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• • • 



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l^eraUite ^Uustratiomi, 



COUPRI8INO 



THE ARMORIAL BEARINGS 



OF THE 



PRINCIPAL FAMILIES OF THE EMPIRE; 



WITH 



PEDIGREES AND ANNOTATIONS. 



•^'ocfTji 



BY JOHN BURKE, ESQ. 

AUTHOR OF -THE Pn&AOB AND BASONBTAGE." "DICTIONABl O? THE LANDED QENTBT," EOT. 



AND 



JOHN BERNARD BURKE, ESQ. 

OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, BARRI8TERATLAW. « 
AUTHOR OF " THE DICTIONARY OF THE LANDED OENTRT." ETC. 



•'««40^)»>' 



LONDON: 

E. CHURTON, 26, HOLLES STREET. 

1845. 



J. BILLING. PfflNTFB, WCKIN«, tl KKKT. 



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CONTENTS. 



Dbdication. 

EmnATED Platrs of Akhb. 

PuHomns AND Annotations, Explanatory of the Engravings. 

MoTToiR, Thansi.atiid and Elucidated. 

Addenda. 

Index. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS 



CJe Bufee o! ^ortftum^jerlantr, ll.<§» 



WE cannot more appropriately introduce the lineage of the Percys, than 
by the following extract from a periodical work of great ability and 
influence,* — the Percys whose nobility dates as remotely as the sovereignty 
of Normandy, and whose renown, coeval with its nobility, has flourished in 
every age and co-existed with every generation since. — " Not more famous in 
arms than distinguished for its alliances/' says the writer to whom we refer, 
''the House of Percy stands pre-eminent for the number and rank of the fami* 
lies which are represented by the present Duke of Northumberland, whose 
banner consequently exhibits an assemblage of nearly nine hundred armorial 
ensigns j among which are those of King Henry VII., of several younger 
branches of the Blood Royal, of the Sovereign Houses of France, Castile, 
Leon, and Scotland, and of the Ducal Houses of Normandy and Brittany, 
forming a galaxy of heraldic honours altogether unparalleled." 

flmni. — Quarterly. First and fourth, grand quarters, first and fourth, or, a lion 
ramp. ax. (beinr the ancient arms of the Duke of Brabant and Loyainb) ; second 
and third, gu. mree lucies or pikes haurient arg., for Lucy. Second and third, 
grand quarters, az. five fusils in fesse, for Percy. 

Creft — On a chateau gu. turned up, erm. a lion statant az., the tail extended. 

l^vpiMirtrrt. — Dexter a lion ramp, az., sinister a lion ramp, guard, or, ducally 
crowned of the last, gorged with a collar gobony arg. and az. 

Giotto. — ^Esperance en Dieu. 

HavimUkl Jb^teHr of tie 9errS0.— Seren quarterings. Quarterly, first and fourth, 
or, a lion ramp, az., for Brabamt and Lovaine ; second and third, gu. three lucies 
or pikes haunent arg. two lions, for Lucy. Second, az. five fusils in fesse or, for 
Pbroy. Third, barry of six or and vert, over all a bendlet gu., for ,Poyming8. 
Fourth, go. three lions passant per pale arg. over all a bend az., for Fitzfaynb. 
Fifth, or, three piles, meeting in the base point az., for Bryan. Sixth, gu. on a sal- 
tire arg. an annulet sa., for Latimer. Seventh, quarterly gu. and or, in the first 
quarter a muUet arg., for Verb. 

Volrge. 

A crescent arg. ^vitliin the horns per pale sa. and gu. charged with a double 
manacle or, fesse ways. 

JlOireline. of Lovaine, brother of Qucen=p9giir0 Ire 9^TC1f, dau. and eventually sole heiress 



Adeliza, 2nd wife of Henry I., and 
son of Godfrey Barbatus, Duke of 
Lower Lorraine, and Count of Bra- 
bant, who was descended from the 
Emperor Charlemagne. 



of William de Percy, 3rd Baron Percy, who 
was son and heir of Alan de Percy, suriiamed 
the Great Alarty by Emma, his wife, dau. of Gil- 
bert de Gaunt, son of Baldwin, Count of Flan- 
ders, and nephew of Queen Maud, wife of Wil- 
liam THB Conqueror. 



K^tS l^e^Isabel, 

eldest son, 
d, before 
his mo- . 
ther. 



r 
a 



Richard de Percy, younger son, who assumed all the rights 

dau. of of the head of the family, and enjoyed its baronial privileges 

Adam after his mother's death. He was one of the feudal lords who 

de Brus, took up arms against King John in 1215, and extorted Magna 

Lord of Charta from that monarch, d. about 1244. 
Skelton, 
CO. York. 



1 
b 



* Quarterly Retnew. 



THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. 



mailluiin l^e 9erc|f. Lord of Pet-^EIena, dau. of Ingelram Henry de Percy, ances- 



worth, CO. Sussex, who came into 
full possession of all his rights and 
properties, at the decease of his un- 
cle, d, in 1245. 



de Balliol, 2nd wife. 



tor of the Percys of 
Hesset, co. Sussex. 



Kenrs tit 9art9» who succeeded his father,=pAIianore, dau. of John Plantagenett 
d. 1272. I Earl of Warren and Surrey. 

r ' 

Kenrs tit 9^(9* ^^ feudal lord, summoned to parliament from 6 Feb. 
[27 Edw. I.] 1299, to 29 July, 1315, [8 Edw.IL] He obtained in Not. 1309, 
from Anthony Beck, Bishop of Durham, by purchase, a grant of the ba- 
rony of Alnwick, co. Northumberland : he m. Lady Eleanor Fitz-AIan, 
ande^. in 1315. *?= 



Kentfi Ire Verc^, 2nd Lord Percy, of Alnwick (eldest son), had a grant^Idonia, dau. of 



from the crown, 2nd Edward III. of the reversion of the barony and 
castle of Warkworth, &c. He had summons to parliament, from 
1322 to his death, 26 Feb. 1351-2. 



Robert, Lord 
Clifford. 



Lady Mary Plantagenet, dau. of^^^mtfi Ire 9erc|f, 3rd Lord=j=Joan, dan. and heir of 



Henry, Earl of Lancaster, son 
of Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, 
Leicester, &c. who was 2nd son 
of King HiNRT, III. 1st wife. 



Percy, of Alnwick, eldest 
son and successor, was at 
the battle of Cres8y,inl346, 
and e^. 17 June, 1368, aged 
46. 



John de Orbey, of co. 
Lincoln, one of the bar 
rons in the reign of Ed- 
WABD III. 



Margaret, = 
dau. of 
Ralph, 
Lord Ne- 
ville, of 
Raby. 1st 
wife. 



'Kentfi Ire Veres. 4th Lord of=Maud, 

Percy of Alnwick, a distinguish- sister 

ed military commander in the and heir 
reign of Edw. III., who assisted of An- 
at the coronation of Richard II. thony, 
as Marshal of England, and was Lord 
advanced the same day, ] 6 July, Lucy, 
1377, to the Earldom or Nor- s.p. 
THUMBBRLAND, with remainder 
to his heirs generally. The Earl 
was slain at Bramham Moor, 
29 Feb. 1408. 



Thomas, created Mary,iii» John, 



in 1797, Earl OF 

WORCBSTBR, 

K.G., a very 
eminent warrior 
and statesmen, 
in the reigns of 
Edw.III., Rich- 
ard II. and 
Hbnry IV., (see 
Burkb's Extmet 
Peerage, 



Lord Ros, 
of Hamelake, 
and d,».p,ui 
1396. 



Renrs (lbtt).= 

the Renowned 
Hotspur^ fell 
at the battle of 
Shrewsbury, 
in 1403, eldest 
son. 



■jn 



Philippa, dau. of Ed- Thos. ^Elizabeth, eld- Ralph,«=Philippa, Alan, 
ward Mortimer, Earl of (Sir), 
March, by Philippa, his 



2nd 
wife, daii. and heir of son. 
Lionel Plantagenet, 
Duke of Clarence. 



est dau. and co- 
heir of David 
Strabolgi, Earl 
of Athol. She m. 
2ndly, Sir Hen. 
Scrope. 



(Sir^. 
d.8.p. 



youngest Mar- 
dau. and garet. 
coheir of 
the Earl 
of Athol. 



Kenri; 9errfi.2nd Earb 

of Northumberland, 
that dignity, forfeited by 
his grand&ther, being 
restored to him in 1414. 
His lordship fell at the 
battle of St. Albans, 23 
May, 1455, under the 
banner of Hbn. VI. 



:Lady Eleanor Nevil, 
dau. of Ralph, 1st 
Earl of Westmore- 
land, and Joan de 
Beaufort, dau. of 
John of Graunt, and 
aunt of Hbn. VL 



— ; — 1 Henry, who left two 

Elizabeth, m. 1st, daus. viz : Elizabeth, 
to John, Lord Clif- m. 1st, to Thos. Lord 
ford, and 2ndly, to Burgh, and 2ndly, to 

Sir William Lucy; and 
Margaret m. 1st. to 
Lord Grey, of Codnor, 
and2ndly, to Richard, 
Earl of Oxford. 



Ralph, Earl of 
Westmoreland. 



flttVtttlJ^tXtJi,ZtA^hB,i^^i'VJMOK^ dau. and 




of Northumberland, 
summoned during his 
father's life to parlia- 
ment, as Baron Poyn- 
ings,29HBNRTVI.fell, 
leading the van of the 
Lancasterians, at Tow- 
ton, 29 March,1461,was 
attainted, but his hon- 
ours were subsequently 
restored to his only son. 

\ — — 

a 



sole heir of Richard 
Poynings, who d. in 
the life- time of his 
father, Robert, Lord 
Poynings. Eleanor 
was heiress of three 
baronies in fee, 

POTNINOS, FlTZ- 

FATNE, and Brtan. 



Thomas, created 
Lord Egremont, 
slain in 1460, 
under the ban- 
ner of Lancas- 
ter. =j= 

Sir John Percy, 
Knt 



I i 

George, in 
Holy Or- 
ders. 

Ralph (Sir 
Knt), Se- 
neschal of 
his father's 
court at 
Alnwick. 



Richard, 
slain at 
Towton. 
William, 
Bishop of 
Carlisle, 
and three 
daus. 



X 



I 



c d 



THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. 



Keirrs Verts, 4lh Eabl, K.G., who was coii-=f=Maad, dau. of 



fined in the tower of London, from the death 
of his father, until the 27 Oct. 1469, when Ed. 
WARD IV. restored him to freedom and to his 
dignities. His lordship was killed 28 April, 
1489. 



Herbert, 1st 
Earl of 
Pembroke. 



Kenrs flU =f=Calherine, dau. and coheir 



gcmoit* 5 th 

Earl, K.G. 
eldest son, 
tL in 1527. 



T' 



of Sir Robert Spencer, Knt. 
ofSpencer-Coombe,Deyon, 
by Eleanor, his wife, dau. 
and eyentual coheir of Ed- 
mund Beaufoft, Duke of 
Somerset, by Eleanor, his 
wife, dau. and heir of Ri- 
chard Beauchampj Earl of 
Warwick 



Sir Wil- Allan Joeceline, m. 

liam Per- Percy, Margaret, dau. 

cy, Knt^ a priest, and sole heir of 

one of Walter Frost, 

the com- Esq. of Bever- 

manders ley. =?= 

at Plod- I 

den. Edward Percy, 

of Beverley. 



bed 

I I I 

1. Eleanor, m. to Reginald 
West, Lord Delawar. 

2. Margaret, m. to Sir Wil- 
liam Gascoigne, Knt. of 
Gauthorpe. 

3. Elizabeth, m. to Henry, 
Lord Scrope, of Bolton. 

rrn 

Eleanor, wife 

of Edw. Staf- 
ford, Duke of 
Buckingham. 

Anne, wife of 
William Fitz- 
Alan, Earl of 
Arundel. 

Elizabeth, d. 
unm. 



||eirt9 fll« ^^Lady Mary Sir Thos. Percy, attainted 

ttmon. Cth Talbot, dau. and executed for Ask's con- 

Saul, K.G. of George, spiracy, 29 Hbnrt Vlll. 

4^,p. in Earl of m. Eleanor, sister and co- 

1^7. Shrewsbury, heirof Geo. Harbottle,Esq. 

CiMff Vftt8» advanced by letters- 
pat«rt» 30 April, 1557, to the degree of 
a BavQO* by the titles of Baron Percy, 
of Ckrakermouth, Baron Poynings, 
Lucy, Bryan, and Fitspayne, and on 
the fbllowing day, was created Earl 
OF NoETHUMBBRLAND,with remainder 
to hit brodier, &c. His lordship was 
beheaded at York, 22 Aug. 1572. 



r 



I I I I 



:Anne, 


Mary, 


Kathe- 


3rd dau. 


wife 


rine. 


of Hen- 


of Sir 


eldest 


ry, 2nd 


Fran- 


dau. & 


Earl of 


cis 


coheir 


Worces- 


Slings- 


of John 


ter. 


by,Knt. 


. Neville 
Lord 
Lati- 
mer. 



HiomM, d. yonng. Four daus. 



— I 1 

Ingelram (Sir). Margaret, m. 

to Henry Clif- 
ford, 1st Earl 
of Cumber- 
land. 



'Kentfi Veres, who sue- 
ceeded as 8th Earl, on 
the death of his broUior, 
under the reversionary 
clause in the patent His 
lordship d, in the Tower, 
where he had been com- 
mitted for participating 
in a supposed plot in fa- 
vour of Mary, Queen of 
Scots, 21 June, 1585. 



9th Eamt, 
K.G., d. 5 
Nov. 1688, 
eldest ton* 



^Dorothy, sister 
of Queen Eli- 
labeth's favor- 
ite Essex, and 
widow of Sir 
Thos. Perrot, 
Knt. 



I I I I ' 
Thos. d, unm, 

Wm. d. unm. 
Charles (Sir, 
Knt) a mili- 
tary comman- 
der, d,9,p. 
Richard (Sir, 
Knt.) d, at 
Anglers, 1648. 



1 T-T" 

Alan (Sir), K.B. Joscelyn 

m. in 1608, Mary, (Sir), d. 

dau. and heir of unm. 

Sir John Fitz, of 1631. 

Fitzford, Devon, George, 

but d.a.p. in 1 6 1 3. d. unm. 



I 1 n 
Anne. 

Lucy, m. Ist, to 

Sir John Wotton, 

and 2ndly, to Sir 

Hugh Owen. 

Eleanor, m. to Sir 

William Herbert, 

K.B. 



fllffttum, lOth Earl, ^Lady Elizabeth 



K.Q., eldeet surviving 
■on, euiimioned during 
his ikther's life, to par^ 
liament as Baron Pm- 
CT, d. 13 Oct. 1668. 



r 



Howard, 2nd 
dau. of Theophi- 
lus, 2nd Earl .'of 

Suffolk. 



Henry, 

created 

Lord 

Pbrct, 

of Aln- 

wick,cl. 



Dorothy, m. to Robt. 
Sidney, 2nd Earl of 
Leicester, and was 
mother of Algernon 
Sydney, the patriot 



1 



Lucy, m, to 
James Hay, 
Earl of Car^ 
lisle. 



unm, 
^Ofeelini, nth Earl, d, 2l May,=7=Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Thomas Wriothesly, Earl of 
1670. without male issue. | Southampton, Loird High Treasurer of England. 



Henry Cavendish, Earl of Ogle,=4Lalr5 Clt^abetft Veceff, only- 
son and heir of Henry, Duke of surviving child and heir, 
Newcastle, who assumed the Baroness Percy, Poynings, 
name of Percy, m. in 1679. d,a.p. Fitzpayne, Bryan, and La- 
1 Nov. 1760. 1st husband. timer, d. in 1722. 



^Charles Seymour, Duke of 
Somerset, who also assumed 
the surname and arms of 
Percy, m, in 1682. 2nd hus- 
band. 



fllsenum Itesmour, eldest surviving son, summoned to parliament on the death of his mo- 
ther, as Baron Percy, inherited the dukedom of Somerset, in 1741, and was created Baron 
Warkworth, of Warkworth Castle, co. Northumberland, and Earl of Northumberland, 2nd 
Oct. 1740, with remainder to his son-in-law, Sir Hugh Smithson, Bart d, in 1750. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platb uv, 

XVII. Az. a lion Dass. guard, or, for Llewelyn ap Dolphin, derived from Ueweljii 
Aurdorcnog, Lord of Yale, in Denbighland. 

XVIII. Gu. on a chev. betw. three goats' heads erased or, three trefoils slipped vert, for 
loRWERTH AP Grono, <ferived from Itbel Velyn of Yale. 

XIX. Gu. three chevronels in pale ar. for Llewelyn ap Meuric, derived from Jes^ 
ap G wrgant, Tributary Prince of Glamorgan, Founder of the V Royal Tribe 
ot Wales. 

XX. Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. on a bend ar. a lion pass. sa. for Davibs of 
GwYSANEY ; second, Ar. a lion ramp.sa. armed and langued gu. (" the Black 
Lion of Powya") for Madoo ap Meredith, last Prince of Powys ; third. Or, 
a lion ramp. gu. armed and langued of the first, for Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, 
King of Powys. 

XXI. Quarterly, first and fourth, Ar. three boars' heads couped sa. langued gu, tusked 
or, for Cadwoan ap Elystan ; second and third, Gu. a Uon ramp, reguaid. 
or, for Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Fferlys. 

XXII. Per bend sinister, erm. and ermines, over all a lion ramp, or, for Tudor 
Trevor, Lord of Hereford. 

XXIII. Sa. a chev. betw. three fleurs-de-lis ar. for Colwyn ap Tanono, Lord of 
Efionydd. 

XXIV. Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. on a chev. betw. three goats' heads erased or, 
three trefoils slipped vert, for Ithel Velyn, Lord of Yale; second and 
third, Az. a lion pass, or, for Llewelyn Adrdorchog, Lord of Yale. 

XXV. Or, a lion ramp. az. for Cadwgan, Lord of Nannau. 

XXVI. Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. a chev. or, a chief erm. for Sir Griffith 
Lloyd ; second, Gu. a chev. erm. betw. three Englishmen's dead heads 
couped in profile ppr. for Ednyfed Vychan, Lord of firynfiejiigl; third, 
Gu. a Saracen's head erased at the neck ppr. wreathed about the temples sa. 
and ar.for Marohddd ap Cynan, Lord of Brynfifenigl. 

XXVII. Vert, a lion ramp, or, for Haynes. 

XXVIII. Ar. a cinquefoil az. for Mutton of Llanerch. 

XXIX. Per pale sa. and ar. sem^e of cross crosslets counterchanged, thereon an eagle 
displ. with two heads or, the whole within a bordure engr. of the last, for 
Sir Hamo Vaughan, Lord of West Tilbury. 

XXX. Ar. a lion ramp. sa. debruised by a bend compony or and az. for Burley of 
Malehurst. 

XXXI. Sa. three towers embattled ar. for De Tour of Shrewsbury. 

XXXII. As. three preeds (small lampems) haurient in pale ar. for Pride of Shrews- 

bury. 

XXXIII. Gu. seven lozenges vair6, three, three, and one, for Sir John de Burgh. 

XXXIV. Or, a lion ramp. gu. armed and langued of the first, for John ap William, 

Lord of Mawddwy. 

XXXV. Quarterly, first and fourth, Ar. two bars gu. fretty or; second and third, Gu. a 

fees betw. six pears erect or, leaved vert, both fiir Clopton of Clopton. 

XXXVI. Ar. a chev. betw. three brocks or badgers pass. sa. for Brock holes of 
Claughton. 

XXXVII. Ar. on a bend engr. sa. three bucks' beads of the field, for Heton of Heton. 

xxxviii. Sa. a fesse betw. two chevrons erm. betw. the fesse and upper chev. a covered 
cup or, for Holden of Lancashire. 

xxxix. Sa. on a chev. betw. three wolves' heads erased ar. a mullet betw. two crescents 
gu. for Barcroft of Barcroft. 

XL. Or, a chev. gu. betw. two lions pass, guard, sa. for Cooke of Owston. 

Crwt. — Out of a mural crown ar. a derai lion guard, issuant sa. gorged with a ducal 
coronet or. 




iQI^GwenlUan, 
styled 
" Heiress 
of Duff- 
ryn 
aiuid." 



epntit CUlh 

Lord of £gl- 
wys Egle, son 
of Maooc, last 
Prince of 
Povuuu 



Gollc, dau. and lieir of 

Catrtogan ap ^Im- 

tan» Prince of Ferlys, 

son of ^Is^tan 

® lolrrsl^lr. Prince of 
Ferlys, son of Cj- 



[Plate LIV. 
ttoger l$roclU=pNicbola, dau. 



I^Olto^of Brock 

holls, living 
temp.'Edw.Il, 



of John de 
Rigmaden. 



1 









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tfaiikn.y.dwv^ ''Jiiiriou.ZC. lIolU-« Sttwt r:«ev*v. -A-- -w-Y-^^ '*^^ 






i*f- 



r.-'ll. 





X.7:. ■: b. 



^ li -1^ ^»w «M 2 1-l. R-M ? 






rf> 




x::^. 




I.. 



Il^*«- c 



tl». 



:^ I. 



al & 



^r -Jkv^^ *» 



ir -or " - r-wTT "^ A.njuw.'wiw. Z^ni ■ Tiui. 



t jmL 



ir 1 






i^umrv 



tf 111 %'«% « ^m aai^. v, fbr EtnoL 

x\%iu. Af. a ^oKwliil u. far Xcrr. v «£ Llavzicv. 



aa 



4*p<« wffk two a«adft «r, tie vm** vsaxa \ Ikavazv as?. «f i^ Um, 
litr H4«o V4CCVIV. L«pi 4^ Wee Tubw. 



iTfcr 



ita. At, a liM nap. «a. lirhr^imf bv a bead 

MatftMCEST. 



aai ax. far Bcelcy of 



%%%%, H«. tJkfK* tow«fi fmhatrirf ar. far De Toca ofSHtcwsBTET. 

%%%iU Au tJun* pfftdi (vnall bapcna^ kavkat ia pale ar. far Peidc of Ssftcws* 
acav« 

%%%m» iiu, teren U>]ieiigci vair^» tluce, three, and ooe, for Sir Jubv de Bcegr. 

Kssfv, Of, a Immi ramp, ra. arned and laogaed of the fint, for Jobx ip Willi a«» 
lA99d tA Mawddwy. 

KKkv, Qaarltrljr, Ant and faorth, Ar. two ban gu. fretty or; secood and third, Gu. a 
Um battv. MX pcan erect or, leared vert, both for Clortum of Cloptom. 

tvtvr Ar. a rb«r¥. betir. tbroe brocka or badgen paat. aa. for Beockholei of 

f'f.ADOIITON. 

t M vif, Ar. on a bend angr. h. tbrce bucks' beads of the field, for Heton of Heton. 

N « «trf If. Ma. ■ (mm In*Iw. two chevroiM erro. betw. the fesse and apper cbev. a coTercd 
I up i»r, fur II01.11P.N of Lancaaiiirk. 

%\\i\, Nrt. iin H ihnv. iMitw. three wolves' heads erased ar. a mullet betw. two crescents 
liu. for llAHrMorr of IIAMCMOFT. 

ki . I>i, « I liav. KM. Iicitw. iwu lions pass, (pianl. sa. for Cooke of Owston. 



tTiHl. Ihii III « iiiuimI rruwn tti, a ilemi lion guard, i&iuant sa. gorged with a ducal 

I ll|MII«i| III 




ipbilij) Jiiiibios iiDOki- U-'.vi), 
of {(I'liKrtini, Cn. llorli, Jtteluii II tofrn, (rii/iOrribMil). 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. Fplate lv. 



Currec, of Clifton |^ou0e, co. ^or&« 

The Rev. Dakson-Richardson Curber, of Clifton House, M.A. of Christ 
Churchy Oxford, third son of the late Rev. William Roundell, of Gledstone, co. 
York, by Mary, his wife, daughter of the Rev. Henry Richardson, M.A. third 
son of Richard Richardson, M.D. of Bierley, Esq. by Dorothy, his wife, 
daughter of Henry Currer, of Kildwick, Esq. assumed in 1801, the Surname 
and Arms of Currer, and bears the Arms of Currer and Roundell Quar- 
terly. 

flnM. — Quarterly, firit and fourth, Erm. three bars gemelles sa. on a chief az. a lion 
paw. gnard* ar. for Currer ; second and third, Or, a fesse ga. betw. three lanrel branches 
ppr. for Roundell ; impaling, in right of his wife Hannah, elder dau. of the late Sir 
William Fonlis, Bart the Arms of FouLis, viz. ar. three laurel leaves erect ppr. 

Criiti.— First, A lion's head erased ar. gorged with a collar sa. charged with three 
bezants, for Currer ; second, A short swora in pale ar. hilt and pommel or, gripe gu. 

Motto.'— 'Meiere. 



^olcombe, of IPembro&edbire. 

This family, which has been settled for nearly two centuries in the county of 
Pembroke^ derives its name from its ancient inheritance, Holcombe, or Holt- 
combe, CO. Devon, where and at Hole it has resided for many descents. (See 
Burke's Landed Gentry.) The present Representative, Harcourt Ford 
HoLCOMBE, Esq. Lieutenant-Colonel Royal Artillery, was made a Companion 
of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath, for his distinguished services in the 
Peninsular War. He is eldest son of the late Rev. Canon William Holcombe, 
of St. Davids, grandson of Admiral Essex Holcombe, and great-grandson of 
William Holcombe, Esq. the first of the family who settled in Pembrokeshire, 
and who was Mayor of Pembroke in 1694. 

2lnn0. — Az. a chev. ar. betw. three men's heads in pro61e, couped at the shoulders or, 
wreathed about the temples of the second, for Holcombe; quartering Downb and 
Drcce. 

Crest — A man^s head fullfaced, couped at the breast ppr. wreathed round the temples 
or and az. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTEIATIONS. [plate lv. 



TButneg, of JForfawftite. 

The Arms of James Burnes, LL.D. F.R.S. Knight of the Royal Guelphtc 
Order, and of Sophia, his wife, daughter of the late Major-General Sir George 
Holmes, K.C.B. are recorded in the College of Arms, London, and certified by 
the late Sir William Woods, Clarenceux Registrar of the Guelphic Order. 

Dr. Burnes is in the public service in India, where his name is prominently 
connected (along with that of his brother, the late Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Alex- 
ander Burnes, C.B. who fell, together with his brother Charles, at Cabool, Nov. 2, 
1841) with our proceedings in Sinde, and the other countries bordering on the 
Indus. He is a Justice of the Peace for Forfarshire. He married, March 29, 
1829, Sophia, daughter of the late Major-General Sir George Holmes, K.C.B. 
and has issue, — George, Jamts, and other sons. Sir George Holmes, who was 
of a Cumberland family, died October, 1816, leaving issue by his wife, Dame 
Sophia Hamilton, (descended from the chief family of that name, who died 
August, 1831); first, Charlotte, died May, 1832; second, Sophia, married 
James Burnes as above; third, Isabella, married Jeffrey Amherst, son of 
General Sinclair of Lybster; fourth, John, Captain 12th Bombay N.I.; and 
fifth, Frances. 

The name of Burnes is mentioned in a Bull of Pope Nicholas IV. to King 
Edward I. dated 1290, in which His Holiness acknowledges letters brought to 
him from England, ** quas delecti filii Johannes de Burnes miles, et Gulielmus 
de Lincolnia, tui nuncii, presentarunt." In a Writ of Privy Seal by King 
James V. dated Stirling, 1528, there is also a Johnne Burness described aa 
having been ** art and part of the convocation and gadering of our lieges in 
arrayit battell agains . umq'^ Johnne Erie of Caithness." 

The Lord Lyon's patent of arms to Dr. Burnes's family recites, tliat his father, (by 
Elizabeth, dau. of the late Adam Glegg, Esq. many years Provost of Montrose,) James 
Buraes, Esq. a J.P. for Forfarshire, is "son of James Burness, cousin-german to Robert 
Burns, the celebrated poet, — which James Burness was son of James Burnes, who was 
the eldest son that lived to have male issue of Robert Burnes of Kinmonth, son of James 
Burness at Brawlymuir, son of Walter at Bogjorgan, who was the only son of Walter 
Campbell of Burnlioose, who fled to the north country during the civil wars in the 17th 
century, and who, losing the name of Campbell, became known by that of Burnhouse, 
corrupted by his descendants into Burness, Burnes, and Burns." This statement rests on 
information communicated nearly fifty years ago by the Rev. Alexander Greig, episcopal 
clergyman at Stonehaven, then a very old man, whose mother was one of the grand- 
daughters of the second Walter. It may be added, that Walter Campbell of Burnhouse 
appears to have been the son of George Campbell and Margaret M'Lellan, his wife, to 
whom conjointly sasine was granted of a propt^rty named Burne in February, 1627 ; and 
that Robert at Kinmonth, also mentioned in the patent, was one of four brothers, who, at 
the commencement of tlie 18th century, were all substantial leaseholders in Kincardine- 
shire till their participation in the rebellion of 1715, under the banner of George Keith, 
the tenth and last Earl Marischall, covered them with irretrievable ruin. (Vide Cun- 
ningham's Life of Burns, and the Poet's letter to Lady Winifred Maxwell Constable, 
December 16, 17U9.) 

9(rtn0.-^BuRNEs. Per saltire, az. and gyrony of eight, or and sa. in chief, a 
wounded lion couchant ar. pierced by a spear behind gu. his head resting on a shield, 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lv, 

gyrony of ei{[ht as above ; in base, a holly bush or, sunnounted by a crook and bugle- 
orn saltirewise ar. ; with the addition (allusive of the Guelphic Order, and to the " pub- 
lic and meritorious services" of the two brothers in India) of, on a chief gu« within a 
bordure ar. the White Horse of Hanover between two Eastern gold crowns. [Sic, in the 
Lord Lyon's patent, and in the Herald's College, London, but it appears that the lion 
couchant is dispensed with by some members of the family, who bear instead thereof, the 
crook and bugle- horn in chief.] 

