A List of Badges



Norton, Sir John, Kt. Co/ours — red. Badge —
a greyhound's head erased in front of two
wings erect all or [Standard — MS. I. 2,
Coll. Arms].

Norwich, Earl of (Edward Denny, d. 1630).
Liveries — 1603, "Blew livery coates and
white dublets, hattes and feathers " [E.
Howes, " Annales," p. 822].

Norys, Sir Walter. Badge — black raven's head
erased [MS. Coll. Arms, 2nd M. 16].

Nottingham, Earl of (William Berkeley, cr.
1483). Badge — a unicorn statant gules,
armed unguled maned and tufted or
[Doyle].

Nottingham, Earl of (Charles Howard, d.
1624). Liveries — 1605. Trumpeters —
orange colour damask, with clokes of cloth
of the same colour. Footmen — orange-
tawny velvet. Pages — velvet of the same
colour, with their clokes suitable. Teomen
— clokes of orange-tawny cloth, garded
with silver and blue silk lace [Robert Tres-
well, Somerset Herald, " Somers Tracts,"
II., p. 72].

Ogilvie (Clan), Badge — -Hawthorn [Cussans].

131



Heraldic Badges



Ogle. Badge — a red bull's head [Woodward] ;
a bull's head erased argent [Cussans].

Oliphant {Clan), Badge — maple [Cussans].

Ormonde. Badge — the Ormonde knot [Plan-
che, Woodward, Cussans]. (Vide Fig. 23.)

Ormonde, Earl of. Badge — "a pair of key-
thongs " (j/V, but drawn as an animal)
[MS. Coll. Arms, 2nd M. 16].

Oxford, Earl of (Hugh de Vere, d. 1263).
Badge — a boar's head [Sig. Secretum],

Oxford, Earl of (John de Vere, d. 1513).
Badge — a mullet argent, charged with
another azure [Doyle].

Oxford, Earl of (John de Vere, d. 1540).
Badge — a mullet [Doyle].

Oxford, Earl of (John de Vere, d. 1562).
Badges — (i) a mullet argent; (2) a stag
statant argent, attired unguled and tufted
or ; (3) a long-necked round-bottle bar-
wise argent, suspended by a cord azure ;
(4) "a chayer of Estate, with cooshins all
gold in it" [MS. Vincent, 172, Coll.
Arms].

Oxford, Earl of (Sir John Vere). Badges — (i)
a boar statant azure, armed unguled and
bristled or, charged with a crescent argent ;

132




Fig. 40.

The bottle of

<ie Vere, Earls

of Oxford.



Fig. 43.

Queen Victoria's

cypher.




Fig. 38.
The King's cypher,





Fig. 39.

The badge of the Lords
Hastings.



Fig. 41.

The "Garde-bras'

of Ratcliff.




Fig. 42. Fig. 44.

The "drag'' of the Lords Queen Victoria's.
Stourton. cypher.



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,^UBLIC LIBRARY



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A List of Badges



(2) a mullet argent, charged with a crescent
azure [Standard — MS. I. 2, Coll. Arms].

Oxford, Earls of (De Vere). Badges — (i) a
boar azure [Stowe's " Survey of London "] ;
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

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