Crest. — Issuant from an Eastern crown or, an oak tree shivered, renewing its foliage 
ppr. 

fSiOttOH' — Below the shield, Ruinam salutanint pro rege. Over the crest, Revirescimus. 

fltm0. — Holmes. Sa. on a fesse embattled, counter embattled ar. betw. three lions 
ramp. ar. fretty gu. a crescent gu. betw. two tigers' ftices ppr. 

Crf0t. — Issuant from an Eastern crown or, a demi tiger ppr. regardant, elevating a 
standard gu. thereon a crescent ar. 

fnotto. — Avito evehor honore. 



31one0, of ^lattrati* 

The Jokes* of Ystrad derive from the Jones* of Llansadwrn, a younger branch of 
the very ancient and once highly distinguished Knightly family of Jones, of 
Abermarles, in the county of Carmarthen. The late Representative, John 
Jones, of Capeldewy and Ystrad, Esq. son (by Anna Maria, his wife, eldest 
daughter and coheir of John Jones, of Crynfryn, in the county of Cardigan, 
Esq. second son of John Jones, of Tyglyn, Esq.) of Thomas Jones, of Ystrad 
and Capeldewy, Esq. and great-grandson of Morris Jones, Esq. by Elizabeth, 
his wife, daughter of William Rees, of Capeldewy, Esq. was M.P. for a long 
series of years, first for Pembroke, and latterly for the county of Carmarthen, of 
which he was a Deputy Lieutenant. He died 12 Nov. 1842, leaving his sister. 
Mart Anne Jones, the present Representative. 

2lrm0.— Ar. a chev. gu. betw. three stags' heads ppr. for Jones of Ystrad ; quar- 
teriog Rees of Capeldewy, Jones of Tyglyn, and Lewis of Llynycrwr. 

Credt. — A stag's head erased ppr. 



Imnoe, of HSortoict). 

The family of Lindoc, originally of Spanish extraction, has been settled for 
several generations in the City of Norwich, and maternally traces a descent of 
great antiquity. The present Robeut Fkederick Lin doe, M.D. of Wells, in 
the county of Somerset, Esq. derives, through his grandmother Caroline, 
daughter of David Barclay, Esq. second son of Robert Barclay, of Ury, Esq. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lv. 



from Roger de Berkeley, Lord of Berkeley Castle, in the coanty of Glouoester, 
before the Conquest, and quarters, m right of his mother Eleanora, the Anns of 
the family of Bakee, of Michaelmarsh, related to the Bakers, of Hertfordshire. 

flnu.— Quarterly, Brst and fourth* per cher. sa. and ar. three leopards* facet cotmtw- 
changed, for Lin doe ; second and third, or, a greyhound courant betw. two bars n« for 
Baker. 

CrfSt. — ^A vryvem. 

HblttO. — Jamais abattu. 

Join Htnlloe, of Norwich, £Bq.=^Caroline, dau. of David Barclay, Esq. 3nd son of 

I Robert Barclay, of Ury, the celebrated Apologbt 
of the Quakers. 

ViubtVi IBLint^t, M.D. of Clifion^^CfUanora, only sunriving dau. and heir of the Rer. 



CO. Somerset, Esq. 



Vtilts Vaiiei:, Rector of Michaelmarsh, bv Elea- 
nora Bennett, his wife, and granddau. of Anne 
Dawson, throush whom she claims collateral de- 
scent from the orave Capt. Harman, who so sig- 
nalized himself in Charles the Second's time, that 
a gold medal was struck on the occasion, and a 
chain of great value placed round his neck by the 
King. 



itol^ert ^tflrerM ILinl^OeyY^'^^^'^^"^ Simonette, only dau. of the late David 
M.D. of Wells, Esq. I Dardier, of Demerara, Esq. 



Fredenck-Ekins. 



Anne-Eleanora. 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lvi. 



^argteat)e0, onBtoati iSDaft. 

John Haroreayes, of Broad Oak, co. Lancaster, Esq. eldest son of the late 
Thomas Hargreaves, of Oak Hill, near Blackburn, Esq. grandson of John 
Hargreaves, of Wheatley, in the same Shire, by his second wife, Alice, daughter 
of Lawrence Whittam, of Hupton, and great-grandson of John Hargreaves, of 
Height, near Higham, Esq. bears for 

flnm. — Qaarterly, Or and rert, oq t fesse erm. betw. three stags courant, counter- 
changed, a fret gu. 

Crcf t— A buck's head erased vert, attired or» with a collar ar. charged with a fret 
gu. in the mouth a sprig of oak ppr. 

blotto. — Fortitudine et prudentia. 



^oppet^SiQiHiam0on» of ^liincliffe. 

The Rev. Robert Hopper- Williamson, Rector of Hurworth, co. Durham, 
Representative of the Hoppers of Shincliffe, (see Burke's Landed Oentry)^ is 
eldest son and heir (by Anne, his wife, only daughter of Dr. William William 
Williamson, Rector of Whickham, third son of Sir William Williamson, Bart.) 
of the late Robert Hopper, Esq. Chancellor of the County Palatine of Durham, 
and Recorder of Newcastle-on-Tyne, who assumed, in consequence of his 
marriage, the additional Surname of Williamson. 

flnni. — Quarterly, first and fourth, Gyronny of eight sa. and erm. over all, a tower 
triple towered ar. masoned ; second and third. Or, a chev. gu. betw. three trefoils 
slipped sa, 

Cflit. — A tower triple towered ar. masoned ppr. 



Cluinie, of Dtleton, co. ^alop. 

Anna Maria Cludde, of Orleton, only child and heiress of the late Edward 
Cludde, of Orleton and Wrockwardine, Esq. by Catherine Harriett, his wife, 
only daughter of Lieutenant-General Sir William Cockburn, Bart, of Cockburn 
and Ryslaw, represents the ancient family of Cludde, (see Burke*s Landed 
Gentry y) and quarters, in consequence, the Arms of Orlxtox, Pemberton, 
Lavglet, Brooke, Bowdler, Legh, and Potker. 

flrms . — First, Erm. a fret sa. for Cludde ; second, Ar. a bend double cottiaed sa. in 
chief, a martlet of the last, for Orleton ; third, Ar. a chev. betw. three water-buckets 
sa. hooped and handled or, for Pemberton ; fourth. Paly of six ar. and vert on a canton 
gu. a ^heon or, for Lanoley ; fifth, Chequy, ar. and sa. for Brooke; sixth, Ar. two 
ravens m pale sa. for Bowdler ; seventh, Ar. a chev. betw. three leopards' faces sa. for 
Leoh j eighth, Or» a parrot close vert, legged gu. for Poyner. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lvi. 



SiQiHington, of MIO0ite|)ane Castle, anti Castle 

QOlfllinstDn, cd. ^ippetarp* 

John James Willington, of Killoskehane Castle, Esq. and his cousin, James 
WiLLiKGTON, of Castle WilliDgton, Esq. descended. from a younger branch of 
the WiLLiNGTONS of Huflcy, co. Warwick, who sprang originally from the old 
Baronial family of Willington of Umbersleigh, co. Devon, (see Burke's 
Landed Gentry y) bear the quartered Coat of Willington, Waldive, and 
Bracebridge. 

flrittf. — Quarterly, first and fourth, Gu. a saltire vaire ar. and az. for Willington ; 
second, ar. three leopards' faces sa. for Waldive ; third, Vaire ar. and sa. a fesse gu. for 
Bracebridge. 

CTteft. — Out of a ducal coronet, a pine tree vert, fructed or. 

^ftottO.^Vigueur de dcssus. 



^atton, ofClonatH^ 

The family of Hatton was anciently of great repute in the counties of Chester, 
Cambridge, and Northampton ; of its members, the celebrated lawyer. Sir 
Christopher Hatton, K.G. Lord Chancellor, temp, Elizabeth, and Chris- 
topher Lord Hatton of Kirby, a gallant Royalist in the reign of Charles L were 
the most distinguished. A branch became settled in Ireland, temp, Elizabeth, 
and has since maintained a leading influence in the county of Wexford. The 
present Representative of this branch is Villiers Francis Hatton, Esq. 
Captain R.N. M.P. only surviving son of the late George Hatton, Esq. M.P. for 
Lisbume, by the Lady Isabella Rachel Seymour Conway, youngest daughter of 
Francis, first Marquess of Hertfort. 

TktXM, — Az. t chev. betw. three garbs or. 
Ctff t. — A hind pass. ppr. 



N 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lvii. 



jFotster, of lOaltliamgtoto, co. dB^stv. 

Thomas Forster, Esq. M. B. Fellow of the Royal Astronomical and Linnsean 
Societies, eldest son of the late Thomas Furley Forster, of Walthamstow, Esq. 
author of *' Flora Tunbrigensis/* and grandson of Edward Forster, of Waltham- 
stow, Esq. Governor of the Russia Company of London, descends from and bears 
the Arms of the ancient and distinguished Northumbrian family of Forster, of 
Bambrough Castle. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) Mr. Forster, who was 
educated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, is an able and learned writer, 
the author of *^ Philozoia, a Discourse on the Condition of Animals," Brussels, 
1840 ; " Pan," a Pastoral Poem ; ** Discours Preliminaire ^ Tetude de THistoire 
Naturelle," &c. &c. 

fltntft. — Ar, a chev. vert betw. three bugle horns, sa. impaling in right of his wife, 
Julia, third daughter of Colonel Maik Beaufoy, of Busbey Heath, the Arms of Beau- 
roY, viz. erm on a bend az. three cinquefoils, ar. 

CTmt* — An arm in armour embowed, holding a broken lance. 

jBottO. — Ante omnia Sylvee. 



^paig1)t, of tf)t Counties of Clare ano limeticft. 



The family of Spaight, long settled in the County of Clare, but established 
originally at Woolwich, co. Kent, derives from Thomas Spaight, of Bunratty 
Lodge, CO. Clare, Esq. seneschal to Henry, Earl of Thomond, to whom Arms 
were confirmed in 1684. The present Representative is Thomas Spaight, ot 
Corbally, co. Clare. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

fltnitf. — Ar. on a fesse sa. three pheons of the first. 
Crwt— A jay ppr. 
motto.— Vi et virtute. 



Thomas Spaight, of Bunratty Lodge, co. Clare 
£iq. Seneschal to Henry, Earl of Thomond : 
had the grant of Arms in 1684 ; son of Thomas 
Spaight, Esa. and grandson of James Spaight, 
late of Woolwich. 



:Eliza, dau. of Mountifort West- 
ropp, of Attyflin and Bunratty, 
CO. Clare, Esq. 



Thomas Spaight, of=j=Grace, dau. of Ed- William Spaight, of=r=Anne, dau. of Moun- 



Bunratty Lodge, 
Esq. (/. in 1757. 



ward Hoare, 
Cork, Esq 



of 



Six Mile Bridge, 
CO. Clare, Esq. 



Thomas, of Kin-=f=Prudence Hely, sister 



sale and Bun 
imtty Lodge, d. 
in 1774. 



of Richard Hely 
Hutchinson, Earl of 
Donoughmore. 



Three other 
Sons who 
d, $, p. 



Captain William^ 
Spaight, 65th 
Regiment, d, 
in 1803. 



tiford Westropp, of 
Attyflin, Esq. 

:IVIilicent Anne,dau. 
of Thomas Stud- 
dert, of Bunratty 
Castle, CO. Clare, 
Esq. 



Prudence, 
m. Edward 
Ferriter, 
Esq. 



Mary- 
Grace, 
d, unm. 



Christiana, 
m. R. T. 
Barnes, 
Esq. and 
d. I. p. 



1. William 
Capt. in 
the 

Army, 
d, s. p. 



2. i^omM =:Eliza- 
l^yAigdt, beth, 
of Corbal- dau. of 
ly, CO. Clare, the 
Esq. present Rev. 
Representa- Robt. 
tive of the Gab- 
family, bett. 



3. George, in 
Holy Orders, 
of Limerick, 
m. Mary 
Anne, dau. 
of William 
Smith, of 
Cherrymount, 
Esq. and has 
issue. 



4. Francis, of Lime- 
rick, m. Agnes, dau. 
of James Campbell 
Paterson, of Kil- 
rush, Esq. and has 
issue. 



5, Henry, of Corbally, 
an officer in the 
Army, m. Constan- 
tia,dau.ofthe Re?. 
Robert Gabbeth, 
and has issue. 



rn — 

Two daughters. 



u. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lvii. 



laaliston* of laaliston, in Scotland* 

Crawford, ia bis History of Renfrewshire, says that this very ancient family is 
descended from the Macduffs, Thanes of Fife, one of whom had a son named 
Ralph, who obtained a grant of lands in Renfrewshire, and called them after 
himself, Ralphstoune, originated the family surname. He refers to Charters, &c, 
wherein the Ralstons are named as early as 1272 and 1346. John de Ral- 
STOUNE, who flourished in the reign of James II. of Scotland, rose to the highest 
honours of the Church and State, obtaining eventually the Bishopric of Dun- 
keld in 1448, and the office of Lord High Treasurer m 1449. (See Burke's 
Landed Gentry.) ^ 

tiVtM. — Ar. on a bend az. three acorns in the seed, or« 

Ibuypottfni. — Dexter, an armed man with a drawn sword ; sinister, a greyhound. 
Crest. — A falcon ppr. with bells at its feet. 

jBottO. — Fide et marte — By fidelity and valour ; of which the supportei^ are sym- 
bolical. 



Hlopu, of TBtontoguu, CO. CatUigan* 

Thomas Lloyd, of Bronwydd, Esq. holds the Barony and Lordship of Kemes by 
the same tenure, and exercises the Jura Regalia and peculiar privileges which 
his ancestor Marteine de Turribus did in the time of the Conqueror. (See 
Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flmitf. — Az. a wolf saliant ar. 

CtMt. — A boar chained to a holly bush ppr. 

fHIOttO.— I dduw B'or Diolch. 



IButton, of Dungtall IPtfotp, 4EpnsfotD, co. B^ent 

Captain Sauva Ryder Burton, R.N. K.C.H. of Dunstall Priory, son of the 
late Rt. Rev. Edmund Burton, Bishop of Killala, and a collateral descendant of 
the ancient Family of Burton, from which derived the Earls of Conyngham, 
(see BuRKE*s Peerage), bears the old Arms of Burton, impaled with the Ensigns 
of Plunkett, in right of his wife, Anna Maria, youngest daughter of the late 
Lord Dunsany. 

The Burtons, seated from a remote period in the county of Salop, and by 
some conjectured to have come originally from Yorkshire, have ever been of 
consideration, and it is recorded of Sir Edward Burton, the then Repesentative 
of the Family, that *' he was with King Edward IV. successful in fourteen set 
battles between the houses of York and Lancaster ; and for bis great loyalty be 
was made Knight Banneret under the royal standard in the field, a. d. 1460.*' 

flnn0. — Per pale az. and purpure a cross engr. or betw. (bur roses ar. jmpaltltg, for 
Plunkett, sa. a bend ar. in the sinister chief point a castle of the second. 
Ctmt-^-Out of a ducal coronet a gauntlet issuing ppr. 
fQottO. — Dominus providebit. 

The Rt. Rev. Edmund Burton, late Bishop of Killala, m. first, a niece of Dudley Ryder, 
the Lord Chancellor ; and 2dly, Martha Otway, of Castle Otway. 



3amn iKfilrer ISutton, of Dunstallr^The Hon. Anna Maria=plst husband, Philip Dau^. 



Priory, Eynsford, co. Kent, Esq. 
Capt. R.N. K.C.H. m. 2 July, 
1823. 



r 



Plunkett, youngest 
dau. of the late Lord 
Dunsany. 



Roche, of Do- 
nore, co. Kildare, 




I 1 ■ \ 

francis- Augustus Plunkett Burton. John Roche, Esq. Randalina, m. to Anna-Maria, m. to 

Capt. 2nd Life Lord Trimles- Lord Louth. 
.Guards. town. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate LVllI. 



8@onep, of COaltliamstoto, co. (ZE0ser« 

The Family of Money, of Walthamstow, is traditionally derived from the 
Province of Normandy. The late Representative, William Taylor Money, of 
Walthamstow, Esq. Knight of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order, H. B. M. Consul 
General at Venice and Milan, sometime a Director of the East India Company, 
one of the Elder Brethren of the Trinity House, and M. P. successively for 
Wotton Basset and St. MichaeUs, married Eugenia, third daughter of William 
Money, of Hom House, Much Marcle, co. Hereford, Esq. and had issue seven 
sons and one daughter. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flnntf.— Or on a pile az. ten beeants, four, three, two, and one, a chief erm. charged 
with a lion pass, of the second, langued gu. 

Ctrat. — A bezant betw. two wings az. each wing sem^ of flenrs-de-lis or. 

jBottO. — Factis non verbis. 



mciliam Cafilor jBones, of Walthamstow,= 

Esq. K.H. H. B. M. Consul General at 
Venice and Milan, &c. eldest son of William 
Money, of Walthamstow, Esq. a Director of 
the I^ast India Company, and one of the 
Elder Brethren of the Trinity House, 6. 4 Sept. 
1769, m. 8 June, 1797. 



:£ngenia, third dau. of William Money, of Hom 
House, CO. Hereford, Esq. son of James Money, 
of Pitsford, Esq. by Eugenia, his wife, dau. 
and co-h. of George Stoughtoo, of St. John's, 
Warwick, Esq. and erandson of Francis Mo- 
ney, Esq. by EHzabetn, his wife, dau. and h. of 
William Washboume, of Wichenford, Esq. 



The Rev. 

mtlliam 

of Lea 
Marston, 
CO. War- 
wick. 



Robert- 
Cotton 
Money, 
E.I. C. 
Civil 
Service. 



James Drum- 
mond Money, 
in Holy Or- 
ders, Rector 
of Sternfield. 



George 
William 
Money, 
E. I. C. 
Military 
Service, 
d. unm, 
1830. 



David- 


Eugenius, 


Charles- 


1 nglis 


d. unm. 


Forbes- 


Money, 


1827. 


Septimus, 


E.I.C. 




of the Co- 


Civil Ser- 




lonial 


vice. 




Office. 



Mary- Eu- 
genia. 



^ttlUngfleet, of I^oto Caple, co. ^eteforn. 

The Rev. Henry Anthony Stillingfleet, M. A. Rector of How Caple and 
Solers Caple, is eldest «oa of the late Rev. James Stillingfleet, Prebendary of 
Worcester, by Catherine, his wife, daughter of Herbert Mackworth, of Gnoll 
Castle, CO. Glamorgan, Esq. and grandson of James Stillingfleet, Register of the 
Diocese of Worcester, who was son of the Rev. James Stillingfleet, D. D. Dean 
of Worcester, son of Bishop Stillingfleet. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flnnf^ — Ar. on a fesse sa« betw. three fleurs-de-lis gu. as many leopards' heads ar. 
Cmt. — A leopard's head ppr. chained and collared gu. 



Orquljatt, of a^elDtum, co« abemeen. 

Beacchamp Colclough Urquhart, of Meldrum and Byth, Esq. Representative 
of the great Northern House of Urquhart, derived from William Urchard, of 
Cromarty, Heritable Sheriff of that shire (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears 
a quartered Shield, with the Supporters as chief. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lviii. 

ftmif . — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, three boars' heads erased gu. armed and landed 
az. ; second, ar. a demi otter Issuing from a fesse wavy sa. crowned with an antique 
crown or: third, or, three crescents gu. within a royal treasure of the last. 

JImpaling the Arms of FiTZsiMONS, in right of his wife, Anne Jane, eldest dan. of the 
late Patrick Fitzsimons, of Streamstoun, co. Westmeath, Esq. 

CtmtO. — First, a dagger and palm branch in saltire ppr. Second, a demi otter sa. 
crowned with an antique crown, and holding in the paw a crescent or. 

J^uyportettf. — ^Two greyhounds ar. collared and chained gu. 

tAottoe§. — Mean, speak, and do well. Abov$ thejirsi Cre$t, Weigh well ; and abov* 
the second Crett, Per mare et terras. 

letgl), of mm l^alU Ibigl) M^h co. ClieiBitet. 

Egerton Leigh, of the West Hall, High Leigh, and of Twemlow, co. Chester, 
Esq. High Sheriff in 1836, eldest son and heir, by Elizabeth, his wife, daughter 
and coheir of Francis Jodrell, of Yeardsley and Twemlow, Esq. of the late 
Egerton Leigh, of the West Hall, Esq. grandson of the Rev. Peter Leigh, Rector 
of Lymme, by Mary, his wife, daughter and heir of Henry Doughty, of Broad- 
well, CO. Gloucester, Esq. and great grandson, by Elizabeth, his wife, daughter 
of the Hon. Thomas Egerton, of Tatton Park, of the Rev. Peter Leigh, M .A. of 
the West Hall, Rector of Whitchurch, co. Salop, who was thirteenth in direct 
descent from Thomas de Leioh, (only son, by her first husband, Richard de 
Lymm, of Agnes de Leigh, only daughter and heir of Richard de Leigh) who 
assumed the surname of Leigh, and first acquired the estate of West Hall, bears 
the quartered Coat of Leigh and Jodrell. 

flmi0. — Quarterly, first and fourth, or, a lion ramp. gu. for Leigh ; second and third, 
la. three buckles ar. for Jodrell. 

Crf0t. — A cubit arm, vested paly of five pieces, or and sa. cuffed ar. hand ppr. 
grasping the upper and lower fragments of a broken tilting spear, the point downvraraa. 

Another Crest is also used by the family, viz. a demi lion ramp, or, holdin? a pennoQ 
displayed az. charged with two bars or, inscribed " Force avec vertu," and with a shield 
Mrith the Arms of Leigh, on which are three Escutcheons of Pretence, with the Armi of 
the three husbands of Agnes de Leigh, of the West Hall, Lymme, Venables, and Hay* 

WARDEN. 

jBottO* — Force avec vertu. 



a^actionalti, of 3lncl)itennetl) anti (tribune, co. 2itesll 

Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Macdon a ld, of Inchkenneth and Gribune, C.B. 
Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant for the county (second son of the 
late Colin Macdonald, Esq. second Laird of Boisdale, by Isabella, his second 
wife, daughter of Captain Robert Campbell, of Glenfalloch, and grandson of 
Alexander, Laird of Boisdale, by Lady Macdonald, his wife, widow of Sir 
Donald Macdonald, of Slate, which Alexander was eldest son of Godfrey Donald 
Macdonald, of Clanranald, fourteenth Chief of that Clan, by his second wife, a 
daughter of Mackenzie of Kildun, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears the 
quartered Coat of Clanranald, and Impales the Arms of Douglas, in right of 
his wife, Mary, third daughter of Thomas Douglas, of Grantham, Esq. 

flrmft. — Quarterly, 6rst, ar. a lion ramp. gu. armed or; second, or a dexter band 
couped fesseways, holdiog a cross crosslet fitchee gu. ; third, or, a lyrophad, and in base 
a salmon naiant in sea vert; fourth, ar. an oak tree vert, surmounted by an eagle or, 
Jjntyaling Douglas, ar. a heart gu. surmounted by a regal crown, on a chief as. three 
muliels ar. 

^Stt$U — Out of a castle an arm in armour holdiog a sword, all ppr. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lix. 



Clboma0, of Catmartben. 

The Reverend Richard James H. Thomas, Lecturer of St. Peter s, and 
Curate of St. Ishmaers, co. Carmarthen, and his brother, William Gwynne 
Stedman Thomas, sons of William Thomas, merchant, by Dorothy, his wife, 
only daughter and heir of Richard Williams, Gent., and Frances, his wife, 
daughter and coheir of the Reverend Thomas Protheroe, Vicar of Llangam- 
march, bear a shield of eight quarterings, being descended — through the 
marriage of the Reverend Thomas Protheroe, with Dorothy, eldest daughter 
and coheir of Miles Stedman, Esq. of Dolygaer, by Mary, his wife, eldest 
daughter and coheir of John Lloyd, Esq. — from the ancient families of 
Stedman, Tatsall, Marshall, Lloyd of Llanllawddog, Tuberville, 
Vauohan, &c. 

flmtf. — Qnarterly. I. Qaarterly. First and fourth az. a stag trippant arg. 
collared and lined or. between the attires an imperial crown ppr. Second and 
third arg. a cher. between three cocks gu. on a chief sa. three spear heads of the 
first, saDfpiinated. II. or. a cross flory az. III. chequy or. and gu. a chief enn. 
IV. paly of six arg. and sa. V. Quarterly. First and fourth arg. three boars' 
heads couped sa. Second and third gu. a Hon ramp, reguardant or. VI. arg. a 
lion ramp, reguardant sa. VII. chequy or. and gu. a fosse erm. VIII. sa. a chcv. 
between three fleurs de lis arg. 

CTtfft — A stag's head erased arg. between the attires an imperial crown ppr. 

blotto.— Virtute non Astutift. 



Eotimgon, of @)uDlep, LttierpooL 

Nicholas Robinson, £^q. of Sudley, an eminent merchant of Liverpool, had 
the following arms confirmed to him by the Herald's College. 

flnM. — Vert, on a chev. between three stags at gaze, or. each charged on the 
•houider with a martlet, sa. as many gates gu. 

Ctfft. — On a crown Tallery, a stag at gaze, or. supporting with his dexter prefoot 
an escutcheon per saltire purpure, and of the last, charged with a saltire erm. 

^lOtto.—Virtute non verbis. 



Dar&p, of ColebtooitDale, co* @aIop* 

Francis Darby, Esq. of Colebrookdale, elder son of the late Abraham Darly, 
Esq. of Colebrookdale, and grandson of Abraham Darby, Esq. by Abiah, his 
second wife, youngest child of Samuel Maude, Esq. of Sunderland, bears, in 
addition to bis family Arms, an Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife, 
Hannah, only child of John Grant, Esq. of Leighton-Buzzard, co. Bedford. 
The family of Darby has been, for many generations, resident and pos- 
sessed of landed property at Colebrookdale and its vicinity. 

flmii. — Per chev. embattled, az. and erminois, three eagles displayed, each charged 
on the breast with an escallop, all counterchanged, 

CtCft — In front of two cross-crosslets fitchfee in saltire, sa. a demi-eagic displayc<% 
conped erm. wings, az. charged on the bieast with an escallop of the last. 

HlHttO. — Utcunque placuerit Deo, 



PLATE Lix.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^pett. Of PaindlDick ^ouse, co. <2^Iouce0tet. 

William Henry Htett^ Esq. of Painswick House^ 'a magistrate and de- 
puty-lieutenant of Gloucestershire, and formerly M.P. for Stroud, son of 
the late Reverend Henry Cay Adams, of Shrewsbury, A.M. of Christ-church, 
Oxford, by^Frances, his wife, daughter of Richard Marston, Esq. of Willenhall, 
CO. Stafford, assumed by act of parliament in 1815 his present surname of 
Hyett, on succeeding to the estates of the late Benjamin Hyett, Esq. of 
Painswick, and bears the Hyett arms quarterly with Adams. The family of 
Hyett, formerly, seated at Lydney, has been regularly recorded in the County 
Visitations : that of Adams is a younger branch of the ancient and worship- 
ful house of Adams of Longdon, co. Salop. See Burke's Landed Gentry, 

Slnit0. — Quarterly, first and fourth, arg. a lion ramp. az. on achief dancett^e^sa. 
two roses arg. for Hybtt. Second and third, erm. three cats passant in pale, az. for 
Adams. 

Cre0t0. — First, a castle ppr. charged with four pellets, issuing therefrom a lion^s 
head, in the mouth a rose slipped gu. for Hyett. Second, a greyhound's head 
erased erm. 

^OttO. — Cor immohile. 



Onley Savill-Onley, Esq. of Stisted Hall, is only son of the late Charles 
Harvey, Esq. M. P. Barrister-atLaw and Recorder of Norwich, who, having 
inherited the estates of his maternal uncle. The Reverend Charles Onley, 
assumed in 1822, in compliance with the testamentary injunction of that 
gentleman, the surname and arms of Savill-Onley. See Burke's Landed 
Gentry, 

TLtVUt, — Quarterly, first and fourth, or. three piles meeting in point, gu. on a 
canton, arg. a mullet pierced, sa. for Onley. Second, arg. on a hend, sa. three 
owls of the field for Savill. Third, erm. on a chief indented, gu. three cres- 
cents, arg. for Harvey, impaling (in right of his wife, Caroline-Mary, dau. of John 
Harvey, Esq. of Thorpe Lodge, Norfolk,) erm. on a chief indented, gu. three cres- 
cents, arg. for Harvey. 

Crests. — First, out of a coronet or. an eagle's head issuing from flames ppr. 
holding in the heak a sprig of laurel, also ppr. for Onley. Second, an owl arg. 
for Savill. Third, a dexter cubit^arm ppr. hand epaum^e, also ppr. charged 
from the wrist with a pile giL above the fingers a crescent reversed arg. for Harvey. 

^OttO.— Alteri si Ubi. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platk i,x. 



9et)eme, of CQallop ^alU co. ^alop, anti of Cbenfbrti, 

CO. HSortbampton. 

Samuel Amy Seterne, Esq. of Wallop Hall and Thenford^ High Sheriff 
of Montgomeryshire in 1824^ and of Northamptonshire in 1829, is repre- 
sentative of the ancient Worcestershire family of Seveme, derived from John 
Scveme, of Shrawley, living temp. Hen. VIII. See Burke's Landed Gentry, 

flnil0. — Arg. on a chev. sa, nine bezants. 
Cttft — ^A cinquefoil, or. 
^Otto — Virtus prestantior auro. 



Ctuantocit, of Botton ^ouse, co. Somerset. 

John Matthew Quantock, Esq. of Norton House, a Magistrate for Somer- 
setshire, son and heir of the late John Quantock, Esq. of Norton, by Frances, 
his wife, dau. of John Bettesworth, Esq. of Caerhayes Castle, co. Cornwall, 
represents an old and respectable county family. SeeBuRKis's Landed Gentry, 

^xm. — Az. an eagle displayed with two heads erminois, in chief three estoiles 
arg. 

Cttf t — Out of the battlements of a tower gu. charged with two annulets, or, a 
demi-eagle with two heads, and wings eleTated issuant, per pale erminois and ermine. 

mstto. — Non immemor beneficii. 



IBurton, of laeUfietD, co. Dot0et, anti launton, 

CO. JKorfott, TBart. 

Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, Bart., of Bellfield and Runton, is the descend- 
ant of an ancient and respectable Essex family. See Burke's Peerage and 
Baronetage, 8th edition. 

flUrttf. — Arff. a lion ramp, tail elevated and turned over the head sa. between 
two mulletB of the second. 

Cttit-— A buck^s head couped gu. attired or. gorged with a collar of the last, 
therafrom pendent an escutcheon arg. charged with an African's head sa. 

J^ipportfTf . — Dexter, an African sa. wreathed about the head and loins rert. 
Sinister, a buck, gu. attired or. 

JKsttS.— Do it with thy might 

IfOM VttXton. of Great Goggeshall, co. Essex (son of Thomas 
Buxton, of Great Goggeshall, by Judith his wife, and grandson 
by Susan his wife, of Thomas Buxton, of Great Cogffeshall, 
who was son by Anne his wife, of William Buxton, of Great 
Goggeshall, who was buried 22 Dec. 1625, and whose will is 
dated 4 Oct. 1625, and was proved 11 Jan. following at 



PLATE Lx.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

Chelmsford) died 26 Dec. 1732— leaving, by Elizabeth his 
wife, who d. II Dec. 1713 — ^wilh other issue. 

, 7 

Charles Buxton, of Braxted, co.^Hannah, dau. of George Read, citi- 



Essex, fourth son, b. 5 Feb. 1703- 
4; d. 12 Sept. 1777. 



sen of London, m. 29 Feb. 1727. 

:Sarah, only child and heir of Tho- 
mas Fowell, Esq. of the city of 
London, d. 3 March, 1814. 

Thomas Fowell Buxton, Esq. of=j=Anna, dau. of Osgood Hanbury, 



Isaac Buxton, of Bellfield, co. Dor-: 
set, second son, b, 22 Jan. 1733-4 ; 
w. 5 Mar. 1755; d, 12 Oct. 1782. 



Earl's Colne, co. Essex, High 
Sheriff of that county, b. 1 Sept. 
1756; m. 12 Feb. 1782; d. 3 
Dec. 1 793. 



Esq. of Holdfield Grange, co. Es- 
sex, m. 2dly, 9 June, 1806, Ed- 
mund Henning, Esq. of Wey- 
mouth, and d, 22 Oct. 1828. 



Sbit C^omas jTotorll ISuxton. of=pHannah, dau. of John Gumey, Esq. 



Bellfield and of Runton, co. Nor- 
folk, late M.P, for Weymouth, 
b. 1 April, 1786; created a Ba- 
ronet of the United Kingdom, 
30 July, 1840; w. 13 May, 1807. 

Issue. 



of Earlham, co. Norfolk. 



IPott, of iBentbam ^ill co. l^ent. 

Arthur Pott, Esq. of Bentham Hill, High Sheriff of Kent in 1840^ descends 
from a family of Pott whose arms are recorded in the Herald's College. His 
grandfather^ John Pott, Esq. whose mother was a coheiress of Clarke^ 
married Anne Fletcher, an heiress, and thus the present Mr. Pott, of Ben- 
tham Hill, quarters the arms of Clarke and Fletcher. See Burke's Landed 
Gentry, 

Arm0. — Quarterly first and fourth, az. two bars dcbruised by a bend let, or. for 
Pott. Second gu. three swords erect, arg. pomels and hilts or. for Clarkb. 
Third Gu, a crqgs engr. between four phcons arg. for Fletcher. 

Crrst. — On a mount vert, a leopard sejant ppr. collared, and chained, chain 
reflexed over the back, or. 

^OttO. — Fortis et Astutus. 



a^artin, of ^am Court, co. C^orcester. 

Joseph John Martin, Esq. of Ham Court, eldest son and heir of the late 
Rev. Joseph Martin, Canon Residentiary of Exeter, descends from and bears 
the arms of the respectable family of Martin of Quy Hall, co. Cambridge, 
and Overbury Park, co. Worcester. Refer to Burke's Landed Gentry. 

Arm0. — Paly of six or. and az. on a chief gu. three martlets of the first 
Cre0t. — A Martin passant ppr. 
^Otto. — Pejus letho flagitium. 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxi. 



messty of 9l0cot patft, co. ^Iouce0tet. 

James Roberts West, Esq. of Alscot Park, a magistrate for Warwickshire, 
(son and heir of the late James Roberts West, Esq. of Alscot, by Anne, his 
wife, only dau. and heir of Joseph Roberts, Esq. of New Combe, grandson 
of James West, Esq. by Sarah Wren, his wife, great granddau. of Sir Chris- 
topher Wren, and great grandson of James West, Esq. by Sarah, his wife, 
dau. and eventual heiress of Sir Thomas Steavens, Knt.) descends from the 
Hon. Leonard West, fifth son of Thomas, third Lord Delawarr (see Burke's 
Landed Gentry,) and bears the arms of that noble house, quartered with the 
Coats of Steavens and Roberts. 

Slmnt. — Quarterly : first and fourth, argent, a fess dancett^ pean, for West ; 
■econd, or, on a chevron gules, between three demi-Uons rampant sable, langued 
of the second, as many cross-crosslets argent, for Steavens ; third, argent, three 
pheons sable, on a chief of the second, a greyhound proper, for Roberts. 

Crcit — Out of a ducal coronet gold, a griffin's head pean, beaked and eared or. 

motto.— Dux vit« ratio. 



^trutt, of TBelper, co. Dertip. 

Jbdbdiah Stsutt, Esq. of Belper, a magistrate and deputy - lieutenant for 
Derbyshire, son of the late George Benson Strutt, Esq. of Bridge Hill, Belper, 
and grandson of Jedediah Strutt, Esq. of Derby, who died in 1797, bears the 
arms of Stbutt, impaled with those of Walker, in right of his wife Sus- 
anna, only dau. of Joshua Walker, Esq. of Clifton House, near Rotherham. 

Smi. — Sa. a chev. erminois between three cross-crosslets fitch^e or. Impaling 
arg. on a chev. gu. between two anvils in chief and an anchor in base ppr. a bee of 
Uie last between two crescents of the field, for Walker. 

Crfft^A dexter arm erect, couped at the elbow, habited sa. cuff erminois 
charged on the sleeve with a cross-crosslet fitch^e or. holding in the hand ppr. a 
roll of parchment of the last. 

JKottO. — Propositi tenax. 

mtllurat l^trtttt of South Normanton, in the co. of Derby. 

T 



Joseph Stmtt, 
of Rickmans- 
worth, if. 26 
Decern. 1794, 
aged 70. 



I I 

Jedediah Strutt,=p£lizabeth, dau.=Anne, widow of William Strutt, 



Esq.of Derby, 
rf.inl797, 6«- 
ried at Bel- 
per. 



of Wm. Wool- Geo. Daniels, Esq.of Derby, 
lat, of Derby, and dau. of died unm, in 
m. in 1755. Geo. Cantrell. 1800. 



William Strutt, Esq. George Benson Strutt, 



of St Helen's 
House, Derby, a 
deputy - lieuten- 
ant for Derby- 
shire : m. Bar- 
bara, dau.ofTho. 
Evans, Esq. of 
Derby. 



Esq. of Bridge Hill 
House, m. Catha- 
rina, youngest dau. 
of Mr. Anthony 
Radford, of Hol- 
brooke, and d. 3 
Aug. 1B41. 



Joseph Strutt, 
Esq. ofSt.Pe- 
ter's House, 
Derby, m. Isa- 
bel, dau. of 
Archibald 
Douglas, Esq. 



ElizaDelh==William Evans, 
Esq. of Darley 
Hall.ncar Derby 

Martha= Samuel Fox, Esq. 
of Derby. 



Edward Strutt^Emily, youngest 



Esq.M.P.for 
Derby. 



Issue. 



dau. of William 
Otter, D.D. Bi- 
shop of Chi- 
chester. 



T 



T 



I I 



Joseph Doug- Isabella=JohnHowardGaUon,Esq. 
las Slrntt, of Hadzor House, 

Esq. d. 8. p. Worcestershire. 

Caroline,=Edward Nicholas Hurt, 
shecf.«. Esq. 
p. in 
1834. 



I 1 

George Henry Mary. d. 
Strutt, Esq. in 1828. 
died with- 
out iasue in 
1621. 



! 1 

JelrelrtilO l^tnitt Esq. Anthony Rad- 



of Belper, Derby- 
shire, m. Susanna, 
dau. of Joshua Wal- 
ker, Esq. of CliAon, 
near Rotherham. 



ford Strutt, 
Esq. h. in 
1791. 



John 8 trull, 
Esq. h. in 
1793. 



Elizabeth 



PLATE Lxi.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^ann&rn, of tbe 31iSie of up iao0$an> co. ^lop. 

This family derives from Nicholas Sandford^ of Calverhall^ third son of 
Nicholas Sandford> Lord of Sandford, who obtained in 1426^ a grant of 
the Estate of the Liee^ near Whitchurch. The present representative, the 
Rev. Humphrey Sandford, of the Isle, who is son of the late Folliott Sand- 
ford, of that place, Esq., and grandson of Humphrey Sandford, Esq. of the 
Isle, High Sheriff of Salop in 1787, by Elizabeth his wife, only child of 
Hugh Jones, Esq. bears a shield of ten quarterings. 

{Smttf.— Per cher. be. and erm. in chief two boars' heads erased or. Quartering 
Springsbaux, Wtnnesburt, Jones, Middlvton, Ribid Flaidd, Blaidd Rudd, 
MiDDLBTON, BowDLBB, and Bbbkblbt. 

Cre0t. — A boar's head erased or, with a broken spear head thrust into the mouth. 

motto. — Nee temere nee timide. 



Cl)orp> of iapton> co. Durtom. 

The Venerable Charles Thorp, D.D. of Ryton, Archdeacon of Durham, son 
of the late Venerable Robert Thorp, Archdeacon of Northumberland, and 
grandson of the Rev. Thomas Thorp, M.A. Vicar of Chillingham and Ber- 
wick upon Tweed, bears a quartered coat, first and fourth, Thorp> second 
and third, Robson, surmounted by an Escutcheon of Pretence for his first 
wife, Frances Wilkie, only child of Collingwood Selby, Esq., and impales the 
arms of Robinson, in right of his second wife, Mary, dau. of Edmund Ro- 
binson, Esq. 

TLtvm. — Quarterly, first and fourth, per pale arg. and or within an orle of ten 
fleurs de lis az. a lion ramp, gules, gorged with a plain collar and pendent Uierefrom 
an Escutcheon of the second charged with a cross pat^ quadrate of the fourth, for 
Thobp : second and third, az. a chev. erm. between three boars' heads erased arg. 
langued gu. for Robson. An Escutcheon of Pbbtbncb for Selbt, and impale- 
ment for Robinson. 

Crcit-yA lion ramp, gules holding in the dexter paw a fleur de lis azure gorged 
with a plain collar and pendent therefirom an Escutcheon as in the Arms. 

HSottO. — Super antiquas rias. 

Sbit SbUpHen Cflorpe, Knt. liyine in 1405, son of Stephen 
Thorpe, who d. 10 Aug. 23 Edw. III., and grandson of 
Stephen Thorpe, who d. 17 Edw. III. and who was lineally 
descended from Robert Thorpe of Thorpe, near Wellwyke, 
in Holdemess, temp. King John. 

, 3= 

Stephen Thorpe, liying 1405.=pJuan, dau. of Sir Robert Con- 

I stable, of Flamborough, Knt. 

I ' ' 

Stephen Thorpe, living 1434,^Isabell. 

12 Hen. VI. 
Stephen Thorpe, died 1502.^Isabel, sister of John Constable, 



1 ' 



j Esq. of Halsham, co. York. 



John Thorpe, of Thorpe, m. in::^Ellen, dau. and heir of William 
J 503, £; . in J 533. Wells, of Anlaby , co. Kingston. 




a 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxi. 



WiUiam Thorpe, of Thorpe, cf.^^Margery, dau. of Christopher 
21 EUz " ■ - 



.<^Aiargery, aau. o 
I Hillyard, Esq. 



Christopher Thorpe, will dated^Anne, dau. of Jasper Sheffield, 
1565. of Croxby. 

StepnenThorpe, Esq. of Thorpe,^Fraxice8, dau. of Nicholas Rud- 
wiU dated 1586. 



I ston, of Hayton. 



William Thorpe, Esq. of Dan-eY^Eliza^au. of Peter Vavasour, 
thorpe, d. about 16zO. 



r 



I'.assMuum, aau. oi r eier v a 
I of WiUtoft, CO. York. 



JohnThoxpe,E8q.ofDanthorpe,^Jane, dau. of Tho. Beck with, 
Capt of a Regt of Horse for of Aketon. 
Cha.L 



John Thorpe, Sheriff of York,>?=Elizabeth, dau. and coh. of Geo. 
1689. Daniel, of Besewicke. 

I 
M«>»<>^1 Thorpe, of Yarm, d, 

1710. 



T 



T 



The Rer. Thomas Thorp, M.A.^F^Iats ICotaOII. of Egglescliffe, 



bapt i Jan. 1699, Freeman 
of York 1739, Vicar of ChU- 
ling>»iim and of Berwick, d, 
12 Dec. 1767. 



cf.at Grateshead in 179»*, aged 
86. 



The Venerable Robert Thorp, chap-spGrace, dau. of . William Alder, 
lain to the Earl of Tankenrilie, 
Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge, 
Archdeacon of Northumberland, 
d. at Durham, 20 April, 1812. 



Tho- Robert,ofe=Mary- 



Esq. of Homcliffe, d, 2 Aug. 
1814. 



mas, ft. Alnwick, 
26Sept 6. 7 Aug. 
1768; 1771, 
d. 27 clerk of 
Not. the peace 
1792. for 

North- 
umber- 
land. 



Anne, 
dau. of 
Thomas 
Alder, 
Esq. of 
Morris 
Hall. 



3. 4. 

Wil- George, 6. 
liam,6. 9 Sep. 1777, 
1772, Ist Lieut. 
d.1787. oftheTerp- 
sichore Fri- 
gate ; killed 

at Santa 
Crui, 1797. 



Frances 
WUkie, 
only child 
of Col- 
lin gwood 
Selby, 
Esq. of 
Swans- 
field, d. 
20 April, 

1811, 
aged 19, 
1st wife. 



5. 

able iSf^arln 
C^orp. IBM. 

6.130ct.l783, 

Fell. & Tutor 

of University 

Coll. Ozon. 

Archdeacon 

of Durham, 

Warden of 

Durham Uni- 

▼ersitv, and 

Chaplain to 

Earl Grey. 



Booert-Alder, 

B. D. d, in 

1832. 
Thomas, m. 

Eliz.-Jane, 
* dau.ofWm. 

Tudor, Esq. 

of Bath. 



Mary,m.tothe 
Rer. John 
Davison. 

Orace-Onslow 
d. unm, 

Jane, <i. young 

Sarah, m. to 
Wm. Dick- 
son, Esq. 



Charles, 
b. in 
1825. 



1 I 1 

Frances. Mary. Elizabeth. 

Eliz. 

Grace. 



:Mary, 

dau. of 
Edmund 

Robin- 
son, Esq. 
ofThorpe 
Green,co. 
York, 2d 
wife. 



Grace- Jane- 
Jane. Eleanor. 



iLenfgan, of Castle iFoffertp, co* Cippetarp- 

Jambs Lenioan, Esq. of Ca«tle Fogerty, a county magistrate^ son and heir of 
the late James Lenigan, Esq. of Castle Fogerty, by Peniel, his wife, dau. of 
Edmund Armstrong, Esq. of Buncraggy, and grandson of William Lenigan, 



PLATE Lxi,] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

Esq. of Zoar, co. Kilkenny^ by Elizabeth bis wife, dau. and eventual heir of 
Thomas Fooerty, Esq. of Castle Fogerty, (see Burke's Landed Gentry,) 
bears a coat of twelve quarterings. 

SInM. — Qaarterly. I. Az. on a palet arg. three trefoils in pale, vert, between 
two lions ramp, regarding each other, or. each between three fleurs de lis two 
and one of the second for Linioan. II. Az. in diief two lions ramp, regarding 
each other supporting a garb all or. in the dexter base a crescent, and in the sinis- 
ter an Irish harpt both gold, stringed arg. for Foobrtt {andent). III. Vert, a 
fesse arg. between three garbs or. for Foobrtt (jnodetTi), IV. Arg. chief vert for 
Mtlbr. V. Per bend indented or. and az. two fleurs de lis counterchanged for 
Sheb. VI. Gu. three swords per fesse arg. hilted or. the centre sword pointing 
to the sinister side. VII. Sa. three pheons arg. VIII. Gu. two swords in saltire 
arg. points down, surmounted by a third in pale point up, hilt or. IX. Arg. a chev. 
between three pheons sa. X. Per pale indented or. and gu. XI. Barry of eight 
arg. and gu. a bend sa. XII. As first. 

Cre0t0. — I. A lion ramp, or, leaning on a sword arg. hilted gold. II. An arm 
embowed in armour ppr. garnished or. holding a dagger arg. hilted gold. Ill: A 
swan rousant sa. membered and beaked gu. 



FLATE Ln. 




Tat VtHtR. 



jTtn. 20 Hoflea Sn^n <■ 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxii. 

^utcfitison, of 3[telanti. 

Thb Hutchisons of Ireland descend from an ancient family in Scotland 3 
their immediate ancestor settled at Belfast after the battle of the Boyne^ 
where he distinguished himself as a Major of Cavalry in King William's 
army, whose helmet was long considered an heirloom in the family ; his 
grandson John Hutchison^ a rigid Presbyterian of the old school^ removed 
to Dublin about the year 1750 ; he was possessed of the extensive district of 
Cooliskane, otherwise Quinsborough^ barony of Ophaly^ county of Kildare, 
remarkable as never having been subject to crown or quit rent, as given 
free thereof by Charles II. to his brother James, Duke of York, foifeited 
in the Great Rebellion of 1641, and subsequently forfeited by James the 
Second on his abdication, and granted in like manner by the Commissioners 
of Queen Anne under the act 1 1 William III. The fee simple of the land still 
remains vested in his descendants as after. This John Hutchison had three 
sons and a daughter ; one of his grandsons, William Hutchison, was for many 
years Chief Accountant in the Bank of England, and died unmarried in 18^8, 
his youngest son £. Hutchison, Esq. married Elizabeth, third daughter of 
Redmond Morres, Esq. (brother of Lord Viscount Mount Morres) a king's 
counsel and member of the Irish House of Commons in many successive 
Parliaments for the city of Dublin, whose eldest son was afterwards created 
Viscount Frankfort de Montmorency (see Burke's Peerage, Sfc) The issue 
of this marriage was several daughters and three sons : — viz ; I. John 
Hutchison, Barrister-at-law,^ now of Dublin and Cooliskane or Quinsbo* 
rough, county Kildare, who married, 1st, Georgina, second daughter of the 
late Reverend James Baden Carpenter, Rector of Elstead, co. Sussex, and of 
St. Olave in the city of Chichester, nearly related in the maternal line to 
the ancient family of Tindal of Sussex (of which the Right Honourable Sir 
Nicholas Tindal, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, England, is a dis- 
tinguished member), and by her, who died in 1823, he has an only daughter; 
he married, 2ndly, Elizabeth, relict of Major Jacob, nephew and heir of 
Colonel Deaken, Groom of the Bed-chamber to the Duke of Cumberland 
brother of George III., and a Colonel of the Guards : II. Redmond Morres 
HutchisoUf deceased, leaving issue, — and III. William Hutchison an officer 
of the Royal Navy, with issue. 

flmii. — Arg. a feu as. surmounted by three arrows, points duwiiw ards, one in 
pale, the other two meeting in point counterchanged^ in chief, a boar's head 
erased, sa. 

Cmt — ^A dart turned upwards, above which the ^Otto — Sursum. 

3lacftjBion, of arslep, co. laenforn, laatt. 

Sis Mountstuart-Goodrickb Jackson, Bart, of Arsley, is son and heir of 
the late Sir Keith Alexander Jackson, Bart, by Amelia, his wife, only dau. of 
the late George Waddell, Esq. E. I. C. S. and grandson of Sir John Jackson, 
who was created a Baronet, 2^ May 1815. 

fixfg§. — Arg. on a fesse between a goat's head couped in chief, gu. and a ship 
in full sail in base ppr. a greyhound courant between two pheons or. 

f^reit. — ^A goat's head, couped, arg. guttle de sang, armed and bearded or. 
gorged with a collar gu. charged with three bezants, ringed, and lined reflexed, of 
the third. 




PLATE Lxn.J HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

iaofi0tt0on, Of lune, Bot^ iBtrttatn. 

Thb Robertsons of Ludb descend^ in common with the families of 
Strowan and Inshes, from Henrf^ Earl of Atholl (see Burke's Landed 
Gentry), The present representative of this very ancient and distinguished 
family is Captain Robertson of the 82d Regt., only son and heir of the late 
General Robertson of Lude. 

{Smm. — Gu. three wolves' heads erased arg. 

Crtf t.— A sleeping wolf-dog ppr. over it the ^otto — Dinna waken sleeping 
dogs. 

|^UB9Ol1fr0.-^Granted by patent in 1779 to James Robertson, Esq. of Lude, 
grandfather of the present representative.) — Two horses. 

HSiltto.^Ductus non Coactus. 

Q^on^ennp, of ^ole l^ouise, lEloItientien, to. fUmt 

Thomas Gybbon Monypennt^ Esq. of Hole tiouse^ formerly M. P. for Rye^ 
eldest son of the late Thomas Monypenny^ Esq. by Catherine^ his wife^ dau. 
of [saac Rutton^ Esq. of Osp'ringe and Whitehills^ grandson of James Mony- 
penny, Esq. of Maytham Hall, by Silvestra^ his wife^ dau. and coheir of the 
Reverend Thomas Blackwell, M. A. and great grandson of Captain James 
Monypenny, R. N., by Mary, his wife, dau. of Robert Gybbon, Esq. of Hole 
House, descends ^m the ancient Scottish family of Monjrpenny of Pitmillie, 
and bears the arms of that house quartered with the ensigns of Gybbon, 
which surname he assumed upon succeeding to the Hole House property. 
(See BuRKB*8 Landed Gentry). 

flltmi. — Quarterly, first and fourth quarterly arg. a dolphin as. finned gu. for 
MoNTPBNNT. Second and third. As. three cross-crosslets fitch^ issuing out of as 
many crescents arg. for Cathcabt. Second and third, Az. a lion ramp, guardant 
between three escallops arg. for Gtbbon. 

Creftf. — ^Firat, Neptune, bestriding a dolphin naiant in waves of the sea, holding 
with his dexter hand the reins, and in his sinister the trident, all ppr. Over it, the 
^Sotto — Imperat lequor, for Montpbnnt. Second, on a chapeau gu, turned up 
erm. an EsciEtrbuncle or. for Gybbon. Third, A demi Uon reguardant arg. ducaily 
crowned or. also for Gybbon. 



mtbsttt, of ]penn0, co. 

The family of Webster, settled in England at a very early period, was origi- 
nally of the counties of Cambridge, Essex, and Huntingdon, in which shires 
Henry VUI. granted to John Webster large estates. The present repre- 
sentative is Joseph Webster, Esq. of Penns, a magistrate for Warwickshire. 
He bears the ancient family arms, impaled with the coat of Payne, in right 
of bis wife Maria-Mary, daughter of Sir Peter Payne, Bart of St Christo- 
phers^ and Blunham Place, Beds. 

Smi. — At. five swans, close, in cross, arg. between four' annulets or. Impalinq 
go. a fesse between two lions passant guarduit arg. 

Ctfit— A swan's neck erased, arg. beaked gu. in the beak an annulet, or. 
IKttts.— Carpe Diem. 



HBRALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platb lxiii. 



RicHABD MiLWARD, Esq. of Hexgreave Park and Thurgarton Priory, de- 
scends from, and bears the arms of, the ancient family of Mill ward of 
Eaton Dovedale, six generations of which are described in the Visitation of 
Derbyshire of 1611. See Burks s Landed Gentry. 

tLtVM. — Erm. on a fess gu. three bezants. 
Crfft — A lion's gamb, aa. grasping a sceptre or. 
0Uftio. — Nee temere nee timide. 

l.lo^ltmiHiwxi», of atoemam l^atit, co. Caroigan. 

Edward Lloyd Williams, Esq. of Gwemant P^k, a magistrate and deputy 
lieutenant for the counties of Stafford, Worcester, and Warwick, and also a 
magistrate for Cardiganshire, son and heir of the late John Lloyd Williams, 
Esq. of Gwemant Park, by Martha Louisa, his wife, second daughter of 
Morley Pendred Saunders, Esq. of Saunders Grove, co. Wicklow, and grand- 
son of Thomas Williams, Esq. by Mary Lloyd, his wife, heiress of Llwyn- 
rheol, CO. Cardigan, bears the quartered Coat of Williams and Lloyd. 

flrms. — Quarterly, first and fourth arg. a lion rampant sa. for Williams. 
Second and third, sa. three scaling ladders, and between the two uppermost, a 
spear's head arg. its point embrued : on a chief gu. a tower triple turretted of the 
second for Llotd. 

Crests. — First, a lion rampant reguardant or ; second, a scaling ladder. 

0MU. — Ofiiwn-Yr-Arglwydd. — Let us fear the Lord. 

^otoarDi of Cort? Castle, co. Cumbetlanii. 

This branch of the illustrious family of Howard, emanating directly from the 
Ducal House of Norfolk, through Sir Francis Howard, Knt. second son of 
Lord William Howard, Warden of the West Marches^ who was second son of 
Thomas^ fourth Duke of Norfolk, quarters Howard, Brotherton, Warren^ 
and Mowbray, through the great alliance of Sir Robert Howard with Mar- 
garet de Mowbray, elder dau. of Thomas de Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, 
who was son and heir of John, Lord Mowbray, by Elizabeth, dau. and heir 
of John, Lord Segrave, and his wife, Margaret, dau. and heir of Thomas 
Plantagknkt, surnamed dr Brotherton, £arl of Norfolk and Marshal of 
England, son of Edward I. by his second Queen, Margaret of France. Dacrb 
and Gbbybtoke were brought in by the marriage of Lord William Howard, 
(" Belted Will Howard ") with Elizabeth, dau. and coheir of Thomas, fourth 
Lord Dacrb of Gillesland, grandson of Thomas, Lord Dacre, by Elizabeth, 
his wife, granddau. and sole heiress of Ralph Lord Greystoke, K. G. The 
present representative of the Corby family, Philip Henry Howard, Esq. 
M.P. for Carlisle, bears likewise on an Escutcheon of Pretence, the arms of 
Canning, in right of his wife, Elizabeth-Minto Canning, of Foxcote, co. War- 
wickj eldest dau. of the late Major John Canning, E. 1. C. S., and niece of the 
late Francis Canning, Esq. of Foxcote. 

flrms. — Quarterly, first gu. on a bend between cross-crosslets fitch^e arg. an 
escutcheon or, charged with a demi lion rampant, pierced through the mouth with 
an arrow, within a double treasure flory, counteinonr of the first, for Howard. 
Second, Gu. three lions past, guard, in pale or, in chief a label of three points arg. 
for Brotusrton. Third, Chequy or and az. for Warren. Fourth, Gu. a lion 
ramp. arg. armed and langued az. for Mowbray. Fiflh, Gu, three escallops arg. 
for Dacrb. Sixth, Barry of six arg. and az. three chaplets, gu. for Oreystokb. 
Over all an escutcheon of pretence — Arg. three Moors' heads, sidefaced, couped at 
Uie neck ppr. wreathed about the temples, or and az. for Gamwino. 

Crcft— On a chapeau gu, turned up erm. a lion statant guard., the tail ex- 
tended, or, gorged with a ducal coronet arg. 

Illsttf.— Sola Tirtus inyicta. 



PLAT£ LXIII.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^atDinet, of Coornbe ILoDge, co. iDxGnlt. 

Samuel Wbare Gardiner^ Esq. of Coombe Lodge, a deputy Lieutenant for 
Oxfordshire^ only son and heir of the late Charles Wrighte Gardiner, Esq.', for 
many years Military Secretary to the East Indian Government at Calcutta 
under liord Hastings, descends from the family of Gardiner, of which was 
Stephen Gardiner, Secretary to Cardinal Wolsey, Bishop of Winchester 
temp. Henrt VIII. and Chancellor of England in the reign of Queen Mart. 

flmtf. — Quarterly, first and fourth or. on a chey. gu. between three griffins' 
heads erased, ax. two lions counterpassant of the field, for Gardxkbb. Second and 
third arg. on a cross gu. five mullets or. for Boddam. 

Cref t — A grifiUi's head erased. 

^ftotto. — Deo non fortunie. 

Jbomuel i^attfintt, of Woodford,^Jane Anne Parkinson, of London, 
CO. Essex, Esq. bom in 1724. I m. 1 Mar. 1750. 



Sophia, m. to 
Jasper Atkin- 
son, Esq. of 
the Cottage, 
Maidenhead, 
Berks, and<f. 
12 June, 1834. 



Sbamutl ^attfi^ 

ItfT, Esq. of 
CoombeLodge 
CO. Oxford, 6. 
13 Sept 1755 : 
m. 14 Nov. 
1782: d. 10 
June, 1827. 



:Mary, dau. and 
heir of Charles 
Boddam, Esq. 
of Bulls Cross, 
Enfield, and 
niece to Go- 
▼emorBoddam, 
of Bombay. 



Anne, m. 30 
June, 1773 
to John 
Fisher 
Weare.Esq. 
of Clifton, 
CO. Somer- 
set. 



John Philip 

Gardiner, 

b. 17 Mar. 

1762 : d. 4 

Mar. 1803. 



Otker 

children 

who died 

young. 



0t%atU$ ^Mary- 



mirt^te 
Garlrtner, 

Esq. of 

Coombe 

Lodge, 6.13 

Nov. 1783, 

d. 4 July, 

1837. 



Anne, 
dau. of 
Thomas 
Chase, 
Esq. 
£.I.C. S. 



Jane, m. 
totheRey 
Edward 
Vansit- 
tartNeale 
first cou- 
sin to 
Lord 
Bexley. 



Rawson Bod- 
damGardiner, 

m. in 1828 
Margaret,dau. 
of Wm. Bar 
ring Gould, 
Esq. of Lew 
Trenchard, 
Devon. 



Allen-Francis 

Gardiner, 

Capt R.N. m. 

1st, in 1823, 

Julia Susanna 

dau. of John 

Reade, Esq. of 

Ipsden, by 
whom he has 
issue; and 
2dly, Eliza- 
beth, dau. of 
the Rev. Wm. 
Marsh. 



Emma, m. 

to the Rev. 

George 

Hunt, of 

Buckhurst 
House, 
Bucks. 



Other 

children 

who died 

young. 



Esq. of Coombe Lodge, 6. 
2 Feb. 1821. 



1 

Mary-AnnC' 

Amelia. 



Laura-Emma=?=William Berkeley, only son 



m. 14 Apr. 
1841. 



of Sir WiUiam Pratt Call, 
Bart 



Rosa- A nna-Matilda. 




^epnell, of lLan0le?« co. Detlip. 

Thib ancient and distinguished family, is generally supposed to be descended 
from Hugh de Grente Mesnil, a Potent Norman Baron. Robert de Mesnfl, 
son of Gilbert de Mesnil,was living temp. Henry L and in the 12 Hbnrt II. 
held five knights' fees of Ralph Fitz-Herbert, of which Langley was one. 
He had three sons — Stephen, ancestor of the Metnslls of Worlton, co. York 
— ^RoBERT^ from whom the Shirleys are descended, and William, ancestor 
of the Mbtnells of Langley, of whom was Sir Hugo de Mesnil of Laagl^, 
Knt. of the Bath, one of the heroes of Cressy and Poicders. See Bubkb • 
Landed Gentry. The present Representative of this long descended line, God- 
frey Meynell, Esq. of Langley Park, Hieh Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1811-19, 
son of John Meynell, Esq. of Langley, by Susanna his wife, daughter and 
heir of Joseph Ward, Esq. of Little Chester, and grandson of Francis Mey- 
nell, Esq. by Jane, -his wife, daughter of John Harpur, Esq. of Littleover, 
bears a quartered Coat — ^Meynell, Grente-Mesnil, Meynell (andent), 
Harpur, and Ward. 

JInw.— Quarterly, first and sixth yaire arg. and sa. for Mbtnbll. Second, gu. 

a pale or. for Grbhtb-Mbsmil. Third, paly of six arg. and gu. on a bend az. three 

horee-ahoes or. for Mbtnbll {anderuY Fourth, arg. a lion ramp, within a bor- 

dne engrailed sa. for Harpur. FiAh, az. a cross patt^ and canton anr. for 

, Ward. * 

Ccmt— A hone's head erased arg. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [pi-ate lxiv. 



e0oms iKpde, of e^utb ^atcle, to. ^etefbrn, 
of mi)t^mi, CO. Ci^iUiB!, ann of l^ttsfotn, 

CO. JlSottbampton. 

Tbb Reverend William Monet Ktrle^ of Horn House^ in the parish of 
Much Marcle^ of Whetham, and of Pitsford^ M. A.^ of Oriel College, Ox- 
ford, representative of the families of Kyrle, Ernle, Washbourne, Stouoh- 
TON, &c. bears a shield of thirty-four quarterings, as registered in H. M. 
CoUege of Arms. 

The first on record of the fomily of Kyrle (whose name has been variously 
written, Crul, Crull, Cryll, and sometime Curl), was Robert Crul, of Altone, 
or Old Town, near Ross, who resided, in 1295, at Homme, now Hom Green, 
in the same neighbourhood. From him directly derived Thomas Kyrle, 
who established himself at Hom House, in the parish of Much Marcle, a. d. 
1573^ which has ever since continued the chief seat of his descendants. With 
this gentleman the annexed pedigree commences, omitting, for brevity's sake, 
the issue of his eldest brother, Walter Kyrle of Walford, from whom derived, 
among others, 3o1)n Sprlf, Pope's celebrated ** fHan of iEloHil." 

The family of Ernlb, which is of Saxon origin, deduced its title from the 
village of Eamley or Ernie, in Sussex, so styled from the Saxon words 
"Elam" and "Lege," — ^the place or habitation of eagles j in reference to 
which three eagles are borne on the shield of £mle. 

The family of Washbourne was of knightly degree, previous to the time 
of £dw. IU. and derived its name from the hamlet of Wasseborne (literally 
the " Water brook"), in Worcestershire. Their crest embodied an opposite 
element, being " A bundle of fire proper." 

The Stoughtons of St. John's, were the second branch of the very ancient 
stock of Stoughton of Stoughton, so called from the place of their first set- 
tlement in Surrey, after the Conquest, viz : " Stoke " or " Stoche," and " Tun," 
signifying ** enclosure.'' For ample details, refer to the Dictionary of the 
Landed Gentry. 

AnBf . — I. Quarterly. First and fourth, Ktrlb ; vert a chev. between three 
fleurs de lis, or. Second and third, Money ; chequy arg. and gu. on a 
chief sa. three eagles displayed or. 

II. Money. Chequy arg. and gu. on a chief sa. three eagles displayed or. 

III. Washbourne. Arg. on a fess, between six martlets gu. three quartrcfoils of 

the field. 

IV. Dabitot. Erm. a chief bendy sinister, or. and sa. 

V. Poyer. Gu. a fess arg. in chief, two mullets of the last. 

VI. Ernie. Arg. on a bend sa. three eagles displayed or. 

VII. Wroughtoo. Arg. a cbev. gu. between three boars' heads sa. a crescent 
for difference. 

Vllf. Best. Ou. three sheaves of arrows, two and one, each sheaf composed of 
three arrows, two in saltire, and one in pale, shaft or. fealhers barb and 
band arg. 



X <=! 



N 



X. Ctmhrdm Ezai. m & 

3LL Fnamniif, Ezai. m ^aevnces ra. 

ilL aia-v^iL P:* iaer. la 

XOL ELcTtfock. .Af^ i. aam a. m -Ju sSoc 

XT. Kuaii^bcC i^ & 
XVL Sniiiamiins. Go. 

XTIIL Gc&cri. 
XrX TxscM. Or. m hm ii ■■!!■ ul 



itnifng. 'SBnntercfljmiA. 



&li»xr ill ^of ;2we ' 

jis lis 3C 



imi bvBclELed, ir. 




fEnuumL iL. 



XXIL HdtfiBf. GfLA^cBd 
XXIIL 1 



fijnr 



or. 



XXTL ioi 



a»an4 fB. & 

or. iaUfec 



Lv cockmoico of the ImL 



fn. oa 



BffctL Az. A laoB raBp. vtchm «a 4iiie of 
(kedMMMier of ck< Iwa a ocufail liigiiif ot. 

XXVUL Braock. Azf, oa a mLor a. ftve svns of t&e fiz«L 

X\TX» RnrfiTBnmi Aiy a fea cop. beiim sx fleixn de Ik la. 

XXX TLaroid. Sa^ three goa&i nlxast anf . 

XXXI. Hoofh. Aif. thice ban n. oa a caBUa az. a maxtkc or. 

XXXII. ICaotcB. Aif. a bend nf^hr 

XXXIU. Btmka^ Aig. a ctch 

XXXIV. Xyrle and iLmej icpctticd. 

CnitiL — Ob a mosntTeft, a Hf rffehnf or. fag KTmix. An eafie's head sa. enaed» 
arg. coUaied gemelle, and holding m the beak a flevr de lb or. far Mosbt. 

JBlda. — Nn Boror ktai^ 



Sfrlf. Esq., Lord of 
Manor of Mach Maide, «■ 
mas K Trie, Eoq. of Walfard Covt. 
eo. Hcsefard, 07 Johaa, hk wife, 
dan. and heir of Hugh AbrahaU, 



das. and heir of Jonv 
EM|.ofMalTcn,Ser. 
to Eing Unacar Vlll. 
and hilf tmtt 1 to Joiu, Lotd Lnm- 
ley, of Luiley Cafik* co. Doriiam. 



Sin JoHn Krain, of Mndi Man:le,-rSTnmj, dan. and heir of Philip Scu- 
Bart.. 00 created, 17 May, 1G27, dL daaore, ton of John ScndaBore. 
in ICdO. Eaq. of Hohne-Lacr, co. Hereford* 

from whom demed Jobic, Lord Vit* 
eoontScndamore, andthe laie Duch- 
cai of Norfolk. 



Fbajccis XraLB, Esq. H^ Sheriff o^Hesler, dan. of Sir Paol Tracj, Bart. 
Herefordahire, tf. r. ^ in 1649. | of Stanvay, co. Gloocesier. 

81B JoHir Ktblb, of Moch Marde, Sd^Rebccca, dan. of Daniel Vincent, eld- 



Bart., M.P. for Herefordahire, dL 4 
Jan. 1679.^0. 



est son of Henry Vincent, of Lon- 
don, Esq., directly descended (ac- 
coidins to Segar) inm Frands, Vis- 
connt LoTeL vho was slain at the 
battle of Stoke, a. d. 1487. 



VnicvxTiA Ktblb, eld. dan. and coh.>fBSin Johw EaicLn. KnL of Bury Town, 



b. 2 OcL 165 J, SI. 6 Dec. 1674. 



CO. Wilts, son of Sir John Ernie, 
KnL of l^lietham. Chancellor of 
the Exchequer, temp, C has lbs II. 
and Jambs II. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxiv. 



John Ryrle Emle,=j=Con8tantia, only dau. Will. Wa8hbournk,=j=Hbster Ernls, 6. 8 

Feb. 1675-6. 



Esq. of Whetham, 
and Much Marcle, 
bapt. 10 May, 1683, 
d. 1725. 



of Sir Tnomaa 
Rolt, Knt. of Sac- 
combe. 



Esq. son and heir 
of WUliam Wash- 
bourne, Esq. of Wy- 
chenford. co. Wor- 
cester, and Pytch- 
ley, CO. Northamp- 
ton. 



CoNSTANTiA ERNLE,=j=Thomas, Visct. Dup- 



only dau. and heir, 
b, 1 Sept. 1717, d, 
29 June, 1753. 



plin^aherwards Slh 
Earl of Kinnoul, d. 
in 1787. 



Elizabeth Wash- 
bourn b, only child 
that left issue, m. 1 
Oct. 1723, at Brom- 
yard, CO. Hereford. 



Thomas John Ernie Hay, only child, 6. 
12 Aug. 1742, d. 13 Oct. 1743, buried 
at Calne, Wilts. 



I 

Jambs Money, Esq. 

of Pitsford, Lieut. - 

Col. in the Army, 

&ap^25 Sept. 1724. 

d, 14 June, 1785. 



FrancisMoney, Esq. 
of Wellingborough, 
CO. Northampton. 



Eugenia, eldest dau. 
and coheir of Geo. 
Stoughton, Esq. 
of St. John's, CO. 
Warwick. 



William Money, Esq. of Much Marcle,=pMary, dau. of William Webster, Esq. of 



b. 23 Feb. 1748, d, 6 Nov. 1808. 



Stockton-on-Tees, by Mary, dau. of 
Roland Burdon, Esq. she d, 20 June, 
1813, aged 69. 



1. Sib Jambs = 
Ktrlb Money, 
of Much Marcle, 
Bart 80 created 
ml838;aMajor. 

General in the 

Army, dL«./>. 26 

June, 1843, aged 

68 yean. 



=Anne Caro- 
line, eldest 
dau. of Ro- 
bert Tay- 
lor, Esq. of 
Gloucester 
Place, 
Portman 
Square. 



2. The Rev.: 
USaiUtam 

Uvvlt, i«.2l. 

of Much Mar- 
cle, Whet- 
ham, and 
Pitsford, 6. 13 
Oct. 1776, m. 
16 July, 1805. 



.=pEmma,dau.of 
Richard 
Down, Esq. of 

Halliwick 
Manor House, 
CO. Middlesex, 
by Rose, dau. 
and heir of 
Henry Neale, 
Esq. of Lon- 
don ; descend- 
ed from the an- 
cient house of 

Neale of 
Dean, in Bed- 
fordshire. 



1 

Four 
younger 

sons. See 

Burke's 

Landed 

Gentry. 



Seven daugh- 
ters, four of 
whom survive. 
See Burke's 

Landed 

Gentry, 



iihUm, 2. Edward 3. John-= 

of Oriel Kyrle, Ernie, 
College, 2d Reg. Capt 82 

Oxford, and Bengal Regt. 6. 

of the Inner Light Ca- in 1812. 

Temple, b, Talry,d.imM. 

1 May,1806. in 1841. 



= Harriet- 
Louisa,dau. 
of William 
Sutton, Esq. 
of Herting- 
fordbury, 
CO. Herts. 



4. James- 

Stoughton, 

F.S.A. 

Rector of 

Yatesbury, 

Wilts. 
ft. in 1813. 



=Rosa-Elizt. 

dau. of 

John Drake 

Pridham, 

Esq. of 

Plymouth. 

{see plate 

Ixv.) 



I I I 1 

5. George Wash- 
bourne, M.A. 
6. in 1815. 

6. Rd. Walter, 
32 Regt. 6. 
in 1825. 

7.Cha. Septimus 

b. in 1827. 
1. Emma. 




riflillimii ffl,i)iifii !!;pr,l 

of ^hl,l, :M»ri-!c, I'r.. M,v.'..i 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lzt. 



l^nDjmm, of Iplpmoutf), co. S)etoon. 

The family of Pridham derives from the ancient house of Prudhome, long 
seated in the county of ]>eTon. The identity of the name is established by 
Lysons, and other eminent antiquBries. The heiress of Prudhome, of Upton- 
Prudbome, married into the family of Whiting, temp. Edw. 111. and conveyed 
lai^ hereditary estates j and subsequently William Feilding, ancestor to the 
Earls of Denbigh, by marriage with Joan, dau. of William Prudhome, ac- 
quired in right of bis wife, the manor of Newnbam Paddox, in the county 
of Warwick, wfaicb has since continued the chief residence of the Denbigh 
family. The Barton of Pridhamsleigh, at Staverton, near Totness, was 
among the various possessions of the Prudhomes. The Plymouth branch 
removed from the neighbourhood of Ottery St. Mary, during the last century, 
and is at present represented by Gcorgb Pridham, of Nortbview House, in 
the parish of St. Andrew, Esq. 

1ltna.-~-At rtt«rd0d bt her Maitttj/'i Cotlcfe qfArmt, Ai. on a pile or. three lions' 
heads enwed of (he Seld. 
Crtft — A lion's gsinb. erawd, &i. grasping ■ fellerlock, oi. 
JMtttS. — Fradliomme et loyal. 

'KannaJ ^amraSi of ilio old DoTonthire fs< 



mUr of 

1743. 



tbftt n 



John Pridham, Eaq. 



peiidi of SL Andieir, Plymoulh, eldest 
viviDf Kn, bapt.l*MMy, 1746,^ 19 April, 
1B29. 



Nodlinew House,3^E1ii>beUi, dnu. of Richard Drake of Buck- 



laod Mouachonim, co. Dctod, a descendant 
of Sir Francis Drake, the celebrated cir- 
cnmnaTigatoi, ttmp. Elizabeth, bapt. 5 Aug. 
1744, m. 27 Mai. 1769, d. 19 Feb. I»i7. 



Baq.of 
Nordnsw 



Oct. 1773, 

^39 April, 
IS38. 



■fta- 



.Uaria, dau. 3. John ■ 

of Thomas Drake 

Dawkina, Fridham, 

B.N., of E^. of 

Hodbar;, Plymouth, 

CO. Deron, banker, 

m. 34 Jan. h. 19 ApnJ, 

1804. 17T7, 
d. 39 Mar. 



3, Richaid=^ 


=Mary, onlj 


4. Wuli«n= 


pAUce, dau. 


W.e 


Pridhun, 




Pridham. 


of William 


naiiirh- 


Esq. 


heir of John 


a;.' 


8pry.E«i. 




6. fe April, 








Eaq.of' 


DaTorell, 


i.-S"C. 






Plymouth. 


CO. DoTon, 














ISOl. 




R.M., 

6. U Feb. 
1784. 








PLATE Lxv.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



I6ramlep^fl0oore, of aifftiurti)* 

John Bram ley-Moo re, Esq. of Aigburth, near Liverpool, who m. Seraphina 
Hibernia, fourth dau. of William Pennell, Esq., H. M. Consul-General for 
Brazil, bears the following arms as granted, on his taking, by royal licence, 
the surname of Bramlet, in addition to, and before, his patronymic Moore. 

flmtf. — Arg. on a cross, sa. between a negroes bead, in the first and fourth 
quarters ppr. and a mullet m the second and third quarters gu. a bee volant or. 

Crest. — ^Upon a mount vert, a Moor cock sa. in the beak a sprig of bramble 
slipped, ppr. 



©rpen, of 3[telanli. 

This branch of the ancient family founded in Norfolk, by Robert Orpen or 
Erpen^ who came to England at the Conquest, and settled at Erpingham, co. 
Norfolk, derives from Robert Orpen, b. in 1637, son and heir, by Mary his 
wife, sister of Sir James Ley, created Earl of Marlborough, of Richard Orpen, 
a gallant cavalier slain at Naseby, and is now represented by Richard John 
Theodore Orpen, Esq. of Dublin, eldest son, by Susanna, his wife, dau. and 
coheiress of Hugh Millerd, of Monard, Esq. Alderman of Cork, of the late 
Reverend Francis Orpen, Vicar of Kilgarvon, and Rector of Dungomey and 
Douglas, and great-grandson of Richard Orpen, Esq. of Killowen, who gar- 
risoned, in 1688, his house there, and received into it all the neighbouring 
Protestants. 

flrmt. — Quarterly. First and fourth, per pale arg. and az. on the dexter side, a 
lion ramp, holding in the dexter paw a sceptre ; on the sinister, a Saracen's head, 
and a crescent surmounted by a Maltese cross, for Orfbn. Second and third, erm. 
a fess az. between three woItcs' heads erased, sa. for Millbro. 

Crest— Out of a ducal coronet, a demi lion ramp., or. 

Ibttpportftf .— Two lions plain collared. 

Motto.— Veritas Vincit 



amiel. 

William Eardley Amiel, Esq. R.N., descends from an ancient and noble 
family in France, a scion of which (his great-grandfather), driven by perse- 
cution at the revocation of the edict of Nantz, from his native country, 
quitted Marseilles where he was settled, and taking with him sufficient fortune 
to purchase an estate, established himself in the Island of Guadaloupe. His 
son, John Amiel, became a merchant, and settled first at Charlestown, South 
Carolina, and afterwards at Boston, of which town he was, for forty years, a 
citizen j he suffered much by the old Spanish war, and by the revolutionary 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxv. 

conflict in America. He m. Christiana Newton, grand -dau. of Thomas New- 
ton, Attorney-General of New England, and dying in 1781, left six sons and 
one daughter, viz. 

^Ol^n, Major 60th Regt., who was at the storming of the Havan- 
nah, in 1758, and also at the hattle of the plains of Abraham, 
with Gen. Wolfe. 

Peter, Roy. Mar., eminently distinguished in that service. 

Philip-Newton, in the Royal Navy. 

Robert, Capt. 17th Regt. of Foot, and Aid-de-Camp to George, 1st 
Marquess Townsend. 

Henry-Strachey, Capt. 7th Hussars, under the Earl of Uxbridge. 

Otho-Hamilton, CapL in the South Gloucester, under Henry Augus- 
tus, the 5th Earl of Berkeley, and also in the First Dragoon 
Guards. 

Christiana, m. to Col. Wm. Henry Armstrong, Deputy Quarter- 
Master-General in the army in America. 

tLvXM. — Gu. six escallops three and three az. 

Crcft — A hunting-hum unstrung, sa. 



l^eitse, of idenale, co. i^orft. 

The ancient and influential family of Feirse, of Bedale, derives from Peter 
Peirse, who lived during the reigns of £dward IV. and Richard III. He 
was a stanch Yorkist, and fought at Bosworth field for the latter monarch, to 
whom he was standard-bearer. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) The late 
Hbnrt Peirbe, Esq. of Bedale Hall, M.P. for Northallerton, b. in 1754, m. 
Charlotte Grace, second dau. of John, second Lord Monson, and dying in 
1834, left three daughters his coheirs, viz : 

I. Chablottb, who m, Inigo Freeman Thomas, Esq. of Ratton, co. 
Sussex, and left at her decease, a dau. and heir, ^eorgtana, tn. 
in 1821, to William Battie Wrightson, Esq. of Cusworth, near 
Doncaster, M. P. 
II. Marumnb, now of Bedale Hall. 

HI. Henrietta, who m. in 1815, Sir John Poo Beresford, Bt. K.G.B. 
and d. 28 Feb. 1825, having had two sons and four daughters. 

The Peirses of Thimbleby, a younger branch of the Bedale family, are now 
represented by Richard William Christopher Peirse, Esq. a Magistrate, 
and Deputy-Lieutenant, who m. Maria, dau. of the Reverend Richard Clarke, 
of Bedale, and has Richard- William, resident at Londonderry, near Bedale, 
and other issue. 

flnm. — Az. a ducal coronet between three cross-crosslets fitch^e or. 
Crcft. — A cross-crosslet fitch^e, surmounted by a mural coronet, or. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxvi. 



^mptl), of ^agbxook, co. mmmmb^ 

Robert Smyth, Esq. of Gaybrook, High Sheriff of Westmeath in 1830, son 
of Ralph Smyth, Esq. of the same place, by Hannah-Maria, his wife, dau. of 
Sir Robert Staples, Bart., descends from the family of Smyth of Yorkshire, 
and bears their arms. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flrms. — Arg. on a bend between two unicorns' heads, coui ed az. three lozenges or. 

Crrit. — Out of a ducal coronet or. a unicorn's head erased az. 

motto. — Exaltabit honore. 

iSltUtam Ibmstf), Esq. the first settler in Ireland circ. 1630, 
came, it is believed, from Rossdale Abbey, Yorkshire. 



T 



1. John. 

Judith, m. 
Capt. Kelly. 



2. \ViIliam=^Mary, dau. 



Smyth, of 
Dundrum 



1. Ri- 
chard, 

m. and 

had 

issue. 



2.Hen. 

ry, m. 

twice, 
and 
had 

issue. 



of Dowdall, 
Esq. 



3. Ralph Smylh,= 
Capt. in the 
Army. 



Elizabeth, dau. 
of Sir Robert 
Hawkesworlh, 
of Hawkes- 
worlh, CO. York. 



3. Tho- 4. James, 



mas, 
Bishop 
of Li- 
merick 



father of 
Edward, 
Bishop of 
Down& 
Connor. 



I. WiU 2. Thomas, 3. Ralph, 
Ham of Drum- of Port- 
Smyth, cree, Capt. 
Bishop of intheArmy, 



lick 
Custle. 



4. Ro. 

bcrt, in 

Holy 

Orders. 



Two 

daugh- 
ters. 



Kilmore 

and Ar- 

dagh, ob. 

1G98. 



1.^ 

liam, 

Dean 

ofArd. 

fert. 



I 



ancestor of 
the present 

Kotrrt 

Ibmut^.Esq. 

of Drum- 

cree. 



J. 



2.Charle8 

T 

Prender- 

gast 

Smyth, 

Ist lorlv 
Iftort 



Arthur 
Arch- 
bishop 

of 
Dublin. 



I ! 1 f 

Jlamm William Smylhe. Frances, Mary, Elizabeth 

^mstf), of Barbavilla, m. to D. m. to m. Ed- 

Archdea- great-great-grand- Clarke, Thomas ward 

con of father of the pre- Esq. Burgh, Smyth, 

Meath,m. sent SS^illtam Esq. of Bishop of 

Miss Ca- ISarlotD Jbrnst^r. Oldiown. Down & 

tharine Esq. of Barbavilla. Connor. 

Vcscy. 



Ralph Smyth, =f=Martha Cramer, Edward Smyth. 



Esq. of Field, 
town, CO. West- 
meath, m. 4 
April, 1748. 



dau.of B.J.Cra- 
mer, Esq. by the 

Hon. Judith 
Butler, his wife. 



James Smylh, 

in holy orders, 

of Bath. 



Annc=Wm. Wal- 
ler, Esq. 
of Aliens- 
town. 



Ralph Smyth, Esq. =?= 1st, Miss Harrison. =f= 2nd, Hannah Maria 
of Gaybrook, died in | Staples, dau. of Sir 



1617. 



r 



J 



Rt. Staples, Bart. 



James Smyth, Capt. 
R.N. killed in action 
in 1781. 



Catherine, wife 

of the Hon. Geo. 

Carendish. 



2. Kofirrt =FHenrietta 



Jtmctfl, Esq. 
now of Gay- 
brook. 



Fran res, 
dau.of Dr. 

Alexan- 
der, Bp. of 

Meaih. 



1. Ralph, Mary. 
d. 8, p, in Jane, d, 
1827. wm/i. 1»43. 



Anne, m. 

toW. M. 

Bond, 

Esq. 



Elizabeth 
Selina.m. 

to F. L. 

Dames, 

Esq. uf 
(Jrecnhill 



99op»ep, of C^arterftouge Linton, co- @omer0et 

The Venerable Charles Abel Moysey, D. D., Archdeacon of Bath, is son 
of the late Abel Movsey, Esq. of Charterhouse Hinton, M. P. for Bath, by 
Charlotte his wife, fourth dau. of Sir Richard Warwick Bamfylde, Bt. of 
Poltimore, and grandson of Abel Moysey, M. D. of St. John's College, Ox- 
ford, who practised with distinguished success at Bath, and purchased in its 
vicinity, the estate of Charterhouse Hinton. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 
Archdeacon Moysey's eldest sur>iving son and heir is Hcnry-Ciorges Moysey, 
Esq. of the 11th Hussars. 

Srnif . — Or. on a fees sa. a cross flory of the field, between three cinqucfoils, ppr. 

ilfrfft. — A dragon's head vert, charged on the neck with a cross flory or. 




PLATE Lxvi] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Cbe Dufte of C^elltngton. 

FiEiii>-ALkR8HAL Arthur, Duke of Wellington, K. G. bears a quartered 
coat for Welles LEY and Colley, and as an honourable augmentation, in 
chief an escutcheon charged the crosses of St. George, St. Andrew, and St. 
Patrick, &c. 

flnuf . — Quarterly, first and fourth gu. a cross arg. between five plates in sal- 
tire in each quarter for Wbllbslby. Second and third, or, a lion ramp. gu. du- 
cally gorged' for Collet, and as an honourable augmentation, in chief sb escutcheon, 
charged with the crosses of St. George, St. Andrew and St. Patrick, conjoined, 
being the union badge of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 

CrtSt^-Out of a ducal coronet, or. a demi lion rampant, gu. holding a forked 
pennon, of the last, flowing with sinister, one third perpale from the sta£f arg. charged 
with the cross of St. George. 

JbupportfTft. — Two lions, gu. each gorged with an eastern crown and chained, or. 

motto • — Virtutis fortuna comes. 



^'DonalD, of Dalcliosme, co. Pertl). 

John M' Donald, Esq. of Dalcbosnie, Colonel in the army, commanding the 
92nd Highlanders, and a Companion of the Bath, descends through the Mac- 
donalds of Kippoch, from Alexander, son of John, Lord of the Isles, by the 
Lady Margaret^ his wife, dau. of King Robert II. of Scotland. His imme- 
diate ancestors, as well as his earlier progenitors, achieved high military 
reputation. His father, the late Major Alexander McDonald, served with 
great distinction in India 3 his uncle, Col. Donald McDonald, commanded 
the 92nd at AVaterloo ; his grandfather, John McDonald, of Dalcbosnie, was 
an officer in the Highland army of 1745 3 and his great grandfather, Alexander 
McDonald, of Dalcbosnie, stanch to the royal line of Stewart, fought and 
fell at Culloden. See Burke*8 Landed Gentry, 

9mni. — Quarterly, first or. a lion ramp. gu. a canton of the last, thereon pen- 
dent from a mural crown of the first, by a ribbon of the second, fimbriated az. a 
representation of the gold medal and clasp, presented to CoL M'Donald, for his 
sendees in the Peninsular war. Second, arg. a dexter arm embowed in armour, 
ppr., garnished or. the hand grasping a dagger, point downwards, iJso ppr. pomel 
and hilt gold. Third, arg. on waves of the sea, ppr. a ship wiA sails furled, sa. 
in base a salmon naiant, also ppr. Fourth, or. an oak tree growing out of a mount in 
base, ppr. surmounted by an eagle displayed sa. over &e whole, a fesse coun- 
ter embattled gu. thereon, two swords in saltire, points upwards arg. pomels 
and hilts or. between a representation of the Spanish cross of distinction on 
the dexter, and the Portuguese cross of distinction on the sinister, both ppr. 

Cre0t. — Out of a mural crown or. in firont of an arm in armour fesseway, 
the hand ppr. holding a cross-crosslet sa. flames issuing from the top, also ppr. 
a flag-staff, therefirom flowing to the sinister a banner, gu. inscribed ** Arolla," in 
letters of gold, the staff entwined with a branch of laurel vert. 

iBottO. — Per mare, per terras. 

mtiiovy of dBQ^tstiifft. 

Thomas William Waldy, Esq. of £gglescliffe, co. Durham, and Castle 
Leventon, N, R. co. York, one of the coheirs of John Waldy, Esq. of Yarm, 
CO. York, by Margaret, bis wife, sole heir of Richard Garmonsway, Esq. of 
Great Burton, co. Durham — (See Burke's Landed Gentry) — bears for 

flrmf . — Or. a bend between three leopards* faces as. for Waldt, an escutcheon 
of pretence for Scott, our., or. on a bend az. a mullet between two stars arg. im- 
palmg or. on a chief az. two mullets arg. for Fabbr. 

Crtfti. — A doTe rising with an olive branch, all ppr. Second, out of a mural 
csrown, a demi-lion ramp. az. holding in the dexter paw, a cross-croeslet Atch^ or. 

iltott0.— Fidelis. 



•JLATE Lxvii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



(Kale, of Honnon. 

John Vale^ Esq. of Devonshire Place, Moida Hill, quarters with the arms of 
Vale, as registered in the College of Arms, the ensigns of Martindale. 

^fXM, — Quarterly. First and fourth or. between two cotises dancett^, three 
cross-croaslets in bend sa. between six eagles displayed of the last, for Vale. Se- 
cond and third arg. two escallops az. between two bars gu. oyer all a bend sa. 
charged with three martlets or. for BIartindalb. 

Ctetft^A mount Tert, thereon a swan's head couped at the neck arg. gutt^ 
depoiz, surmounting two crosses pat^e fitch^ in saltire gu. 

4SllttO.-^In te, Domine, Speravi. 



Capior> of ^oselep $>aU, co. WLotcmet. 

James Taylor, Esq. of Moseley Hall, and Moore Green, co. Worcester, 
J. P. and D. L., and High Sheriff of that county, in 1826, second son of the 
late John Taylor, Esq. of Bordesley Park, co. Warwick, and Moseley Hall, co. 
Worcester, by Sarah, his wife, eldest dau. of Samuel Skey, Esq. of Spring 
Grove, near Bewdley, co. Worcester, and grandson of John Taylor, Esq. of 
Bordesley Park, High Sheriff of Warwickshire, in 1756, bears the paternal coat 
of Taylor impaling the arms of Moseley, in right of his wife, Anne-Eliza- 
beth, eldest dau. of the late Walter Michael Moseley, Esq. of Buildwas Park, 
CO. Salop. 

Rnitt.~-Erm. on a chief indented sa. three escallops or. impaling, sa. a cher. be- 
tween three millpicks arg. for Mosblbt. 

Crf0t — ^A demi lion ramp. erm. holding between the paws an escallop or. 

Mintto. — Fidelisque ad Mortem. 




:■ f.!'-<'.^ ■■.■■■■ : :.: 11 I. 



PLATE Lxviii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

with those of Robson, in right of his wife Anne, dau. of William Robson, 

Esq. of Richmond^ co. York. 

^xm%, — Sa. three swans' necks couped arg. ; impaling for Robson, gu. three 
boars' heads couped arg. 
^xjaA.—A swan's neck couped arg. gorged with a ducal coronet, or. 
^Otto. — ^Esse quam yideri. 



a^ountain, of tfyt ^eatg. 

The Reverend Jacob Henry Brooke Mountain, D. D. of the Heath, co. 
Herts, Rector of Blonham, co. Bedford, descends from the ancient house of 
Montaigne, of which was the celebrated Michel de Montaigne, and which was 
established in England at the revocation of the edict of Nantes. He bears 
a coat quarterly of four, for Mountain and Wale, and on an escutcheon of 
pretence, the arms of Brooke, in right of his wife, Frances Mingay, dau. and 
coheiress of the Reverend William Brooke, of Swainthorpe Hall, co. Nor- 
folk. — He is eldest son of the late Dr. Jacob Mountain, D. D.| Lord Bishop 
of Quebec, by his wife Elizabeth Mildred Wale Kentish, coheiress of Bard- 
field Hall, CO. Essex, and grandson, by Anne Postle his wife, of Jacob Moun- 
tain, Esq. of Reedham Hall, co. Norfolk, son and heir of Jacob Mountain, 
Esq. of Thwaite Hall, co. Norfolk. 

flnmi. — Quarterly. I. Quarterly. First and fourth erm. on a chev. az. between 
three lions ramp, guardant sa. each supporting between the fore paws an escallop 
erect gu. a mitre t>r. on each side, a cross-crosslet fitch^e arg. for Mountain. Se- 
cond and third az. a lion's paw erased within an orle of trefoils slipped or. for 
MoNTAONB. II. Gu. a pair of wings conjoined arg. debruised by a bend az. for 
Kbntish. III. Arg. on a cross sa. five lions ramp. or. for Walb. IV. Quarterly, 
as first, and on an escutcheon of pretence,' gu. on a chev. arg. a lion ramp, guard- 
ant sa. crowned or. armed and langued of the first for Brookb. 

Cmt— A demi lion ramp, guardant, per fess wavy arg. and sa. supporting be- 
tween the paws an escallop gu. on the breast, a cross-crosslet fitch^e of the second. 

iRottO.-^In Cruce Salus. 



i 



ILpne0, of Coolep PatL 

Sauuel Parr Ltnes, Esq. of Tooley Park, co. Leicester, and Hackleton, 
CO. Northampton, only son and heir of the late Reverend John Lynes, LL.B. 
of Tooley Park, by Caroline Sobieski, his wife, eldest dau. of John Wynne, 
Esq. late of Garthmeilio, co. Denbigh, and his wife Sarah-Anne, only surviving 
dau. and heir of the Reverend Samuel Parr, LL.D. of Hatton, Prebendary 
of St. Paul's, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears a shield quarterly, Lyneb 
and Parr, with a canton charged with the arms of Wynne in the second and 
third quarters. 

Arms. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. on a bend az. between two lions 
ramp. gu. a fleur de lis, between two giyphon's heads erased or. for Ltmbs. Se- 
cond, erm. two bars az. each charged with as many crosses pat^ or. a bordure, engr. 
sa. thereon four roses, and as many escallops alternately arg. for Parb. A canton 
arg. six bees Tolant sa. three, two and one, for Wtkmb. 

Ctff t.— In front of a fleur de lis arg. a lion ramp. gu. 

IKottO.— Foi, Roi, Droit. 



IIEHALDIC illustrations. [plate lxix. 



Splmet, of iLpon0, co. l^tlDare. 

MicHABL Valrntinb Aylmer, Esq. Representative of the very ancient family 
of Aylmer of Lyons, and chief of the name, is elder son and licir of tlic late 
Gerald Aylmer, Esq. by Catherine his wife, dau. of Patrick Lambert, Es(\. of 
Carnagh^ co. Wexford, and grandson of Michael Aylmer, Esq. of I^yons, by 
Mary, his third wife, dau. of the Hon. Thomas de Burgh, younger brother of 
Michael, 10th Earl of Clanricarde. (See Burkb's Landed Gentry.) 

The AvLif ERS of Donadea, now represented by Sir Gerald George Aylmer, 
Bart, and the Aylmers of Balrath, now represented by Lord Aylmer, both 
derive from, and are junior branches of, the family of Aylmer of Lyons. 

SInBf .— Arg. a cross sa. between four Comisli choughs ppr. 

df mt. — A Cornish chough rising out of a ducal coronet, all ppr. 

mottO.^Uallelujah. 



Eobmison, of Heiceisters&tre. 

Ff|RDKRiCK ScuDAUORR RoBiNSON, Esq. sccoud son of the late John Riiggs 
Robinson, Esq. of Kirby Frith, co. Leicester, bears, on his paternal shield, an 
Escutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife Mar v- Ann k, only dau. and heir 
of the late Rowlrs Scudamork, Esq. a descendant of the ancient Hereford- 
shire family of Scudamore of Holme Lacy. 

flrmf . — Vert, a chtv. eng. arg. between two stags statant at gaze, or. senile of 
tortcaux in chief, and a stirrup leather of the third in base. 

Am Escutchbom of Prbtbiicb, gu. three stirrups, leathered and buckled, or. for 
ScuDAMORR of Uolmo Lftcy. 

CtCit. — A mount vert, tliercon a stag statant at gaze or. scmcc of torlcaux, at- 
tired gu., betweoa the attires an cstoile gold, the dexter foot resting on a stirrup 
iron, sa. 



laujoisen, of e^oote <^teen, Swing's Jl^otton, co. moxcmet. 

AViLLiAM CoNGREVE RussELL, Esq. of King's Heath, formerly M. P. for the 
Eastern Division of the County of Worcester, represents an ancient family, 
resident for several generations iit Moore Green, and bears their arms. (See 
RuRKK*8 Dictionary of the Landed Gentrij.) 

Slrm*.— Arg. a lion ramp. gti. on a chief sa. three escallops of the first. 
Crifit-*A goat passaut arg. armed or. 



Pf.ATE LXIX.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Captor, of ©trensljam Court, co* caorcester^ 

John Taylor, Esq. of Strensbam Court, High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 
1817, eldest son of the late John Taylor, Esq. of Bordesley Park, co. War- 
wick, and Moseley Hall, co. Worcester, High Sheriff of the former shire in 
1786, by Sarah, his wife, dau. of Samuel Skey, Esq. of Spring Grove, descends 
from a highly respectable family, and bears arms confirmed by the Herald*s 
College in 1674. 

9rm0. — Erm. on a chief indented sa. three eseallops, or. 

Crrtt.^ — A demi-lion rampant, erm. holding between the paws an escallop, or. 

iRottO. — Fidelisque ad mortem. 

J^onat^an Cafilor, Esq. of London. 

T , 

Rebecca Kettle. 



John, of Ripley, Hants, 
died 8, p. 



JoMATUiN Taylor, £sq. of: 
Bordesley, co. Warwick, d. 
in 1733. 



John Taylor, Esq. of Bordesley^Mary Baker. 
Park, b, 27 March, 1711 ; High 
Sheriff of Warwickshire, in 
1756. 



r 



John Taylor, Esq. of BordesIey^Sarah, eldest dau. of Samuel 



Park, and of Moseley Hall ; 
High Sheriff of Warwickshire 
1786; b. 20 Feb. 1738; d. 27 
Aug. 1814. 



Ske 

CO 



.W 



Esq. of Spring Grore, 
orcester. 



Soin €ati\0Tf S^mn CTa^lor* William, 5.25 

Esq. of Strcn- Esq. of Moseley Mar. 1789, d, 

sham Court, co. Hall, co. Wor- 17 Nov. 1839. 

Worcester ; cester ; High 

High Sheriff, Sheriff, 1826. 

1817. See Plate 

IxTii. 



Sarah 



Joanna, m. 1st 
Nov. 1810, to 

Sir Thomas 

Edward 

Winnington, 

Bart, of Stan. 

ford Court. 



Caroline, m. 

11 Dec. 1823 

to the Rev. 

Geo. Wm. 

Bowyer 

Adderley, of 

Fillongley 

Hall. 




Cl)omp0on, of fUdtb]^ ^all, co. f^otft. 

Richard John Thompson, Esq. of Kirby Hall, formerly Capt. 4tb Dragoons, 
and subsequently Major in tbe Hussar Yeomanry, quarters tbe arms of Maw- 
hood, as representative of his great grandmother Catharine, dau. and heir 
of the Rev. J. Mawhood, D.D., and impales the shield of Turton, in right 
of his wife, Elizabeth, dau. of John Turton, Esq. of Sugnall, co. Stafford. 
The Thompsons of Kirby descend from Richard Thompson, Esq. of Kilham, 
second son of William Thompson, Esq. of Humbleton, co. York, who was 
great grandson of Jonas Thompson, Esq. of Thornton, in Pickering, living in 
1460. Of the same lineage are the Thompsons of Escrick, and tbe Thomp- 
sons of Sheriff Hutton. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

Tivm. — Quarterly. First and fourth, per fess arg. and sa. a fess count erembattled 
between three falcons counterchanged, belled and jessed, or, for Thompson. Second 
and third arg. three bars bars gemelles sa. over all a lion rampant gu. charged on the 
shoulder with a cross crosslet fitch^ or, for Mawhood, impalimq or ten trefoils 
slipped vert, four, three, two, and one, a canton gu. for Turtow. 

Crfft. — An arm embowed in armour, quarterly, or and az. the gauntlet ppr, 
holding the truncheon of a broken lance uf the first. 

4iottO. — Je reux de bonne guerre. 



IIER.VLDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxx. 



I^otfee, of (2BrDDiff> co* Denbigh- 

Simon Yorke, Esq. of Erddig, son and heir of the late Simon Yorke, Esq. of 
Erddig, by Margaret, his wife, dau. of John Holland, Esq. of Teyrdan, co. 
Denbigh, bears a shield quarterly of four — 1st, Yorke j 2d, Mellek ; 3d, 
HuTTON 5 and 4th, Yorke. 

flmtS. — Arg. on a saltire az. a bezant, quartering Meller and Hutton. 
Cre0t — A lion's head erased ppr. collared gu. charged with a bezant. 
43ottll. — Nee cupias nee metuaa. 

Sbimon Sortie, Esq. uncle of the=7=Ahne, sister and heir of .9o1)n fHel« 



Isl Earl of Hardwicke. 



let, Esq. of Erddig, a Master in 
Chancery. 



Simon Yorxb, Esq. of Erddig, (i.=j40orotQ5, dau. and heir of fiSiaU 



28 July, 1767. 



t^etD Autton, Esq. of Ncwu- 
ham, Herts. 



Phili? Yorkb, Esq. of Erddig,=^Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Sir 



F.A.S. d, 19 February, 1804. 



John Gust, Speaker of the Ilouso 
of Commons. 



Simon Yorkb, Esq. of Erddig, i6.^Margaret, dau. of John Holland, 
27 July, 1771, dec. \ Esq. of Teyrdan, co. Denbigh. 

^tmon Sorite, Esq. now Erddig. 

^aptoarD^©out!)bp, of Carstnen, co* TBerfe0* 

TnoMAS Hayward-Southby, Esq. of Carsvvell, only son and heir of the late 
Thomas William Chamberlain Perfect, Esq. by Elizabeth, his first wife, only 
surviving child of Sir Thomas Hay ward, of Carswell, who was son of the 
Rev. John Haywrard, Rector of Withington, co. Gloucester, by Bridget, his 
wife, eldest dau. of Richard Southby, Esq. of Carswell, lineally descended 
from John Southby, of Carswell, Esq., living in 1577, assumed his present 
surnames, by royal sign manual, 1 Nov. 1822, and bears the ([uartered Coat 
of Southby and Hayward. 

ftms. — Quarterly. First and fourth, or, a chev. between three apples gu. for 
SouTHBT. Second and third, arg. on a bend sa. three fleurs-de-lis or, upon a chief 
of the second a lion of the third for Hayward. 

Crtft — A demi lion ramp. or. holding in his dexter paw an apple gu. 

4lstt0.— Virtute non sanguine. 

John Lewis Eyre, Count of the Lateran Hall and Apostolic Palace in 
the Pbpal Dominions, so created by patent of the Sovereign Pontiff, dated 
March 3, 1843, is younger son of the late Vincent Eyre, Escj. of High- 
lield and Newbolt, co. Derby, by Catherine, his wife, only child and heir of 
William Parker, Esq. of Rainhill, co. Lancaster, and grandson of Nathaniel 
Eyre, Esq. a lineal descendant of William le Eyr, of Hope, co Derby, who 
held lands of the king in capite, temp, Henry HI. by service of the custody 
of the Forest of High Peak. (See Burke's Peerage, 8th edition.) 

flmtf. — Quarterly. First and fourth arg. on a chey. sa. three qiiartcrfuils or. 
Second and third, arg. two bars gu. in chief a lion passant of the second. 
Crrft — An armed leg, couped at the thigh, knee-cap and spur. 
J^ttpyorten. — Two men in armour. 
Motto* — Neminem metue innocens. 

ViwciNT Eyre, Esq. of HighfieId=^Catherinc, only child and heir of 



and Newbolt, co. Derby, lineally 
descended from William le Eyr, 
of Hope, temp. Hen. HI. 



William Parker, Esq. of Rain- 
hill, CO. Lancaster. 



i. ViiccBNT ETRB,=7=Mary, dau. of 2. John-Lewis, CouNT=p 1st. Sarah, dau. 



Esq. of Highfield 

and Newbolt, h. in 

1771, m. in 1809. 



Anthony 

Wright, Esq. 

m, in 1809. 



Eyre, m, 2dly. August- 
ine-Cecile-Pulcherie, 

dau. of Armand Du- 

mcsniei, Marquis de 

Somracr}'. 



of William 

Parker, Esq. of 

Kingston upon 

Hull, m, Ibll ; 

d. in 1825. 



Six other 

sons 

and live 

daughters. 



PLATE LXX.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



'Vinccttt 
. Anthony, 
*.'in 1810, 
w. 1812, • 
Jane, 3d 
dan. of 
Edward 
Huddlestqn. 
Ksq. of 
Parse 
Caundio,' 
CO. Dorset, 
and has a 

son, 
Vincent 
• Thomas. 



llehry, 
b. in 
1811. 



Mary- 
Francus. 

Lucy. 

Anne, m, 
to John 
Erring- 
ton, Esq. 
of High 
Warden, 
and d. in 
1842. 



b 

I 



I. 

Vincent, 
in Holy 
Orders ; 
Hon. 
Cham- 
berlain 
to Ihc 
Sove- 
reign 
Ponliir. 



John, 
in 

Holy 

Orders, 

d.U. 

Oct. 

l84^. 



3. 

Charles, 
in Holy 
Orders ; 
Hon. 
Cham- 
berlain 
to the 
Sove- 
reign 
Pontiff. 



— r~i 

4. 

Thomas. 

6. 
Williftm. 

1. 
Catherine 
d» young. 

3. 

Juliana, 
d, young. 

* 4. 
Mary, d, 
aniufant. 



1 

2. 

Anne, m. 4 

April. 1842, 

to William 

Grainger, 

Esq. of 

Causetown, 

CO. Meath. 



Dtale, of Buttoell €ourt> td. Oebon. 

Sir Tdomas-Trayton Fuller-Eliott Drakr, Bart, of Nutwell Court, co. 
Devon, third scrti of John Trayton Fuller, Esq, of AshdoWn House, co. Sussex, 
by Anne, his %vifc, dau. of George Augustus Eliott, created Baron Heathiield 
in 1787, which Lord Hcathficld, the celebrated defender of Gibraltar, married 
Anne Pollexfen, dau. of Sir Francis Drake, Bart, representative of the cele- 
brated Sir Francis Drake ; succeeded to the estates of his uncle, Francis 
Augustus Eliott, second Lord HeathBeld, on that nobleman's decease g, p, in 
1813, and assumed, by sign manual, the additional surnames and arms of 
Eliott and Drake. Ue is a field officer in the army, served in the Penin- 
sular War, and -was created a Baronet August 2^, 18^1, with remainder^ in 
case of failure of issue, to his brothersj^ WHliam Stephen Fuller, and Uose 
Henry Fuller, Esqrs. 

0rm0. — Quaricrly. First and fourth, sa. a less wavy, bctw. two pole stars, arg. 
for Dkakb. Second, on a bend or, a baton ax. on a chief the arms of Gibraltar ; 
viz. az. betvecn two pillars, a castle arg. from the gate a golden key pendant, the 
wordd ** Phis vHra** inscribed under, for Euott. Third, arg. three barrulcts and 
a canton gu. for Fullise. ^ 

Crr^tS. — First, a ship under reeff, drawn round a terrestrial globe with a cable 
rope, by a hand out of the elouds, all ppr., in the rigging of the ship is hung up by 
the heels a wyvem gu. (Prince says that Queen Elisabeth gaTu to Sir Francis 
Drake, this, tlie crest of Sir Bernard Drake, of Ashe,) and on an escroll, the words 
" Auxilio Divino,** for Drakk. Second, a dexter hand in armour, coupcd above 
the wrist, grasping a scimitar, ail ppr., the wrist charged with a key sa. for 
Eliott. Third, out of a ducal coronet gu. a lion's head arg. fo^ FuLUtR. 

^Ottors. — Forlitcr et recte ; Sic parvis magna ; Per ardua. 




^emon, of Hilton, co. ^taffbrD. 

Major-General Hknry Cuarles Edward Vernon, of Hilton, co. Stafford, 
only son of the late Henry Vernon, Esq. of Hilton, by Penelope, his first 
wife, dau. of Arthur Graham, Esq. of the City of Dublin^ grandson of Henry 
Vernon, ^q. of Hilton, by the Lady Henrietta, his wife, dau. of Thomas 
]Jarl of StraSbrd, and great grandson of Henry Vernon, Esq. of Hilton, by 
Penelope, his wife, dau. and coheir of Robert Philips, Esq. of Newton Regis, 
CO. AVarwick, descends from a younger branch of the great House of 
Vernon,. whose chief is the present Lord Vernon, and bears a shield of nine 
quartering^. 

flrms. — Quarterly. First arg. fretty sft. for Vbrnor of Hilton. Second, Barry 
of six or. and az. a canton erm. for Suirlbt. Third, or. an eagle displayed az. for 
MoNTGOMEBY of Sudbury. Fourth, arg. a croas fleury sar. for Swinmbrtom. Fifth, 
arg. a cross fleury sa. a bordurc cngr. gu. for StriNNEBTON. Sixth, or. on a feese az. 
three garbs or. Seventh, az. a chcv. arg. betwioen three falcons close, t>eUed of the 
last, for PiiiLirs. Eight, or, a chief uz. three escallops emu for Graham of 
j&rmagh. Nine, arg. fretty sa. for VBaNON of Hilton. 

<2rrC!lt.-*A boar'8 head erased $a. ducaily gorged or. 

fClottO. — Vcr-non semper viict. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [flate Lxxr. 



COinstanlep, of TBrauiwton, co. Leicester* 

Clkmrnt Winstanley, Esq. of Braunston Hall, co. Leicester, High Sheriff 
of that county in 1815, eldest son and heir of the late Clrmknt Winstanley, 
Esq. High Sheriff in 1774, by Jane, his wife, dan. of Sir Thomas Parky ns, 
liart. of Bunny, and sister of the first Lord Rancliffci grandson of James 
W1N8TANLEY, Esq. of Braunston, by Mary, hi» cousin and wife, dau. and 
coheir of Sir Edmund Prideaux, Bart, and great grandson of Jaubs Win- 
8TANLKY, Es(|. of Brauustou, M.P. for Leicester, by Frances his wife, dau. 
and coheir of James Holt, Esq. of Castleton, co. Lancaster ; bears a quartered 
coat of WiNSTANLBY, HoLT, and Prideaux 5 he represents a branch of the 
ancient house of Winstanley of Winstanley. 

flmtS, — Quarterly. First and fourth, or, two bars, az. in chief, Ihfed erossea 

SaU^c gu. for Winstanley. Second, arg. on a fcse engr. sa. three phcons of the 
eld for Holt. Third, arg. a chey. sa. in chief a label of three points gu. for 

PttlDBAUX. 

Crat.— A cockatrice displayed or, crest and jellop gu. 



3i(mefi^ of Creloptben, anD Ebietoport, co. Q^ontgometp. 

This younger branch of the eminent house of Nannau, in Merioneth, derived 
from Rhiwallon ap Madocy second son of Madoc, Lord of Nannau, son of 
Cadwgan^ and grandson of Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, King of Powys, is now 
represented by Wythen Jones, Esq. of Trewythen and Rhiewport, co. 
Montgomery, High SherifiP in 18^9, elder son and heir of the Rev. Evan 
JoncSi of Trewythen, by Charlotte, his wife, dau. of Har\'ey Combe, Es(|. 
of Andover, and grandson, by Mary, his cousin and wife, dau. and heir of 
Evan Jones, Esq. of Trewythen, of Bowkn Jones, Escj. of Penyr Altgoch, 
who was eldest son, by Mary, his wife, daughter and heir of Richard Bowen, 
Esq. of Penyr Altgoch, of Wytuen Jones, Es(|. great -great -grandson of 
Wythen Jones, of Trewythen, and Judith, his wife, dau. of Edward Lloyd, 
Esq. of Llwnynis, co. Denbigh (See Buhke*s Landed Gentry,) 

0l^g._Quarterly. First and fourth, or, a lion ramp. gu. Second and third, sa. 
three nags* headis erased. 

Crr^t. — A lion ramp. gu. 

fClottO. — Frangas non flectes. 

The Rev. Evan Jones, of Trcwy-^Charlottc, dan. of Harvey Combe, 



then, late .reprcscntalivc of thid 
ancient family. 



I — r Tz :: r 



Esq. of Audovcr. 



T 1 

Wytuen J0NE8, Esq. of Trcwy- Uurvcy - Bowen Charloiio, m. to Caroline, m. to 

then and Uhie\\T>ort, a Magts- Jones, Esq. m. John Hunlrr, Esq. Boytv Combo, 

trato, and Dfpuiy- Lieutenant, Sophia, dau. of the of Mount Severn. Esq. 

High Sheriff of Montgomery- lale John Frcder- 

shire, in 1«29; m. in 1811, ick Tike, Esq. of 

Mary, eldest dau. of the hitc Euadd. 
llev. William Thornes, nud 
hat ouu daughter, Charlotte. 

apsjbfbro^mise, of Claj^ton ^all, co* ^taflfoto. 

JouN Ayshforp Wise, Esq. of Clayton Hall, son and heir of Ayshford Wyse, 
Esq. of Ford House and Wonwell Court, co. Devon, formerly M.I*, for Tot- 
ncss, and great grandson of John Wise, Escj. of Totness, by Margaret, his 
wife, dau. and heir of John Ayshford, Estj. of Wonwell Court, descends from 
ft second son of the family of Wise of Sydenham, which derivt»d from 
William Wise, or (iwiss, living .shortly after the Conquest (See Burkf/s 
Litnded Gentry). He bears a shield of eight quarterings, and an escutcheon 
of pretence also quarterly of eight, in right of his wife, Mary Lovatt, only 



PLATE Lxxi ] HERALDIC ILLUSTILVTIONS. 

dau. of the late Hugh Booth, Esq. of Clayton, by Anne, his wife, dau. and 
heir of Thomas Lovatt, Esq. 

flnrw.— Quarterly. 
X. Sa. three chevronels erm. 
u. Gu. a cross pat^e vaire. 

III. Arg. three hawks gu memhred, heaked &c. or. 
iv. Gu. a chey. per fesse indented ar. and az. betw. three martlets of the second. 

V. Arg. on a bend gu. three stags courant, or. 

VI. Sa. a pelican in her piety, or. 

VII. Arg. three bunches of ash seeds, vert, between two chevronels sa. 
VIII. Or. on a bend sa. three horse shoes arg. 

On an Escutchion of Prbtbncb, quarterly, 
1. Arg. three boars' heads erect and erased sa. 
II. Arg. a fesse engr. gu. 

III. Az. a cross engr. erm. 

IV. Or, a saltire sa. 

V. Arg. three wolves' passant in pale sa. 

VI. Erm. a bordure entoyre. 

VII. Arg. a cross voided between four cross crosslcts fitchee gu. 
viii. Per pale or and az. a chcv. erm. 

Crests. — A demi lion ramp. gu. gutt^ arg. holding in his paws a regal mace or. 
A Saracen's bust, side faced, wreathed az. and or, issuing out of ash learcs ppr. 

IBottO. — Sapere aude. 

Coiie, of ^oDinton, to. fumt 

Thr Rrvsbeno Nicholas Toke, of Godinton, eldest surviving son and heir 
of the Rev. William Toke, of Barnston Hall, co. Essex, by Sarah, his wife, 
dau. of the Rev. Francis West, D,D, and grandson of John Toke, Esq. of 
Godinton, High Sheriff of Kent in 1770, by Margaretta-Eleanor, his wife, 
only dau. of William Roundell, Esq. derives from a family, the name of 
whose patriarch appears on the roll of Battle Abbey, and which is stated 
to have settled in the county of Nottingham, as early as the reign of 
William Rufus (See Burke's Landed Gentry). Mr. Toke bears the quar- 
tered coat of Toke, Goldwell, and Rounoell. 

0nil0. — Quarterly. First, arg. on a chev. betw. three greyhounds' heads erased 
sa. collared or, as many plates. Second, per chey. sa. and arg, three griffins' heads 
erased counterchanged. Third, az, a chief or, over all a lion ramp. erm. 

CrfStf. — First, a fox courant, regnard, or. Second, a griffin's head erased per 
cheV. sa. and arg. the upper part guttee d'eau, the lower gutl^ de poix, holding in 
the beak a sword ppr. pomel and hilt gu. 

JQotto. — Militia mea multiplex. 



HSotman, of 9u0)3!er. 

This family, which was settled for several generations in Cumberland, is 
represented by John Man ship Norman, Esq. of Slaugham Park and Den- 
combe, CO. Sussex, M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge, and Barrister-at-Liiw, 
a Magistrate for the County, eldest son and heir of the late Robert Norman, 
Esq. who left Cumberland about 1790, settled in London, and purchased pro- 
perty in the county of Kent, and grandson of John Norman, Esq. of Car- 
lisle, son of Robert Norman, Esq. of Bow, co. Cumberland, by his wife 
Esther Stothard, of Penrith. The present Mr. Norman impales, in right of 
his wife, Catherin€-Eliz<i, eldest dau. of the Rev. G. M. Bethune, L.L.D., the 
coat of Bbthunb and Balfour. 

Ami. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. on abend gu. three bucks* heads ca- 
bossed of the field. Second and third, gu. on wares of the sea, a ship of three 
masti ppr. in chief three mullets arg. impaling Bethunb, quartering Balfovr. 

CTtVf t — A sea lion sejant, resting its dexter paw on an anchor. 

fll0ttO.~Deus dabit rcla. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platb licxii. 



®tetoart, of ®r. jFott, co. jFife, BJ5, 

Henry Stewart, Esq. of St. Fort, son of the late Robert Stewart, Esq. 
E.l.C.S. of Castle Stewart, in Wigtonshire, and St. Fort, in Fifeshire, by 
Anne, his wife, dau. of Henry Balfour, Esq. Denborg, is male representative 
of the Stewarts of Urrard, who derived from John Stewart (progenitor of the 
Athol Stewarts), fourth son of Alexander, Lord Badenock, Earl of Buchan, 
fourth son of King Robert H. by his first wife, Elizabeth Mure, of Rowallan. 

SIrms. — Or. a fess chcquy az. nnd ar^. surmounted of a lion rampant gu. all 
within a bordure enj^ailcd of the second, charged with three garbs of the field 
alternately with as many crescents of the third. 

iETrest. — A dexter arm from the elbow, holding a dagger in pale, both ppr. 

IBottO. — Never fear. 

Jl3icl)ol0on, of TBallotD, co* Doton* 

Tnis family, originally from Cumberland, and seated for upwards of two cen- 
turies in the county of Do^vn, is represented by Robert Nicholson, Esq. of 
Ballow, who impales the arms of the ancient and noble family of De Angelo, 
or Nangle, Barons of Navan, in right of his wife, Elizabeth- Jane, dau. of 
Walter Nangle, Esq. of Clon baron, co. Meath. 

0nitS. — Gu. two bars crm. in chief three suns in glory or. 

^r(0t. — Out of a ducal coronet or. a lion's head erm. 

iBottO. — Deus mihi sol. 

Nicholson, settled in co.^ 

Down, in the reign of King 
Jambs I. 



Hioii Nicholson, of Ballymagee,=p Isabel Orr. Other issue, 

living in 1671. 

William Nicholson, of BaIlow,=pEleanor Dunlop. Other issue. 



E.q. b, IG69. '\ 



William Nicholson, of Bullow,=pMary, dau. of Hugh Whyle, Esq. of 
Esq. b. 1699. Ballyree. 

Margaret Maxwell Nichol8on,=t=Robbrt Gawen Steele, Esq. b. 
b. 1734. 1733. 

r ' ' 

William Nicholson Steele NicH-=j=Isabella, dau. of Jacob Hancock, 



OLSON, of Ballow, Esq. J. P. b. 
1772. 



Esq. of Lisbum. 



Uobert XirfloUon, of Ballow, Esq.=j=Elizabcth- Jane, dau. of Wallrr 



J. P. b. 1809. 



Nangle, Esq. of Clonbaron, co. 
Meath. 



HrcH Nicholson, 6. 25lh Jan. Walter NichoUon, b, 17 July, 
1812. 1813. 

^potttiStQOOtie, of @potti0tQOODe, co« lBet\aick. 

John Spottiswoode, Es(|. of Spottiswoode, chief of the ancient and distin- 
guished family of Spottiswoode; of which was the ever memorable Arch- 
bishop of St. Andrews (Sec Burke's Land&l Gentry), is eldest son of the late 
John Spottiswoode, Esq. of Spottis\foode, by Margaret- Penelope, his wife. 




PLATE Lxxii] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

dau. of William Strahan, Esq. of London, and grandson of John Spottis- 
woodc. Esq/ of Spoltiswoodc, by Mary, his wife, eldest dau. of John Thom- 
son, Esq. of Charleton, co. Fife. 

^nns. — Arg. on a chcv. gu. between three oak trees eradicate, vert, a boar's 
hfiad, or. 

<2rre0t. — An eagle displayed looking at the min in its splendour ppr. 

i^tt9|lortetlS.— I'wo savages wreathed about \he loins and resting their exterior 
hands on cluba« all ppr. 

^Ot|o,?*PaUor ttt potiar. 

flDHell, of Carrifflea, co* saiaterforD* 

John Odell, Esq. of Carriglea, High Sheriff of the county in 1828, is son 
and heir of the late John Odell, Esq. of Carriglea, by Catherine, his wife, 
dau. of the Right Rev. Matthew Young, D.D., Bishop of Clonfert, grandson 
of John Odell, Esq. of Mount Odcll, by Judith, his wife, sister of Sir 
Richard Musgrave, Bart., and great grandson, by Isabella, his wife, only child 
of the Rev. Simon Radcliffe, Vicar of Ardmore, of Richard Odell, Esq. 
of Mount Odell, who was eldest son of John Osborne Odell, Esq. of Mount 
Odell, CO. \yaterford, and grandson, by Anne, his wife, dau. of Sir Richard 
Osborne, Bart, of Taylorstown, co. Waterford, and sister and coheir of Sir 
John Osborne^ Bart., of Charles Odell, Esq. of Castleton, co. Limerick, 
son and heir of Charles Odcll, Esq. of Castleton, a grand juror for co. Lime- 
rick, 1682 (Sec Burke's Landed Gentry) ; he bears a quartered coat for 
Odell, Osbornk, and Radcliffe. 

Stmttf. — Quarterly. First and fourth, or. three crescents gu. for Odell. Se- 
cond, pi. on a fess or. bctw. two cottises arg. three fountains ppr. oTcr all n bend 
of the third for Osborne. Third, arg. a bend engr. sa. an escallop of the second 
for Radcliffe. 

^Trrtt. — An arm embowed in armour holding a sword all ppr. 

^otto. — Qiisintnm 'm rebus inane. 

Pi&ington, of ^atfielD, co. potk, 

Redmond Williau Pilkington, Esq. of Hyde Park Gate, Kensington, a 
Magistrate for Middlesex, second son of William Pilkington, Esq. of 
Hatfield, by Sarah, his wife, dau. and coheir of John Andrews, Esq. of 
Kniiresborough, qi|arters the arms of Pilkington, Verdon, and Andrews, 
and impales the coat of Adams, in right of his wife, Frances, dau. of Tuomas 
Adams, Esq. of Belgrave Place. 

The family of Pilkington of Hatfield is a branch of the very ancient line of 
Pilkington, of Pilkington and Bradley, derived from John, younger brother of 
Thomas Pilkington, living temp, Edward VI., ancestor of the IMlkingtons of 
Nether Bradley and Chevet, Raronets (See Burke*s Landed Gentry). The 
quartering of Verdon was brought in by the marriage of Sir John Pilk- 
ington, one of the companions in arms of Henry V., with Margaret, dau. 
and heir of John db Verdon. 

2lrm0 — Arg; a cross palonce voided gu. quartering Vbrdon and Andrews ; and 
impaling Adams. 

Crrst. — A mower of parly colours gu. and arg. 
IRottO.— -Nov thus *. now thtitj ! 



«b. 



K" 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxih. 



®rap, of M3[)amlanD0, co^ jQortfjumberlanD* 

This family claims descent, through a younger branch, from Sir Andrew 
Gray, of Chillingham, who derived in direct line, from Anschetel de Croy, a 
companion in arms of the Conqueror. Sir Andrew was a stanch adherent 
of Robert Bruce, and obtained from that monarch, in 1306, a grant of various 
possessions in the counties of Forfar and Perth, From him descended 

Adam Gray, born in 1496, who resided at Harltwhistle, in Northumberland, 
and was much engaged in excursions against the Scots : he died in 1546, and 
was $. by his son, 6. in 1517 : who d, in 1567, and was s, by his son 

Adam Gray, Esq. who held lands at Harltwhistle, Hexham, and also in 
Cumberland. He was murdered at Harltwhistle, 2 James I., a.d. 1604, and 
was interred in the church there. His son, 

Edward Gray, Esq. m. in 1608, Miss Eliot, and was progenitor of John 
Gray, Esq. of Kirkhouse, co. Cumberland, b, in 1717, who m. Margaret, sister 
of Sir Wilfrid Lawson, Bt. of Brayton, and had issue : 

John, who m. Miss Mounscy, and was father of George Mounsey 

Gray, Esq. 
Edward, of whom we treat. 
Frederick, d. unm. at Jamaica. 

The second son, Edward Gray, Esq. b. in 1767, m. Miss Winter, of Alston, 
and had, with three daus. Jane Winter, m. to Capt. Strong, R.N.^ Margaret, 
m. to Capt. W. Strong, 44th Regt., and Edith, m. to Capt. D. Riley, 24th Regt., 
a son and successor^ 

John Gray, Esq. of Whamlands, co. Northumberland, and of Trefriw, and 
Hartsheath Park, co. Flint, 6. 2 Dec. 1/92, a magistrate for the latter county, 
and late a Capt. of the Tyne Yeomanry Hussars. Capt. Gray was a Knight 
of the German Empire, of the Orders of " Les Quatre Empereurs," and " Le 
Lion de Bavare,*' of the Legion of Honour of France, and of many minor 
foreign orders, having been employed on several diplomatic missions, and 
held for some time a consular appointment. He m, 1st, 21 Aug. 1816, Sarah- 
Maria, dau. and coheiress of John Plura^ Esq. of an ancient Italian family 
and niece of General Delaval, and had by her, who d. 1842, one son, Francis 
Delayal, his heir, and one dau. Eliza-Maria, m. 1 June 1841, to George- 
Patrick 0*Malley, Esq., Capt. in the 88th or Connaught Rangers, (only son 
of Middleton CMalley, of Marino, co. of Mayo, Esq.) who d. 2(> Nov. 1841. 
(For pedigree see O'Mallby, Bart, in Burkk's Peerage and Baronetage,) 



PLATE Lxxiii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

He m. secondly, Sarah, eldest dau. and coheir of John Mathews, Esq. of 
Plas Bostock, co. Denbigh, and coheiress of the late Thomas Mathews, Esq. 
of Eyarth. Mr. Gray d. 14 Feb. 1839, and was s. by his son, the present 

Francis Delayal Gray, Esq. of the 14th Light Dragoons, of Whamlands, 
CO. Northumberland, who m. 23 Nov. 1843, Ellen, youngest dau. of the 
late Edward Dawson, Esq. Capt. 12th Royal Lancers, of the Cremome family : 
by right of descent, he bears a shield of eight quarterings, and impales the 
quartered coat of Dawson. 

0nn0. — Quarterly. First, ga. within a bordore engr. a lion ramp. arg. for Gray. 
Second, gu. on a bend engr. or. a baton az. for Eliot. Third, perpale arg. and sa. 
a chey. counterchanged for Lawson. Fourth, for Winter. Fifth, for Bell. 
Sixth, arg. a fesse az. between an eagle displayed with two heads sa. in chief, 
and a lion ramp, in base for Plura. Serenth, erm. two bars yert. for Delayal. 
Eighth, as first, imfaung for Dawson. Quarterly, First and fourth, az. on a 
bend engr. or. three martlets gu. Second and third, az. three torches erect ppr. 

CtfStl — First, out of a mural crown, a phoenix in flames ppr. Second, a demi 
lion guardant, holding in the dexter paw a dagger, all ppr. 

pottos. — Over the Cre9<»— Clarior e flammis. Under ike Arrm — Yixi liber et 
Moriar. 



3i(AMe, of ammettioiDn Patft, co. Somerset. 

The name of this family, whether a corruption from Norman-French, or 
otherwise, was anciently written Joli. The family is of considerable anti- 
quity, in the counties of Stafford and Worcester, and the pedigree in the pos- 
session of the senior members comprises intermarriages with many eminent 
and noble houses. The present John Twyford Jolliffk, Esq. of Ammer- 
down Park, and his brother, the Rev. Thomas Robert Jolliffe, surviving sons 
of the late Thomas Samuel Jolliffe, Esq. M.P. for Petersfield, by Mary- 
Anne, his wife, dau. and heiress of — Twyford, Esq. of Kilmersdon, co. 
Somerset, and grandsons (by his second wife Mary, dau. and heiress of 
Samuel Holden, Esq. of London, of John Jolliffe, Esq. M.P. for Peters- 
field, in 1763 — whose eldest son, William, M.F. was grandfather of Sir 
William George Hylton Jolliffe, Bart., bear a quartered coat for Jolliffe 
and TwTFOSD. 

The following particulars of the late respected Thomas Samuel Jolliffe, 
Esq. M.P., are from the Bath Herald, of the period of his decease, in 1824. 

" Descended from an ancient family, which dates its origin from the incur- 
sion of the Norman Conqueror, and collaterally allied to some of the chief 
nobles of the kingdom, Mr. Jolliffe filled an elevated station in society, with 
distinguished ability and credit. Of late years he resided almost entirely in 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxiii. 

the country 3 but he formerly mingled in the brilliant circles of the metropolis 
and sat in several parliaments during the government of Lord Norths and the 
first period of Mr. Pitt's administration. In the House of Commons^ as in 
every other situation, he sustained the character of a high-minded and scru- 
pulously honourable gentleman. Of the disinterested and upright principle 
which universally governed his conduct, he, early in life, gave an eminent 
proof, by resisting a very flattering overture, which embraced high hereditary 
rank, as well as pecuniary emolument, rather than desert those connexions 
whose political views he had conscientiously adopted. Mr. JoUiffe had con- 
siderable property in various parts of England, but his chief estates were in 
Somersetshire, for which county he was several years since appointed High 
Sheriff, and served the office with a degree of splendour which has seldom 
been equalled ; the whole of his retinue on that occasion being selected from 
his principal tenantry. As a magistrate, he was acute, active^ humane, up- 
right, intrepid, and intelligent -, his opinions were received with the sincerest 
deference, and his decisions heard with respectful acquiescence. On the insti- 
tution of the Fencible Dragoons^ at an important crisis of the late war, he 
was appointed to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, a situation for which he 
was peculiarly qualified by his habits of activity, his address in the manage- 
ment of his horse, and his personal accomplishments. Since the reduction of 
the regiment he resided almost exclusively on his extensive domain, where 
in the calm scenes of domestic retirement he became the centre of a grate- 
ful and admiring circle.'' 

0nn0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. on a pile az. three dexter gauntlets of 
the field for Jolliffb. Second and third, arg. two bars sa. on a canton, a cinque- 
foil for TWYFORD. 

Cref t. — A cubit arm erect, verted and cuffed, the sleeve charged with a pile arg. 
the hand grasping a sword ppr. 

^OttO. — Tant que Je puis. 



^ungerfom, of BDinglep ]^ait> co. JlSortbampton. 

Hrnry Hungerford Holdich Hunoerford, Esq. of Dingley Park and 
Maidwell Hall, both in co. Northampton, a Deputy Lieutenant for Leices- 
tershire, and High Sheriff of co. Northampton in 1828, s. to the estates of 
the late John Peach Hungerford, Esq. M.P. for Leicestershire from 1775 to 
1790, under that gentleman's will, who d. 4 June, 1809; and assumed, on 
attaining his majority in 1824, the surname of Hungerford, in addition to 
his patronymic, Holdich. He is elder son, by his first wife, Anne, eldest 
dau. of Henry Haynes, Esq. of Whittlesea, co. Cambridge, of the Rev. Thouas 
Holdich, A.M. of Clare Hall, Cambridge, Rector of Maidwell, co. North* 



PLATE LxxiH.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

amptoB, and grandson^ by Anne, his wife, grand niece and coheiress of 
Thomas Peach, Esq. of Dingley Park, of Edward Holdich, Esq. son of 
Thomas Holdich, Esq. of Thrapston, who derived from a branch of a family 
of the same name, which possessed considerable estates in Norfolk at an 
early [leriod (See Burke's Landed Gentry)i he bears a quartered shield for 
HuNGERPORD and Holdich. 

0nn0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, sa. two bars arg. in chief, three plates for 
HuNOBRFORO. Secoud and third, or. on a cher. la. cottised gu. three martlets of 
the field, a chief vaire for Holdich. 

Crests. — First, out of a ducal conmet or. a pepper garb, of the first between two 
sickles erect ppr. for Hunobrford. Second, a martlet sa. in front of a cross pat^e 
fitch^e between two branches of palm or. for Holdich. 

Jttottof .— £t Dieu mon i^p^i, fat Hvmgbbfobp. Stet fortuna donus, for Hol- 

. DICH. . 



I'LATK IXXIIi. 




EKFORD. IK). 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



TLATK LXXIV. 



^miitf), of fl^ni ^all atiD ^oret)am ^all, co. <Bsstx, anD 
attietiro' CO. JlSorfoift, anD CamtiettoelU co. ^utrep, 

iBart. 

RoGER^ a natural son of Edward the Black Prince, styled de Clarendon, 
from the place of his birth, is the recorded ancestor of the family of Smijthj 
of which was John Smijth, styled cousin german of King Edward VI., and 
in that monarch's reign sent ambassador to Spain. He resided at Saflfron 
Walden, Essex, and was High Sheriff of Herts and Essex, 30 Hen. VIII. 
By Agnes, his wife, dau. and coheir of the ancient house of Charnock, of 
Lancashire, he had, with other children. Sir Thomas Smijth, knighted in 
1548, P. C. and Principal Secretary of State to Edward VI. and Queen Eliza- 
beth, and their Ambassador to France, &c.. Chancellor of the Most Noble Order 
of the Garter, and, as says his biographer Strype, the best scholar of his time, 
and a most admirable philosopher, orator, linguist and moralist. He d, at 
Hill Hall, 12 August 1577, «t. 65, and was buried in the chancel of the 
church of Theydon Mount, under a sumptuous monument. As he left no 
issue, the succession devolved by his will on his brother, George Smijth, 
from whom derives the present representative. Sir Edward Bowyer Smijth, 
Bart, of Hill Hall, Horeham Hall and Attlebro', who bears a shield of 
seventy quarterings, as registered in H. M. College of Arms. 

Slrms.— Quarterly. 

XXIV. Walrond. 

XXV. Lortie. 

XXVI. Read. 

XXVII. Trcgothin. 



I. Smijth and 
Bowyer. 
II. Smijth. 

III. Charnock. 

IV. Wyndham. 
V. Scrope 

VI. Tiptoft. 
VII. Baddlesmere. 
Tin. Sydenham. 

IX. Killlesford. 

X. Dallingridgc. 
XI. Dclalyndc. 

XII. Hussey. 

XIII. Popham. 

XIV. Standbh. 
XV. Kentisberc. 

XVI. Koufl. 
XVII. (jJambon. 
xviii. Wadham. 
XIX. Chilcsdcn. 
XX. Popham. 
XXI. Zouch. 
xxii. St. Martin, 
xxiii. Neville. 



xxviii. Hendover. 

XXIX. Cornwall. 

XXX. Chamberlain. 

XXXI. Pever. 

XXXII. Wyndham. 

xxxiii. Scrope. 

xxxiv. Tiptoft. 

XXXV. Baddlesmere. 

XXXVI. Sydenham, 

xxxvii. Kittesford. 

xxxviii. Dalling^idge. 

XXXIX. Delalynde. 

XL. Hussey. 

XLI. Popham. 

xLii. Stan dish, 

xi.iii. Kentisberc. 

xLiv. Rous. 

xLv. Gambon. 

XL VI. Wadham. 

XL VII. Chilesden. 



XLviii. Popham. 
XLix. Zouch. 
L. St. Martin. 
LI. Neville. 
L II. Walrond. 
LI II. Lortie. 
Liv. Read. 
Lv. Tregothin. 
Lvi. Hendover. 
Lvii. Cornwall. 
Lvfii. Chamberlain. 
Lvix. Pever. 
Lx. Ashe. 
LXi. Bowyer. 
Lxii. Braban. 
LXiii. Boys. 
Lxiv. Draper. 
Lxv. Draper. 
Lxvi. Auger. 
Lxvii. Urswick. 
Lxviii. Fifield. 
Lxix. Kirklofl. 
Lxx. Smijth and 
Bowyer. 



lat wife, Eleanor, dau. of Ferdi-=f Edward I. =j=2d wife, Margaret, dau. of Philip the Hardy, 
uandlH. King of CHsiille. I King of France; d, 1317. 

r 

Thomas Plantagenet, Earl=j= Alice, dau. of Sir Roger Halys, 



Edward II.^ 



I 

Edward HI.' 

f 
a 



J 



of Norfolk, sumamed de 
Brotherton; d. 1838 



Knt. of Harwich. 



r 
b 



r-4-AT. i-XXT. 



IIEILU-PL ILLrSTRATIONS. 



i-.-rwaT • U! hiMf 



MsxcsK T'lnziiasciic;. T^»\i — , 
rji« r NoTtoLL eldest 
oa. r liimDB^ ac Br*- • 
inmc:. . . . 138i 



mill. i4i*. 



Huzanci. nai. mnu Jieir;s;=Jafaz:. 



1 Jianut> >i nwnnt'. . linke 




?«in;l-: — 






N". Ihnma- itniiii.. 
Kt.. ytrrri^um i 
^«Lki. ] km, i'.ov 
^ . an. Wnrr. V.,- 
lahi t:. inrr.' ixutc- 

AiiinjMMiir I. 
>Tanf»r- •. !". Au. 



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Si l^'«.:kaT.. i < i. 



tTTorr 
r ill 



lUazsasY. (UL.. mn.. 



I. of 

r, of 









if 



^-sc Jo&i. mx: of Joim 

CrnwntiioriM:. ec. Notfidk. 



&L lilOnUL i- 1-1' 

ttofx* \arioL. 



dau. and eoh. «f 
iifsin liOBd Iimi p t . of 






!«-. .'tin.. r« itrrjmr.i'ssJIhxahrtl.. dau. md eob. ef J4 
>iiBirTA . otaoiuDb. £oq. of OiukML 

incnc; 



.toll.: ^- 1 icn^ne: OA^. i .lan: T^ adiinn. Bo<f. of 



' ! 1 iimna. rrriiif. 
itoT. »iiii: .. 1^^|•^ 



1 l.JWrar.. .. ;:ii. 



I L.iiHan. .. 



'! V j.ii.ii;. ,. ;r*' 









L of 



liii-nnjL^ ^ I..:ixah(!U.. aAucMr- t. $b: Jofax. Ilodc* of 



of 



IjBt^ n. 



^ .uian = k »;iiffnn. aa*. r S:* Jwpni. 



. fh?»l 



mm. p* . Middle 



\\ t;iinT.. . 

Ni". 
I«>1K *. 



Ann. ni.»^ 

4lA.. I Ts: 

Ti . lie:. 

f ItfTiU. 



JMtrnL 

nam. c 
AiUli •. 
i -4i 



sMaitJu.. dau. aad roi. c 
Si: JalRe^ Aahc. Ban. c 
1 'vxckfaJiaB;.!! iddlcaOL 

m CVAUinuii. dab. of fir 
KiSmnnd]in«nrBr.afCa»- 



Jnr.i. »-■ l.aii-.i»f?^t 1 6ii. W actin. ri "^ orif 
Hiif«i:utts. u»: naiiv . li-»wvr- •. i^** 



htn. 



-i V ...m^. I t>^:;. ARiK uai. i:u iiu. t> ;:> . :-:. 

*'«""'*• •*'■ V ::uw:^. .. N i;.ii t.. 2! Max. l-^'.:-. 

V 1... Airmail. •■ I jai. 



s.ii. I... .I'. . 1. jsa-X'^iifcT Ar.m 



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AfirlaBl'inc^ 

--., till. ■..II-IV*; 






.. V T.1V 

r^i-« li n?*! 

1. 1. If ^j, BUTmiiiM 





-Jli'l, Ji.l.lU, 'lf.U. l*!,M-.V, 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxv. 



IPopnti, of Tdrocfebampton I^ouse- 

Thb family of Poyntz, and that of Clifford, spring from a comnjon ancestor, 
Drogo Fitz Pons, who accompanied William the Conqueror to England, 
and had two sons : — I. Richard, of Clifford Castle, in Herefordshire, ancestor 
of the Earls of Cumberland, the Lords Clifford of Chudleigh, &c. — II. Osbkrt 
Fits Pons, who was Sheriff of Gloucester, V. King Stephen, and ancestor of 
the family of Poyntz. Sir Hugh Poyntz, Knight, fifth in descent from this 
Osbcrt, being engaged in the wars of Wales, Gascony and Scotland, was 
summoned to Parliament as a Baron, in 1295, and the title descending to his 
heirs is now in abeyance. A second branch, the Poyntz's of Iron Acton, 
derived from Sir John Poyntz* of Iron Acton, co. Gloucester, (Lord of the 
Manor in right of his mother), son of Nicholas Poyntz, the second Baron, 
by his second wife, Matilda, dau. and heir of Sir John Acton, of Iron Acton. 
Of this branch, is Stephen Poyntz, Esq. of Brockhampton House, Havant, 
Admiral of the Blue Squadron, b. in 1770, who m. Miss Frances Brace, and 
has had issue : I. Stephen, Lieutenant R. N. m. and d. s. p.' II. James, who 
is married: III. Mary-Frances: and IV. Edmund-Henry, Captain in the 
Army, who m. Miss Massey, and has issue, Stephen-Edward, and William- 
Henry. 

flInM.— Barry, of eight or and gu. a burdure az. on a chief, wavy of the last ; on 
the dexter, a representation of the ship Solebay ; and on the sinister, four French 
ships, all ppr. 

^rfft. — Out of a naval crown arg. a cubit arm, tlie hand grasping two flag staffs 
in saltire, ppr. flowing from either a French tri-culoured flag; that on the dexter in- 
scribed " Tiburon," and that on the sinister *' Inipeteux," in letters of gold. 

HlottO. — Crainte, Refrainte. 



(SIton, of CletieDon Court, co. Somerset. 



n^ 



Thk present Sir Charles Abraham Elton, of Clevedon Court, co. Somerset, 
Lieutenant-Colonel of the 2d Somerset local militia, succeeded as sixth Ba- 
ronet at the decease of his father, the Rev. Sir Abraham Elton, the fifth Baronet, 
in 1842. He is great-great-grandson of Sir Abraham Elton, (descended from 
an ancient family of the Hasles, in the counties of Hereford and Gloucester,) 
who was Mayor of Bristol in 1/10, and M.P. for that City, and who was cre- 
ated a Baronet 31 Oct. 1717. 

flrmtf. — Paly of six gu. and or on a bend, sa. three mullets of the second. 

CTrrst. — An arm cmbowed in armour ppr. holding with gauntlet a scimetar arg. 
pomel and hilt, or, tied round the waist with a scarf, vert. 

Motto. — Artibus et armis. 



PLATK Lxxv] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^epnett, of Bortt) I^tltiington, co. i^orft. 

This ancient family, derived from Hugh de Mknbll, living from 1203 to 
1260, second son of Robert de Mainill, son and heir of Walter de 
Mainill, who, some time in the 12th century, had a grant from his brother 
Roger de Hilton, of lands in Snotterdon, is now represented by Thomas 
Mevnell, Esq. of the Fryerage and North Kilvington, co. York, and of 
Hartlepool, in Durham^ J. P. and D.L. for the N.R. of Yorkshire — son and 
heir of the late Edward Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington> by Dorothy his 
wife, dau. of George Gary, Esq. of Torr Abbey, co. Devon, grandson of Roger 
Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington, and great-grandson by Ann, his wife, dau. 
of Edward Charlton, Esq. of Hesleyside, of Roger Meynell, Esq. of North 
Kilvington, sixth in direct descent from Anthony Meynell, Esq., who ac- 
quired the lands of North Kilvington. (See Burke's Landed Gentry). Mr. 
Meynell bears a shield of six quarterings, Meynell, Cattrrich, (modern and 
ancient) Tempest and CJmfraville, impales for his wife Theresa Mary, eldest 
dau. of John Wright Esq. of Kelvedon, co. Essex, the arms of Wright and 
Corrington, quarterly. 

flmttf. — Quarterly. First, and sixth, az. three bars gemelles, and a chief or, for 
Mbtnbll. Second, arg. on a fesse, engr. sa. three qoartrefoils, or, for Cattsbich. 
Third, cheqny arg. and sa, a bordure of the first, for Catterich, (ancient). Fourth, 
arg. a bend betw. six martlets, sa. the bend charged in chief, with a crescent for 
Tbmpest. Fifth, gu. a cinquefoil betw. eight crosses crosslet, or, over all a bendlet, 
arg. for Umfrayillb. Impaling quarterly, first and fourth, az. two bars, or, in 
chief, a leopard's face of the last, for Wright. Second and third, arg. a cross gu. 
betw. four peacocks ppr. for Cobbimgton. 

Cretft. — A savage's head in profile, ppr. couped at the shoulders, and wreathed 
round the temples, or, and az. 

Motto. — Deus non reliquit memoriam humilium. 
Roger Mbtnell, Esq. of North Kilvington, eldest=pMAROARET, dau. and coheir of An- 



son and heir of Anthony Me3mell, Esq. who ac- 
quired those lands, and d. in 1576; grandson of 
Robert Mennell, of Hilton, by Agnes, his wife, dau. 
of Sir John Lancaster, Knt. of Sockbridge. co. 
Westmoreland, and great-grandson of John Men- 
nel, of Hilton, b. in 1432, who was fiAh in descent 
from Hugh de Menel, living, 1203. | 

r ' 



THOMT Catterich, Esq. of Stan- 
wick, CO. York, by Elizabeth, his 
wife, dau. and coheir of Rowland 
Tempest, Esq. of Holmside, co. 
Durham. 



Thomas Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington,=y= Winifred, dau. of Thomas Pudsey, Esq. of 

b. 1564. Barforth, co. York. 

Anthony Meynell, Esq. of North Kilving-=^Mary, dau. of James Thwaites, Esq. of Long 

ton. Marston. 



J 



Thomas Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington,=ipGerard, dau. of Will. Ireland, Esq. of Nos- 
March, lb*37. | tell Abbey, co. York. 

r ' 

Roger Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington.sj^Mary, dau. of Sir John Middleton, Knt. of 

I Thumloft. 

Roger Meynell, Esq. of North Kilvington, 
living 1720, who m. Ann Charlton, of Hes- 
leyside, and was great-grandfather of the 
present CffOmafl Af^nrll, Esq. of North 
fCilvington. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [.-latk i.xxv. 



laeaDe, of 3[pstien, to. DrfbrD. 

John Reade^ Esq. of Ipsdcn House^ son of George Reade, Esq. of the same 
place^ by Anne his wife, dau. and heir of the Rev. William Thomas, represents 
a junior branch of the Reades of Barton, and Shipton^ Barts., derived from 
Edward R£ADB,£sq. second son, by Mary his wife, dau. of Sir Thomas Corn- 
wall, Lord of Burford, co. Salop, of Thomas Reade, Esq. whose eldest son Sir 
Compton Reade, was created a Bart. 4th March, 1660. (See Burkp/s Peerage, 
and Baronetage). 

0nn0. — Gu. a sal tire, betw. four garbs or. 

CvtHt. — On the stump of a tree, verL a falcon, rising ppr. belled and jessed, or. 

Motto. — Cedant arma to^ie. 



PotonalU of IPoionall, co. Cbestet. 

James Pownall, Esq. of Pownall, a magistrate for Cheshire, son of the late 
William Pownall, Esq. of Litherland, co. Lancaster, by Elizabeth his wife, 
dau. and heir of John Quillen Esq. Attorney General of the Isle of Man, bears 
the quartered Coat of Pownall and Quillen, and an Escutcheon, quarterly first 
and fourth, Kewley; second, Prichard^ third, Ass heton, in right of his 
wife, Maria- Anne, only child of P. Kewley, Esq. of Liverpool, and coheir of 
her maternal uncle, the Rev. Richard Assheton, M.A. Fellow of the Collegiate 
Church of Manchester. 

flmtft. — Quarterly. First and fourth, gu. a lion ramp. erm. gorged with a collar 
gemcl. az. therefrom pendant an escutcheon of the last, charged with a mullet arg. 
for Pownall. Second and third, arg. a lion passant az. for Quillen. An escut- 
cheon of pretence, quarterly first and fourth, arg. on a chev. sa. two mullets of the 
the first, for Kewlby. Second, erm. a lion rampt. sa. for Prichard. Third, arg. 
a mullet sa. for Assukton. 

Crest. — A lion^s gamb, erased ppr. charged with two mullets in pale, arg. in the 
paw, a key in bend s<ni»tcr, affixed thereto a chain entwined about the gamb, of the 
second. 

fHottO.— Officium prflpsto. 



V • 



't 



•f-.- • • 



■ '«. 



. .••■» 



■ K 



'• 



•»' 



.'» 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxvi. 



©teuatt, Of ®Ienotmf0ton> co* Peetiles, JI3* 15. 

William Mc Adam- Steu art, Esq. of Glenormiston, co. Peebles, D. L. for the 
county, son and heir of the late Adam Steuart Esq. by Grace, his wife, 
dau. of James McAdam Esq. of Waterhead, descends maternally from the 
ancient family of Montgomerie, Earls of Eglinton. (See Burke's Landed 
Gentry.) 

fltmtf.— Arg. a fesse chequy or and az. betw. three arrows in pale, points up- 
wards in chief, and three fleurs de lis in base of the third. 

Crest — A branch of olive, and one of Indian palm, in saltire. 

iRottO. — Paz, copia, Tirtus. 



©osluns, of iBiitb l^ouse, co* ©erefoto* 

Keoowin Hoskins, Esq. of Birch House, co. Hereford, J. P., D. L. and M. P. 
for Herefordshire, only surviving son of the late Rev. John Hoskins, Rector 
of Cranford, co. Middlesex, and Landinabo, co. Hereford, by Sarah, his wife 
and cousin, dau. of Kedgwin Hoskins, Esq. of Newland, co. Gloucester, and 
grandson of the Rev. Christopher Hoskins, Vicar of Longhope, by Mary, his 
wife, dau. of John Roger Esq., of Landinabo, bears for 

flnmi. — Three swords in fesse, and in chief as many griffins heads, couped. 
Crest. — A dexter cubit arm holding a sword. 
iRottO. — Solus minus solus. 



WioWf of ^olme, co« 3lntteme00. 

Major-Grneral Sir John Rose, K. C. B. of Holme, co. Inverness, only sur- 
viving son of the late John Rose, Esq. of Holme, by Jane, his wife, dau. of 
Alexander Gumming, Esq. of Logic, co. Moray, represents a branch of the 
House of Kilravock, derived from Alexander Rose, second son of Huob 
Rose, of Kilravock, living in 1460, byMoir, his wife, dau. of Malcolm Mack- 
intosh, of that Ilk, Captain of the Clan Cbattan (see Burke's Landed 
Gentry,) and bears the ensigns of Kilravock, impaling those of Eraser, in 
right of bis wife Lillias, dau. of James Eraser, Esq. of Culduthel, co. Inver- 
ness. 

flrms. — Or, three water bougets, az. impaling for Frasbp — Quarterly. First, and 
fourth, az. three cinquefoilH, arg. Second and tliird, gu. three antique crowns, or. 

Crwt — A ha\*k, ppr. 

IHottOr*.— ( r/irftr tfie Arms) Audco — (Abotn: the Crest) Constant and True. 



^ 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxvii. 



D&eottet, of ^^eoDer, co. ^taSbtD. 

This family, which has been seated at Okeover for upwards of seven cen- 
turies, is now represented by Charles Haughton Okeover^ Esq. of Okeover, 
son and heir of the late Rev. Charles Gregory Okeover, by Mary-Anne, his 
wife, dau. of Gen. Sir George Anson, G.C.B. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

Arms. — Erm. on a chief gu. three bezants. 

Crest. — First, an oak tree, ppr. Second, out of a ducal coronet or a demi- 
dragon, wings elevated and adorsed, erm. 

iRottO. — Esto yigilans. 



Btsbitt, of WiooWll CO, Donegal. 

James Ezekiel Nesbitt, Esq. of Woodhill^ a Magistrate and Deputy Lieu- 
tenant, son and heir of the late George Nesbitt, Esq. of Woodhill, by 
Catharine, his wife, dau. of John Irwin, Esq. of Drumsilla, represents a 
branch of the ancient Scottish family of Nesbitt, of Dirleton, and bears their 
arms. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flrmtf. — Arg. a chev. gu. between three boars* heads, sa. armed gu. 
Crmt.— A dexter hand, ppr. 
iRottO.^Amica Veritas. 



CiQadtngton, of ideriisbire. 

George Watlinoton, Esq. Prothonotary *of the Common Pleas, and Re- 
corder of St. Albans, son of William Watlington, Esq. and grandson of 
William Watlington, Esq. by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. and coheir of Thomas 
Flowerdew, Esq., descends from Sir Robert de Watlington, living temp. King 
Stephen, about the year 1135 (see Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry), 
and bears a shield quarterly, for Watlington, and Flowerdew, and in right 
of his second wife, Louisa^ second dau. and coheir of Robert Bodle, Esq. of 
Woolston Hall, co. Essex, descended from the ancient family of Scott^ of 



> 



PLATE Lxxvii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

Woolslon Hall/ sprung from Sir WUliam Scott, Chief Justice, temp. Ed- 

WARD III. 

flnmi — Omarterly. First and fourth, barry of sit arg. and sa. on a chi^.go. a 
. saltire or. Second and third, per cher. engr. arg^and afi, water bougets c^unter- 
- changed for Flotvi^rdbw. An Escutcheon of Pretence, quarterly of ten, fgr *BoDLn- 

QJCfit— iA demi lion rampt. ppr. holding in the dexter pa^ & sword arg» pottel - ^ 
andhilt or. ~ 



* • 



IRottO. — Mens conscia recti. 



a^tUer> of CoIlier0toooti, co« ^urrep. 

BoTD Miller, Esq. of Colliers wood, near Merton, co. Surrey, who assumed 
his present surname, in lieu of his patronimic Darby, by royal sign manual, 
in 1800, bears the arms of Miller, impaling Montgomerie, in right of his 
wife, Margaret, eldest dau. of Robert Montgomerie, Esq. of Craig House, 
CO. Ayr. 

SSrms. — Arg. a cross moUne.az. in, chief a lozenge between two mullets of the last, 
in base a bar, wary yert, impaling Momtoomerib. 

Crest. — A hand couped at the wrist, the third and fourth fingers folded in the 
palm, arg. 

UTotto. — Manent optima coelo. 



Caldot, of CaUiot ^all, co. mtxUnn. 

John Hyacinth Talbot, Esq. of Talbot Hall, and Ballytrent, co. Wexford, 
late M. P^.for New Ross, and half brother of William Talbot, Esq. of Castle 
Talbot, CO. Wexford, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears the ensign of the 
noble house of Shrewsbury, as deriving from a junior branch of that family, 
and has, in right of his wife, Anna-Eliza, dau. and heir of Walter Redmond, 
Esq., an Escutpheun of Pretence for Redmond. 

fllnM. — On. a lion rampt, within a bordure engr. or. An Escutcheon of Pretence, 
gn. a caatle between three. 

Crftt.-«^n a chapeau gu. turned up erm. a lion statant, or, the tail extended. 

JBottO. — ^Prest d'accomplir. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxvjji. 



a^acnamara, of 9ple, to. Clare. 

Jamrs Dillon Macnamara^ Esq. of Ayle, co. Clare, J. P., second son of the late 
Dillon Macnamara, Esq. of Dublin, by Charlotte, his wife, dau. of Alexander 
Campbell, Esq. of Mountjoy-Square, in that city, descends from the ancient 
Milesian family of Macnamara, (see Burke's Landed Gentry)^ and succeeded in 
1838, to the estate of Ayle, under the will of his kinsman, the late James 
Macnamara, of Ayle. He bears in addition to his paternal arms, an Es- 
cutcheon of Pretence, in right of his wife, Jane- Louisa-Mary- Anne, only 
child of Capt. Grant, R.N.9 of Park-place, Stoke, co. Devon. 

Anns. — Gu. a lion rampt. arg. in chief two spear heads in pale, or, and on an 
Escutcheon of Pretence, the arms of Grant, viz. gii. a boar's head betw. three an- 
tique crowns, or. 

Crest — A naked arm embowed, grasping a scimetar ppr. 

iRottO. — Firmitas in cgbIo. 

Peacocft, of @outf) Haucedp, co. Lincoln. 

Anthony Peacock, Esq. of South Rauceby, co. Lincoln, M. A., only surviv- 
ing son of the late Anthony Taylor Peacock, Esq. of South Kyme, Deputy 
Lieutenant for Lincolnshire, by Mary, his wife, eldest dau. of John Wilson, 
Esq., and grandson of Anthony Peacock, Esq. of Potterhanworth, by Harriet, 
his first wife, dau. of Anthony Taylor, Esq., represents an old and respectable 
family, long possessed of the manor of Potterhanworth, (see Burke's Landed 
Gentry.) The Rev. Edward Peacock, M. A. Vicar of Fifehead Magdalen, co. 
Dorset, is half-brother of the late Anthony Taylor Peacock, Esq. being son of 
Anthony Peacock, Esq. of South Kyme and Potterhanworth, by Mary, his 
second wife, only dau. of John Wilkinson, Esq. 

Amitf. — Gules on a fcss eng. arg. between three mascles, each within an annulet, 
or, as many peacocks' heads erased, ppr. 

Crat.~A peacock's head erased ppr. gorged with a mural crown, or, holding in 
the beak, a rose, gu. leaved and slipped, ppr. 

D'BeilU of iBunotoen €a0tle, co. <$altoap. 

John Augustus O'Neill, Esq. of Bunowen Castle, is son and heir by Gertrude 

his wife, dau. and coh. of Robert Fetherstone, Esq. of White Rock House, 

CO. Longford, of the late John David Geoghegan, Esq. of Bunowen Castle, M.P. 

Accountant General of the Court of Exchequer, to whom King George III. 

granted his royal licence to assume the surname of O'Neill, as descended 

paternally from Nial, of the nine hostages, Monarch of Ireland, at the close 

of the fourth century. (See Burke*s Landed Gentry), 

9rm9. — Arg. a dexter hand coupcd at the wrist, supported by two lions rampt. 
gu in base, a Scilmon nniiiiit in waves of the sea, ppr. 

Crffit. — First, out of an) castcni crown, an arm embowed in armour, the hand, 
ppr. grasping a sword. Second, an Irish wolf dog, statant, collared, ppr. 

^ttpportrr0. — Two lions rampt. guardt. 

IBottO. — Semper procsto patri(P servirc. 



pt^iB LxxTiii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Daniel John Niblet, Esq. of Haresfidd Court/ co. Gloucest^, High Sheriff 
in 1816^ son and heir of the late John Niblet^Esq. of Haresfield^ High Sheriff 
of Gloucestershire^ by Catherine his wife, second dau. and cdh^ir (with her 
sbters, Frances, wife of Greorge Munro, Esq. Major in the Army, and Judith, 
tvife of Sir William Hicks, Bart.) of Edward Whitcombe, Csq. of Orleton, 
CO. Worcester, (see Burkb's Landed Gentry), bears the paternal coat of Nib- 
let, quarterly with the arms of Whitcombe, Matbsyn, and Morton, and in 
right of his wife, Emma Catherine, eldest dau. and cob. of the Rev. Thomas 
Drake, D.D., Vicar of Rochdale, an Escutcheon t>f Pretence, bearing the arms 
of Drake and Wood, quarterly. The family of Whitcombe represented the 
ancient houses of Mavesyn of Berwick Mavesyn, and Morton, of which was 
Cardinal Morton, /enip. Hen. VH. 

■ 't 
Antt0» — Quarteriy. First, az. on a chev. arg. betw. three rising eagles or, 

- as many bars gemelles gu. for Niblbt. Second, paly of six, arg. and sa. three 

eagles displayed counierchanged for Whitcombb. Third, arg. a fess, betw. three 

cinqnefoils, sa. for Mavbsyn. Fourth, quartezly, gu. and erm. in the first and 

fourth quarters a goat's head erased, ppr.,for Mobtom. An Escutcheon of Pretence, 

quarterly. First and fourth, aig. a.wyrem gu. for Dba&b. Second and third, or, an 

oak tree, ppr. for Wood. 

Cmt. — An eagle rising, quarterly or and arg. 

iRotto. — Sperantes in Domino non deficient. 



Cippmg, of Preston, a^anc|)e0ter, ano Little Bolton, 

CO. Lancaister* 

Thomas Tipping, Esq. resident at Davenport Hall, co. Chester, represents a 
branch of the ancient family of Tipping, of Tipping Hall, co. Lane, temp, 
Edw. hi., to the senior line of which a Baronetcy was granted in 1698. (See 
Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) 

Arms. — Quarterly. First and sixth, arg. a bull's head erased sa. armed or, on a 
chief of the second three pheons of the field, for Tipping. Second, arg. on a bend 
sa. three mullets of the field, for Gabtsidb. Third, gu. a chev. betw. three doves, 
arg. membered sa for Paob. Fourth, erm. a cross patt^e, sa. for Moss. Fifth, 
quarterly gu. and or, in the first and fourth quarters a cross potent arg. for Cross. 

Crest. — An antelope's head, erased vert, ducally gorged or. 



V 




HERALDIC ILLUSTIUTIONS. 



[rLATE LXXIX. 



TdfoAttaiilty of Clproto Court, to. IRaDnor. 

Thomas Baskertille MYNOR8-BASKERyiLLE,£sq. of Clyrow Courts J.P. D.L., 
High Sheriff for co. Wilts, in 1827, and M. P. for Herefordshire, a descend- 
ant of the great house of Baskerville, bears a shield of sixty quarteriugs, 
▼iz. : 



I. 

u. 

HI. 

IV. 

V. 

VI. 

VII. 

riu. 
ix; 

X. 

XI. 

XU. 

XIII. 

XIV. 

XV. 

XVI. 

XVII. 

XVIII. 



BaSXBRVILLR. XXI. 

MtNOBS. XXII. 

R1CXARD8. XXIII. 

BOULCOTT. XXIV. 

FURMIVAL. XXV. 

LOVBTOT. XXVI. 

DXLAHAT. XXVII. 

POWRLL. XXVUI. 

BaBKRRVILLB. XXIX. 

BrRS. XXX. 

LrNTHAL. XXXI. 

Lrorob. XXXll. 

BUTLBR. XXXIII. 

(called Pbdwardbn.) xxxnr. 

SOLLBRB. XXXV. 

PaVRLBT. XXXVI. 

BRUORB. XXXVII. 

PtCARO. XXXVIII. 

SaPIR. XXXIX. 

DrLAMRRB. XL. 



Bebynton. 

MiLBOUHMB. 

Etnsforo. 

FURMVAL. 

Vbrdon. 

LoVBTOT. 

Led BD. 

FoLUOTT. 

Keyncouet. 

MOEEILL. 

Eniaymb. 

Tebvbeb. 

Stutvillb. 

Baskbevillb. 

Rbbs. 

Lbhthall. 

Lkoeob. 

BUTLBE. 



S0LLBE8. 



XLI. 


Pavkley. 


XUI. 


BuUGEli. 


XLIII. 


Pycard. 


XLIV. 


Sapie. 


XLV. 


Dblamerb. 


XLVI. 


Blackbt. 


XLVII. 


AP GWILLIM. 


(LVIII. 


Baskeeville. 


XLIX. 


Keen. 


L. 


Lenthall. 


LI. 


Leqeos. 


LII. 
LIII. 
LIV. 


BuTLBR. 


S0LLBR8. 


LV. 


Pavblby. 


LVI. 


Beuobb. 


LVII. 


Pycard. 


LVIII. 


Sapib. 


LIX. 


Delambeb. 


LX. 


Baskbevillb. 



Sir Robert BBskar-- 

ville, Knt of Er- 

diBley Caatle, co. 

Hereford. 



Ralph oe BB8ker-< 

ville, Lord of £r- 

diBley.lsmp. Hrm- 

rtU. 



Sir Ro^ de B 
kenrille. Lord of 
Erdiflley, living 
Imip. Hrmrt if. 




sAoMRi, dau. and heir' 
of Galfrid Rees, 
of Wales. 



>A dau. of Drogo, bro- 
ther of Lord Clif. 
ford. 



dau. of Sir Rothes 
de GroB, Knt. Lord 
of Orcop. 



Sir RichardBaskerville,' 
Knt. ofErdisley, M.P. 
for CO. Hereford, in 
1347. 



Sir RichardBaskenrille, 

Knt. of Erdialey, 46 

Edw. IlL 



Jane, or Joane, dau. of 

Sii Rich. Poynings or 

Poins. Knt., m. 14 

Edw. II. 

Isabella, dau. and co- 
heir of Sir Walter Pa- 
veley, Knt. 



SirRicharUBa8kerville,spJoan, or Jane, dau. of 



Knt. sued out his live 
ry 17 Rich. II., d. 19 
Rich. II. anno 1395. 



Walter de Baaker 
ville, 
lenipi 

Walter de Baaker- 
ville. 



r de Baaker-ajsAnne, dau. and heir 
of Erdialey, I of Montgomery, 
K Rich. I. I Sheriff of co. Sdop. 

:Su8an, dau. of Sir 
John Crigdon, Knt. 



r 



Adam Everingham, of 
Laxton. 



Sir Jolm Ba8kerville,Bf^Elizabeth, dau. and heir 

of John Bruges, of Let- 
ton and Stanton. 



Knt., living 4th Hen- 
ry IV. 



r 



Sir John Ba8kervilIe,apElizabeth, dau. of John 



Knt. of Coombe, co. 
Hereford, eldest son. b. 
12 Feb. 1408, d. 2Srd 
Dec. 1455. S3rd Hbn- 
RY V. 



Touchet, LordAudley. 



SirRichard de Bas-= 
kerviUe, M.P. for 
Hereford, 1295, & 
1297,High Sheriff 
8th and 9th of Ed- 
WARD II., 2nd son, 
a. his elder brother 
in Erdisley. 



:A dau. of Sir 
SoUerg, Knt. 



Sir James Baskerville,: 
Knt. of Erdisley, eld- 
est son. Sheriff of co. 
Hereford, 38 Hrm. VI. 
4 Edw. IV., and 14 
Hem. VII., M.P. in 
1476, Knight Banneret 
on the field of Stoke. 



Sir Walter deBaa-=pSibill, dau. of Peter 



kerville. Lord of 
Coombe, about 
12 Edward HI., 
eldest ton. 



Corbet, of Caui, m. 
16 Edw. I. 



Sibill, dau. of Walter 
Devereux, Lord Fer- 
rers, ofChartley,K.G., 
Uving 19 Edw. IV. 



PLATE LXXIX.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Anne, dau. of Mor-: 
gan ap Jenkin ap 
Philip, of Pencoyd. 
Ist wife. 



I 

Sir James Basker-= 

ville, Knt. of Erdis- 
ley, d. 13 Nov., 38 
Henry YIII. anno 
1546, will dated 4 
Jan. 1544, proved in 
London, 9 Decem- 
ber, 1546. 



:Sir Walter Baskerville, Knt., Sheriff of= 
Hereford, 9 Edw. IV., created K. B. 
on the marriage of Prince Arthur, anno 
1501 ; d. 4th Sept. 1505, 20 Hbnbt YII. 



Esq. of Wan- 
borough, CO. 
Wilts. 



:Eliza6kth, dau. and co« Elizabeth, dau 
heir of John Breynton, of — Brand, 
of Stretton-Sugwas, co. 
Hereford, by SiBiLLA,hi8 
wife, dau. and coheir of 
Simon Milbome, grand- 
son of Sir John Mil- 
bome, by Elizabkth, his 
wife, dau. and heir of 
Sir John Eynsford. 



:Elizabeth, dau. of Henry 
ap Milo ap Hanj, of 
Poston. 2nd wife. 

L , 

.^Simon Baskerrille, Esq. 
5th and youngest son of 
the 2nd marriage, d. in 
1602, buried at Winter- 
bourne Basset Church, 
CO. Wilts. 



Humph- =p 
rey Bas- ' 
kerville, 
of Abere- 
dow and 

Lam- 
bedr, co. 
Radnor, 
Jure ux- 
ort9,5th& 
youngest 
son of Ist 
marriage. 



:Elbanob, 
dau. and 
heir of 
John ap 
Gwillim, 
of Abere- 
dow and 
Lambedr. 



WalterBas- 

kerville, of 

Erdisley, 

4th son, m. 

Jane, dau. 

of Thomas 

Thame, of 

Stovill. or 

S to well, 

d. 8, p. 



Sir Thomas Ba8- 
kerville,ofBrin- 
sop, CO. Here- 
ford, and of 
Wolves Hill, CO. 
Worcester, Knt. 
3rd son, m. Ele- 
anor, dau. and 
coheir of Rich. 
Abington, Esq. 
of Brockhamp- 
ton, CO. Here- 
ford, and relic of 
John Dansey, 
Esq. ofBrinsop. 



T 



John Baskcr-^ Sarah, dau. of Eleanor, only dau. and 
▼ille, Esq. uf Thos. Lewis, heir, m. to John Tal- 
Aberedow, Esq. of Harp- bot, Esq. of Grafton, co. 



only son, m. in 
1578. 



ton, CO. Rad- Worcester, and was 
nor. mother of John, 10th 

Earl of Shrewsbury. 



John Baskerville, 
Esq., High Sheriff 
co.Hercford,3Pui- 
Lip and Mart, and 
12 Elizabbth, 2nd 
son, 8, to Erdisley, 
on the decease of 
his elder brother, 
m. Elizabeth, dau. 
and heir of Roger 
Hergest, of Chen- 
ston. His male line 
terminated in 1617, 
on the decease of 
his great grandson. 

Sir Humphrey 
Baskerville^ Knt. 

Eleanor, dau. of= 
— Quarrel, or 

Quarles, of 
Brockland, or 
Evesham, co. 
Worcester. 



Sir Jas. Bas- 
kerville,Knt. 
of Erdisley, 
Sheriff of co. 
Hereford, S4 
Hbn. YIII., 
eldest son, m. 
Catherine, 
dau. of Wal- 
ter Deve- 
reux. Vis- 
count Here- 
ford, and 
d, 8, p. 20 
Sept. 1573. 



:George Basket 
ville, Esq. of 
Tewkesbury, 

CO. Gloucester, 
3rd son. 



Thomas Baskerville,=?rEleanor,dau. of John Joan, dau. of — Lor,=7= Thomas Baskerville, 



Esq. of Lambedr, m. 
in 1610 



Lewis, of Lanwenny, m. about 1604, d. 16 
m. before 1610. Jan. 1642. 



Esq. of Richardston, 

2nd son, J. P. for co. 

WelU,d. 14. Jan. 1620. 



James Baskerville, 

Esq. of Aberedow 

and Lambedr. 



Dorothy, dau. of 

David Blaney, of 

Kinsham, who d. in 

1697. 



Margaret, dau. of Sir= 

John Granville, Knt., 

d. 28 March 1696. 



I 



: Francis Basker\'ille, 
Esq. of Richardston, 
3rd son and heir, 6. 

Nov. 1615, m. in April, 
1635, Uving 1650. 



James Baskerville, ^ Elizabeth, dau. of 



Esq. of Aberedow, 

living 1686 will dated 

7 July, 1686, proved 

26 Aug. 1692. 



Edward Griffin, Esq. 
of Bickmarsh. 



Mary, dau. of Rich.: 
Jones, Esq. of Han- 
ham, CO. Gloucester, 
d. 3rd May. 1721, 
aged 81. 



^= Thomas Baskerville, 

Esq. of Richardstown, 

2nd son and eventual 

heir,d. 12 Feb. 1718, 

aged 78. 



Thomas Baskerville,^ Sibill, dau. of — 



Esq. of Aberedow and 

Bryngwyn, buried at 

Aberedow, 15 Nov. 

1740. 



Thomas Baskerville 
Esq. of Aberedow 
Court, d. in 1740. 

r 

a 



Collins, Esq. of Bryn- 
gwyn, CO. Radnor, m. 
in 1700. 



Jane, dau. ofSirWil 
liam Gore, Knt., of 
Barrow Court, co. 

Somerset, and widow 
of — Raymond. 



=f= Richard Baskerville, 

Esq., 2nd, but eldest 

surviving son, heir of 

Richardstown, d. 14 

Sept. 1739. 



Meliora, eldest dau., 

bapt. 10th Dec 1701, 

m. in 1726. 



Jane, his cousin, dau.- 
of George Basker- 
ville, Esq. of Win- 
terboume Basset. 



-Thos. Basker^'ille, Esq. 

of Richardson, only 

sur^'iving son and heir, 

d. 1758. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[PLATK LXXIX. 



I 

Philippa Baskervine,^The Rev. John Pow 



ouly surriving child 
and heir, m, in 1767. 



elJ, of Penland, co. 
Radnor, </. in 1819. 



Anne,only dau.of the=Tho8. Baskervillc, Esq. 
Rev. Jas. O'Neile, of Lieut. -Col. 60th foot, 

m. twice, but d. 8. p. in 
1817, when his estates 



Ballyshannon, co. 

Donegal, 1st wife. 
Jane, youngest dau. 
of Thos. Bishop, Esq. 
of Kinsale, 2nd wife. 



devolved on his 
cousin. 



Meliora Powell, only dau. and heir=pPeter Rickards, Esq. of Evenjobb, 



m. at Aberedow, in Feb. 1787 — re- 
married Jasper Farmar, Esq., but 
by him had no issue; she d. 12 Oct. 
1829. 



CO. Radnor, and of Treago, co. Here- 
ford, who took the name and arms 
of Mynors, by royal license, 14th 
Sept. 1787, d, in Aug. 1794, aged 40. 



Piter 
Richards 
Mynors, 
Esq. of 
Treago, 
elder son. 



Anne, dau. and=Cf|Oma0 iSasfurbtUeiRsnoill^EUzabeth-Mary, 



heir of John 

Hancock, Esq. 

of Marlborougn, 

m. ISlSfd.a.p. 

]832, 1st wife. 



HastterbtUe, 1E0(|. of Clyrow 

Court, who inherited in 1817, 
the Wiltshire estates, on the 
death of his kinsman, Colonel 
Baskerville, and assumed, the 
following year, the surname 
of Baskbrvillb. 



eld. dau. of Rev. 
Powell Colches- 
ter Guise, young- 
er brother of Sir 

John Wright 
Guise, Bart., m. 

2 March 1837, 
2nd wife. 



Meliora, 
m.in 1816, 

to Hugh 
Hovell 

Farmar, 
Esq. of 
Dunsi- 

nane, co. 

Wexford. 



Walter Thomas Mynors, Heroert Witherstone My- Edward- Reginald Mynors, 
b. 7 Jan. 1839. nors,&. in Sept. 1841. 6. 13 March, 1843. 







+!:tJS^vs=. 




(fljijuh i&i3.urt.(t«,Eai)raii, 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxxx. 



3lol)n0ton, of Hilton in tfye e0et»t. 

LiEUT.-CoL. Frederick Johnston, of Hilton, elder son of the late Major 
Henry George Johnston, of the York Hussars, and grandson, by the Lady 
Henrietta Cecilia West, his wife, dau. of John, 1st Earl of Delawar, of Gen. 
James Johnston, who commanded the Ist Royal Dragoons with great distinc- 
tion throughout the seven years* war, represents the ancient and distinguished 
Border family of Johnston, of Hilton, being now the lineal male heir and 
representative of Gavin Johnston, who had a charter of the lands of Clerk- 
orchard &c. in Annandale, 6 March, 1555. (See Burke's Dictionary of the 
Landed Gentry.) 

2lnn0. — Arg. a saltire engr. sa. on a chief gu. three cushions or. 

Creftt. — On a torse arg. and gu. a sword and dagger ppr. hilted or, crossing each 
other saltireways, points upwards. 

HlottO. — Paratus ad arma. 

Jambs Johnston, of Beirholm, designed of Middlehill, son 
of Gavin Johnston, who had the charter of 1555. 



r" 



T 



Archibald Johnston, MtT-=f=Rachel, dau. of Sir John 



chant in Edinburgh, en- 
tered Burgess and Gild 
Brother, 1577. 



Amot, of Berseck, Pro- 
vost of Edinburgh. 



Home, of Polwarth. 



I 1 1 1 

1. James. 2. Samuel, of 3. Joseph Johnston, =f-Sophia, dau. of Sir Patrick 

I Schienncs. of Hilton, rf. 1639. 

oald, of =?= 

I H 

Archibald of William.=r Janet, dau. and heir 



Archibald, of 
Warriston. 



Schiennes. 



of John Johnston, 
of Wamphray. 



j- 



Robert, of 
Wamphray. 



I ■ I 1 1 

Archibald spCatharine, Joseph. 1. Sophia, m. 1654, John 

dau. of Sir Fairholm, of Craigie Hall, 

Geo. Win- and had an only dau. Sophia, 

ram, of wife of Wm. 1st Marquis of 

Liberton, Annandale. 2 Rachel, m. 

SirW. Bruce, 1st Bart. 



Johnston, 

of Hilton, 

d. in 1663. 



r— \ 1 

Joseph Johnston, of Hilton, Janet. Margaret, dau. of Kin-=j=Sir Palrich Johnston, Mer- 

.</. 1683, whose male line neir, m.9 June, 1684. chant,BurgessandGildBro. 

* expired with his descend- ther, 1684, Lord Provost of 

ant, Robert Johnston, of Edinburgh, 1 704, M.P., and 

Hilton, in 1842. one of liic Commissioners 

for the Union between En- 
gland and Scotland, d.\736. 



Capt. George Johnston, of=7= 
Kimmergham, and Whit 



some, b. 1686. 



Hester Bland, of Dub- Other 
lin, of the family of issue. 
Bland of Derriquin. 



1 

Henrietta, m. Sir John War- 

render, of Lochend. 



Gen. James Johnston, Col.=f^ 
6th Inniskillcn Dragoons, 
for twelve years (iovernor 
of Minorca, d. 1797. 



r 1 

Lady Henrietta Cecilia Margaret, m. to Mary, m. in 1750, 
West, dau. of John, Wynne Johnston, to Francis, Lord 
Ist Earl Delawarr, by of Hilton. Napier. 

Lady Charlotte Mdcar- 
thy, his wife. 



Mi^or Henry-George Johnston, =p 
York Hussars, 6. in 1766,</. in 
1809, buried at Hosenealh : 
served with the Inniskillcn 
Dragoons in Flanders, and the 
York Hussars, in theW. Indies. 



Jane Campbell, m. in Oct. 
1788, rf. in 1840. 



'1 



Caroline • Georgina, m. to 
Colonel Evelyn Anderson, 
brother of Chas. 1st Lord 
Yarborough. 



Srimt^CoI. ifrrlrrrirlt ipot)n==r 

fton. late of the 07 ih Kcgi- 
ment, served in the Inniskillen 
Dragoon8,the 17 th Lancers.and 
lliC 67lh Foot, m. in Aug. 1817. 



Elizabeth, dau. of Admiral John John-Frederick, Lieut. 

Rd. Delap Halleday, nephew R.N., d. on board the 

to the Earl of Dysart, under Queen Charlotte, of 

whose will he took the name wounds received at 

of Tollcmachc. Algiers, 1816. 



Frcderica.=r=Thos. Plummer Halsey, Esq. 



1 



Thos. Frederick Habey, b. 9 Dec. 1839. 



PLATE Lxxx] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



l^oole, of e^asUtto, co. Cotft. 

Thomas Poole, Esq. of Mayfield, is representative of the Irish branch of the 
ancient family of Poole, originally, a. d. 1220, of Poole, in Cheshire, and 
subsequently of Sapperton, co. Gloucester (see Burke's Landed Gentry.)] 

The late Hewet Baldwin Poole, Esq. of Mayfield, son of Thomas Poole, 
Gsq., of Mayfield, by Anna Baldwin, his wife, m. in 1768, Dorothea, dau. of 
Tonas Morris, Esq. of Barley Hill, and dying in 1800, left issue ; ThoiiaS) 
the present head of the family, Jonas-Morris, in Holy Orders, and several 
daus. of whom Elizt. m. Samuel McCall, Esq. of Glyntown, co. Cork, and 
was mother of James McCall, Esq. Lieut. Col. 8th Hussars. 

2lnn0. — Az. sem^ of fleurs de lis or, a lion rampt. arg. 

CTreftt^Oat of a ducal coronet, a griffin's head, arg. 

motto.— Pollet Virtus. 



Q^atf)e0on, of acdanp, B.lB. 

James Matheson, Esq. of Achany, co. Sutherland, M. P. for Ashburton. (See 
Bub KB* 8 Landed Gentry) bears for 

2lnit0. — Gironny of eight, sa. and gu. a lion rampant or, a bordure of the last 
charged with three boars' heads az. muzzled, and three hands holding daggers 
erect, ppr. 

Crrst — A dexter hand brandishing a scimetar, ppr. 

motto. — Heart and hand. 




^O00> Of €tm(^ Qieio, ann Cartron> co. iao$common. 

The surname of Hogg, one of local origin, is of great antiquity in Scotland, 
coeval with the retirement of Gospatrick, Earl of Northumberland, into North 
Britain, about the time of the Norman Conquest : it became hereditary in 
the reign of Malcolm Canmobb, and was first assumed by the proprietors of 
the lands of Hogstown, in the shire of Angus : for we find in the bond of 
submission given in 1296, by the Barons of Scotland, to Edward the First of 
England, as recorded in Prynne*s History, that Alexander Hogo, ancestor of 
the family of whom we are treating, is styled Alexander de Hogstoun. From 
him lineally derived (see Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry, supple- 
ment), Alexander Hogg, of Hogstoun, who, in the reign of Jambs IH. gave 
a charter of alienation to Sir Alexander Hume. He was founder of the 
House of Harcarse, in Berwickshire, from which sprung Sir Roger Hogo, 
Senator of the College of Justice, and also the Rev. James Hogg, immediate 
ancestor of the Hoggs of the county of Roscommon. 

SnRf . — Arg. three boars* heads erased az. armed or. 
Cffit. — ^An oak tree ppr. 
IKottO* — ^I>at gloria vires. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxxx. 



The Rev. Jambs Hooo, Minister of South Leith, in 1656, 
suffered for his attachment to the House of Stewart. 
He married Mary Gordon.^ 



John Hogg, Esq. son 
Rev. James Hogg, 



1 of the=j=J 

• 1 



ane Hogg, of Harcarse, whose mother was 
Catherine Dundas. 



The Rev. James Hogg, settled in Ire-=x=Susanna King, John, who m. Helen, dau. of John 



land, in 1678, and in a few years 
after, was presented to the Rectory 
of Kilmore, in the diocese of £1- 
phm. He resided at Lowfield, co. 
Roscommon, and was buried in the 
cemetry of his Rectory, about the 
year 1712. 



Hogg, by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. 
of Thos. son and heir of Sir John 
Charteris of Amisfleld, by the 
Lady Catherine Crichton, dau. of 
William, Earl of Dumfries, and by 
this lady left issue. 



1 Gilbert of= 

Mullagh,co. 

Leitrim. 



. Hoinr. =5=^ 



Jas. iiogg, 
Esq. 



William •• 
Hogg, Esq. 
ofOilstown, 
CO. Roscom- 
mon. 



:Mary, sister 
ofJohnStaf- 
ford, ofOils- 
town, and 
aunt of Mar- 
garet Blake- 
ney. 

Jane Piers, 
aunt of Sir 
John Piers. 

'Mary, dau. 
of Godfrey 
Hemsworth 
Esq. of Ab- 
beyville. 



2 John, of=^Jane, dau. Andrew of=?=Margaret, Essy, m. Jas. 



Cartron,co. 
Roscom- 
mon, d. in 
1760, aged 
70. 



ofCapt. Jn. Lowfield. 
Hall, son of 
the Bishop 
of KUlala, 
by Susanna 
Blackbume 



sister of Honan, Esq. 

Thos. Hogg, ofBallycom- 

Esq. of min. 
Edinburgh. 



James, of=y= Anne Gilbert, of^ Jane, dau. John. An 
Cartron, d. Clarke. Moyglass. 
in 1789 



» of=p 
I. AM 



dre^ 



of Jas. Ho- 
nan, Esq. 



1 1 — 

Jas. Ho^g,^ Isabella, James, J. P. Susanna, m. 

" ' dau. of Jas. d,unm. William Mc 

Ball Booth, Donnall, 

Esq. Esq. of 

Dublin. 



1 



Esq. d, m 
1816. 



Jane, m. 
Edw. Wal- 
dron,Esq. of 
Drumsna. 



Jas. Hogg, Esq.^^Eliza, dau. of Gilbert, of James, John.Booth, Andrew, Margaret. 



ofGilstown.J.P. 
for Roscommon, 
and Leitrim, d, 
March, 1831. 



Francis Wal 
dron, Esq. of 
Drumsna, and 
Mary Kelly, of 
Charleville. 



Cartron. 



who d. in 
1836. 



in Holy 
Orders. 



Jas. Hemsworth Godfrey, of =j=Ellen, dau. Gilbert, distin- «=Be8sy, dau. of William, 



of Gilstown Church View, 
House, m. Mary 6. in 1812, J. P. 
Johnston, and 
has issue. 



of the Rev. guished in the Dr. Kelly, of and five 

Thos.Knox. Spanish war, at- Birr, & niece daughters, 

tained the rank of Chas.Kelly, 

of Col. in Spain, Esq. of Char- 
May, 1837. leville. 



James. 



IPaplIton, of 9cti0e> co. l^ent, aitD €to\ohnt8t ipiace, 

CO. ^U00er. 

Thomas Papillon, Esq. of Acrise and Crowhurst Place, elder son and heir of 
the late Thomas Papillon, Esq. of Acrise, Lieut. Col. of the East Kent Militia, 
by Anne, bis ^vife, second dau. and eventual coheir of Henry Cressett Pelbam, 
Esq. of Crowburst Place, quarters the arms of Pelham, with bis paternal 
coat, and impales those of Oxenden, in right of his wife Frances Margaret, 
second dau. of Sir Henry Oxenden, Bart. 

The family is one of great antiquity, and many of its members were con- 
spicuous for their zeal and sufferings in the cause of the Reformation. 

flrms. — Az. on a chev. between three butterflies arg. quartering the quartered 
coat of Pelham. 

Creftt. — A crescent arg. 
jClottO.— Ditat servata fides. 



■ ■ I 




ir^ 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxxxi. 



i>ttifi[elii, of iDliifielti, CO. Cbestet. 

Thomas Brame Oldfield, Esq. of Peckham Cottage, co. Surrey, Representa- 
tive of the very ancient family of Oldfield, of Oldfield, co. Chester, bears a 
shield of twelve quarterings. 

I. Oldfibld. Argent, on a bend gules, three crosses pate^ fitche^ of the field. 
II. Hasblwbll. Argent, a chief azure. 
III. Orosvbnor. Az. a garb or. 

iv. MoBBBRLBY. Argent, two chevrons gules, with a cross crosslet fitchee or, on a 

canton of the second. 
Sable, a hart lodged, argent 
Sable, a cross patonce, argent. 
Az. three pheasants close, or. 

Quarterly, argent and sable, a cross patonce counterchanged. 
Argent, on a fesse dancetti^ azure, three garbs, or. 
Or, a fesse vert. 

Quarterly, or and gules, a bendlet sable. 

Or, on a chevron gules, between three columbines argent, as many 
flowerpots of the field. 



V. DOWNBS. 

VI. PULFORD. 

VII. PuESAlfT. 

VIII. Eaton. 
IX. Lbftwich. 
X. Vernon. 

XI. Malbank. 

XII. COLMBTT. 



Ctfft — A demi wyvem,with wings displayed arg. issuing from a ducal coronet or. 
ISotto. — Viresco Vulnere. 

KirHrll He '^mun, son of William de €rU8 ttt Vrobeitrr, ac. 

companied Queen Ele- 



VUlXkU U <8lrO0benor was great-grandson 
of Gilbert leGrosvenor,who descended 
from RoUo, the famous Dane, (who 
made an attempt upon England in 
872, and conquered Normandy in 
912) and accompanied his uncle Hugh 
Lupus, Earl of Avranches, to Eng- 
land in 1066. Ralph le Grosvenor 
adhered to the cause of the Empress 
Maud against king Stephen, and was 
taken prisoner at the battle of Lincoln 
in 1149. r= 

Robert le Grosvenor, accompanied Rich- 
ard L to the Holy Land, and was pre- 
sent at Acre. ^ 

Warren de Vemon^pDau. and heiress Richard db Oldfbld, Richard le Grosvenor, purchased the 



Vernon of Vernon Castle in Nor- 
mandy, created by Hugh Lupus Earl 
of Chester, Baron of Shipbrook, 1070, 
was grantee of Leflwich and fourteen 
other manors in Cheshire at the 
Domesday survey. 

, J 

William de Vernon, 2nd Baron of Ship- 
brook. =^ 

I 

Hugh de Vernon, 3rd Baron of Ship- 
brook. =F 



anor to England, on 
her marriage with 
Henry IIL 1236, m. 
about 1255, Alice, sis- 
ter of Patrick de Has- 
clwall, and with her 
acquired the manor of 
Oldfeld, as dowry. 



I 



SllfON DB PrOVENCB. 



4th Baron, living 
1119. 



of Reginald de 
Baillot, Lord of 
Enderwick and 
Helgrave. 



who on inheriting his 
grandmother's estate, 
assumed the surname 
of Oldfeld. 



Richard de Vernon, 5th Baron. 



I 



J 



1 

Adam db Oldfeld, m. 

1330. 



Warren de Vernon,=f=Auda, dau. and 



6th Baron. 



coheir of Wil- 
liam de Mal- 
bank, Baron of 
Wich Malbank. 



I 



John db Oldfeld, m. 
about 1390. 



manor of Hulme, in 1234. 

J J 

Robert* le Grosvenor, Sheriff of Ches- 
ter in 1284, m. the dau. and co-heiress 
of William DB MoBBBRLBY,by Maud 
his wife, dau. and heiress of Robert 

DoWNBS. =p 

I 

Sir Robert le Grosvenor, Knt fought at 

Cressy, in 1316, m. Emma, dau. of 

Waring de Main waring. 



I 



Raufe le Grosvenor, m. Joan, in 1342. 

— , , T 

Warren de \ emon,=?= Margaret, daugh. William db Oldfeld, Sir Robert Gros-=f'Joan,dau. and heir 



I 



7 th Baron 



Warren de 

Vernon, 8th 

& last Baron 

of Shipbrook 

d. s. p. 



and heiress of 
Ralph de Au- 
deviile, and re- 
lict of Hugh 
de A I tar ib us. 



m. about 1415. 



T 



Thomas Oldfeld, of 
Oldfeld, m.about 1440. 



venor.Knt. who 
was engaged in 
the celebrated 
action with Sir 
Rd. le Scrope, 
in 1389. 



Maud, dau. & coheiress, 
inherited from her fa- 
ther, the manor of 
Leflwich, m. Sir Rd. 
Wilbraham, Knt. 

I 
a 



I 



ess of Sir Robert 

DEPuLFORD,Lord 

of Pulford. 



Sir Thos. le Gros- s?=Joan dau. and co- 



Reginald Oldfeld, of 
Oldfeld, m.about 1462, 
Johanna. 

I 
b 



venor, Knt. liv- 
ing 1422. 



heir of Sir Wil- 
liam Phbbant, of 
Stafford, Knt. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxxii. 

« 

^lumetmwcn, of ^i\»ton ]^atft> to. ^ert0. 

Robert Plumer-Ward, Esq. of Gilston Park, J. P. High Sheriff of co. Herts 
in 1832, son of John Ward, Esq., and younger brother of the late George 
Ward, Esq. of North wood Park, in the Isle of Wight, having m. in 1818, 
Jane, relict of William Plumer, Esq. of Gilston Park, and dau. of the Hon. and 
Rev. George Hamilton, son of James, seventh Earl x)f Abercom, by Anne, 
his Countess, dau. of Col. John Plumer, of Herts, M. P., acquired with her 
the estate of Gilston, and assumed under his marriage settlement by Royal 
License, the surname of Plumer, in addition to his patronymic Ward, and 
bears the arms of Ward and Plumer quarterly. Mr. Plumer- Ward, who was 
appointed a Welsh judge in 1805, and filled several high offices of State, 
having been Under Foreign Secretary, a Lord of the Admiralty, Clerk of the 
Ordnance from 1811 to 1823, and Auditor of the Civil List, until the aboli- 
tion of that office in 1831, is eminently distinguished in the literary world, as 
the author of the " History of the Laws of Nations," and of ''Tremaine,** 
" De Vere,*' &c. &c. He is father of Henry George Ward, Esq., M. P. for 
Sheffield. 

flmni. — Quarterly. First and fourth, az. a cross flory or, in the dexter chief 

point, a key erect, the wards downwards, and turned to the dexter : in the sinister 

chief point an anchor erect both of the last, for Ward. Second and third, per chev. 

' flory, counterflory arg. and gu. three martlets'counterchanged, and (for distinction) 

a pile issuant from the centre point of the second, for Plumer. 

CTrtf t. — A wolfs head erased or, charged on the neck with an anchor erect, sa. 
and holding in the mouth a key, the wards upwards ppr. for Ward. Second, a demi 
lion gu. holding betw. the paws a garb or, charged on the shoulder (for distinction) 
with a cross flory of the last, for Plumer. 

Hlottfl. — Give the thankyss that are due. 



lotonnes^^tone, of larig^tttoell l^atit, co. iDrGitn. 

William Francis Lowndes-Stone, Esq. of Brightwell Park, D. C.L., J. P., 
D. L. and High Sheriff of Oxfordshire, in 1834, eldest son, by Elizabeth, his 
wife, second dau. and coh. of Richard Garth, Esq. of Morden, co. Sur- 
rey, by Anne his wife, dau. and coh. of Sir John Carleton, Bailiff of 
Brightwell, of the late Williara Lowndes^ Esq. of Ashwood and North Craw- 
ley, Bucks, who assumed on the demise of his mother Catharine, eldest dau. 
of Francis Lowe, Esq. of Buldwyn BrightweD, co. Oxford, in 1 789, the sur- 
name and arms of Stonk, grandson of William Lowndes, Esq. and Catherine 
Lowndes, wife and great-grandson by Margaret his wife, dau. and heir of — 
Layton, Esq., of William Lowndes, Esq. of Ashwood Bury, co. Bucks, second 
son of William Lowndes, Esq., Secretary to the Treasury, in 1 652— bears 

the arms of Stonr and Lowndes, quartering Latton and Lowr. 

flnn0.— Quarterly. First and fourth, quarterly ; first and fourth, arg. three cin- 
quefoils sa. a chief of the second for Stonb ; second and third, arg. fretty az. on 
each joint a bezant, on a canton gu. a leopard's head erased or, wreathed round the 
neck vert, for Lowndks. Second, sa. on a bend arg. three escallops gu. for Layton. 
Third, arg. on a bend as. three wolfs* heads erased of the field for Lowe. 

Ctftttf . — Out of a ducal coronet or, a griffin's head erm. for Stonb. Second, a 
leopard's head erased or, with a chaplet rert for Lowndes. 

jHotto. — Mediocria firma. 



PLATE Lxxxii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^ubann, of 3lPiBle?9 co. mat^itk. 

George Huband^ Esq. M. A., Capt. Unattached, late Capt. 8th Hussars^ 
elder son of the late W. Huband^ Esq.^ and grandson of Joseph Huband, 
Esq., represents the Hubands of Warwickshire and Derbyshire^ and bears 
the arms of Huband, quarterly with those of Danverb^ Bruly and Puryb. 

2lnn0. — Quarterly. First, sa. tliree leopards' faces jessant de lis arg. for Hubamd. 
Second, az. on a bend or three miUlets of the field, for Dantbrs. Third, erm. on a 
bend gu. three chevrons or, for Brult. Fourth, arg. on a fesse betw. three mart- 
lets sa. as many mullets of the first, for Puryb. 

Crmt. — A wolf passant, or. 

IKottO. — Gave Lupum 



William Hubold, of Ipsley, a.d 
1189, descended from Hugo 

; who held Ipsley of Osbemus, 
at the Conquest. 



Thomas Huband, Esq., a Com- 
missioner 2nd Richard II. for 
assessing a subsidy for co. 
Warwick. 



Henry Hubald, living Ist King 
John. «= 

SirWilliam Hubald,or Hubaude, 
Knt.,who d, 1287, m. Dyonisia, 
widow of Simon de Berreford. 

T 



J 



Richard Huband, Esq. liying 
12th Henry VI. 



J 



Sir John Huband, Knt, of Ips- 
ley, m. Margaret, dau. of Sir 
Emerick de Paunceford, Knt., 
of Hasfield, d. 1319. 

3= 

Sir John Huband, Knt, of Ips- 
ley, m. in 1321, Margaret, dau. 
of Sir William Lucie, Knt., 
of Charlecote, co. Warwick. 

T 



Thomas Huband, Esq. living 
20th Edw. IV. 1461. 



I 



Richard Huband, Esq. who m. 
Anne, dau. of Thomas Bur- 
dett, Esq. of Arrow, co. York, 
ancestor of the late Sir Fran- 
cis Burdett, Bart. 



J 



John Huband, Esq. of Ipsley, 
Knt. of the Shire in the par- 
liament assembled at West- 
minster, 29th of Edw. III. 



John Huband, Esq. living 21st 
Hbnry VIII. 



T 



Nicholas Huband, Esq. d. 1554. 



spDoROTHT, dau. and coheir of Sir John Danvrbs, 
Knt., of Calthorpe and Waterstock, co. Oxford, 
descended from the marriage of Sir William Dan- 
vers, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, 
(son of John Danvers, by Jane, his wife, dau. and 
heir of William Bruly, of Waterstock), with 
Anne, dan. and heir of John Purib, Esq. of 
Chamber House : d. 16 May, 1558. 



Sir John Huband,Knt. 
of Ipsley, Sherifi* of 
CO. Warwick, 18th 
and 35th Hbn.VIII. 
m. Mary, dau. of Sir 
Geo. Throckmorton, 
Knt., but d. a. p, in 
1583. 



Ralph, 8, his brother 
in Ipsley, High She- 
riff of Warwick, 34lh 
Elizabbih, died in 
1605, leaving by his 
2nd wife, a son and 
heir. 

T 



George, d. unm. 



Anthony Huband,Esq. 
inherited estates in 
Worcestershire, un- 
der his mother's will, 
m. a dau. of the Rev. 
John Tibotts, Rector 
of Inkberrow. 




John Huband, Esq. of 
Ipsley, m. a dau. of 
Sir Hen. Poole, Bart, 
of Oakly, co. Wilts. 
d. 1650. y 

I 

a 



John Tibotts Huband, 
Esq. of Inkberrow, d, 
in 1624. 



T 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxxxii. 



Ralph Habandf Esq.i 
Lord of Ipsley, d. 29 
Oct. 1651. 



5 



'Anne, dau. and coheir Isabella, dau. of Tho-^Edward Huband, Esq. 

of Genrase Teverey, mas Dyson, Esq. of - — 

Esq. of Stapleford, Morton Hall. 
Notts. 



of Egyoke House, co. 
Worce8ter,d. 29 Dec. 
1670. 



Sir John Huband, of=y=Jane, dau. of Lord Hester, dau. of Tho-=j=Edmond Huband,Esq. 



Ipsley, eld. son, cre- 
ated a Bart by Chas. 
II., 2nd Feb. 1660-1, 
d. 1710. 



Charles Paulett, of mas Spring, Esq. of 
Dowlas, Hants. Springfield,co.Dub< 

lin. 



Sir John Huband, 2nd=y:Rhoda, eld. dau. 



accompanied the Duke 
of Onnond, Lord Lieu- 
tenant of Ireland, as 
private Secretary to 
that country, and set- 
tled there; d. 1729. 



Bart, of Ipsley, d. in 
1727. 



of Sir Thomas 
Broughton,Bart. 



Sir Joim Huband, 3rd Bart, of Ipsley, d. 
a minor, in his 18th year, at Oxford, 
when the Baronetcy and the male line of 
Ralph, 2nd son of Nicholas Huband, be- 
came extinct, and the representation de- 
ToWed on the descendant of Nicholas' 
fourth son, Anthony. The sisters and co- 
heirs of the last Bart, were Rhoda, m. to 
Sir Thoe. Delves, Bart., Mary, wife of 
Thos. Wright, Esq., and Jane, m. to Robt. 
Henley, Earl of Northington. 



Francis Huband, Esq., Edward Huband, Esq. 
m. Anne, dau. of John 2nd son, m. Eliza, dau. 
Hayes, Esq. of Avon- of Thomas Willcocks, 
dale, CO. Wicklow, by Esq. banker of Dublin, 
Anne, his wife, dau. and left with an elder 
of John Pamell, Esq. son, Joshua, of co.West- 
M.P. for Granard, and meath, Lieut. R.N.,who 
aunt to the late Lord d, without lawful issue, 
Congleton, and left an another son 
only son, John- Francis, 
who m. twice,and left by 
his 2nd wife, an only 
son, Francis, who d. a.p, 
in 1835. 



Katherine, dau. of George Reynolds,^ Joseph Huband, Esq. d, in 1835. 
Esq. of Crumlin, co. Dublin, by his 
wife, Catherine Noy, of the family 
of William Noy, Attorney Gen. to 
Charles I. 



Frances, eldest dau. (by Anna, his= 
wife, dau. of Samuel Lindesay, Esq. 
of HoUymount), of ArthurChichester 
Macartney, Esq. of Murlough, co. 
Down, elder brother of the late Sir 
John Macartney, Bart, and eldest 
son of William Macartney, Esq., forty 
years M.P. for Belfast 



:Willcocks Huband, Esq. a gentleman of 
extensive literary attainments, and a zeal- 
ous patron of the fine arts, author of **Art 
of Acting," &c. "A Dictionary of Engli^ 
Participles,'* ** An Essay upon Taste and 
Judgment in the Fine Arts, and upon 
Etching on Copper ;'* m. in 1806, d, v,p, 
in 1834. 



^(Orac Pltttanlr. Esq.=Marianne, young- 
Capt Unatt.,late Capt. est dau. of Admiral 
of the 8th Hussars, m. Croft, of Stilling- 
Ist May 1844. ton, co. York. 



1 1 1 I I 

Arthur, Anna, Catherine, m.to Letitia and 

late of d, unm. Arthur Burgh Georgiana- 

the R.N. 1822. Crof\on,Esq.of Augusta, both 

Roebuck Cas- d, unm, 

tie, CO. Dublin, 

High Sheriflfin 

1842. 



IPalmer, of jRa^ing IParft, co. (B%%tx. 

George Palmer, Esq. of Nazing Park, M. P. for South Essex, eldest son of 
the late William Palmer, Esq. of Nazing, by Mary, his wife, sister of Bishop 
Horsley, and great-grandson of Archdale Palmer, Esq. of Wanlip Hall, co. 
Leicester, by Anna, his wife, dau. and heir of Nicholas Charlton, Esq. de- 
scends from the very ancient family of Pidmer of Wanlip (See Burke*8 Dio- 
tionary of the Landed Gentry), and bears their arms, quartered with those 
of Charlton, and has, in right of his wife, Anna-Maria, dau. and coh. of 



PLATE Lxxxii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

William Bund, Esq. of Wick, co. Worcester, an escutcheon of pretence — 
quartet'ly Bund, and Parsons. 

flnm^— Quarterly. First and fourth, are. two han sa. charged, the upper with 
two and the lower with one trefoil slipped of the field, in chief a peyhound courant 
of the second, for Palmbb. Second and third, a<. on a choT. or, betw. three swans' 
arg. as many cinquefoils gu., for Cha&lton. An escutcheon of pretence. Quarterly, 
First and fourth, gu. three eagles' legs erased a la Guise or, for Bund. Second and 
third, az. a chev. enn. betw. three trefoils arg., for Pabsoms. 

Crsst. — A greyhound sejant sa. collared and charged on the shoulder with a tre- 
foil arg. 

4MtO. — Palma virtuti. 



9aunlier0, of Hatgap, co« Catian. 

Richard Saunders,. Esq. of Largay, eldest son of the late Owen Saunders, 
Esq. of Largay, by Mary-Anne, his wife, dau. of Richard Sadleir, Esq. of 
Sadleir^s Wells, co. Tipperary, represents a famUy of very ancient descent, 
derived from Sir Harloven. Saunders, a descendant of the Counts of Haps- 
burgh, who came into England, in or about the year 1370. (See Burke's 
Landed Gentry,) 

fLtVX$ — Arg; a chev. betw. three elephants' heads, erased sa. on a chief gu. a 
sword erect broken pointed ppr. between two plates. 

Crfit. — ^An elephant's head issuing out of a mural crown, charged with an ogress. 

motto. — Nil conscire sibi. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platk i,xxxiii. 

Pitcairn, of IPitcalms, to, IPettb. 

John Pitcairn, Esq. of Pitcairns, a magistrate for the counties of Perth and 
Linlithgow, and a Deputy Lieutenant of the former, is only son of the late 
John Pitcairn, Esq. of Pitcairns, by Mary his wife, eldest dau. of Thomas 
Trotter, Esq. of Edinburgh. 

The surname of Pitcairn is of great antiquity in the counties of Fife and 
Perth, and an original charter from Alexander IIL may be seen in the Gene- 
ral Register House at Edinburgh, dated a. d. 1250, confirming a grant of 
the lands of Innernethy in Strathern, by Hugo de Abernethy, to his kinsman 
Joannes de Pitcairn. (See Burke's Landed Gentry). 

Sirm0. — Arg. between three lozenges gu. an anchor in pale az. 
Crwt. — The sun in her splendour, or. 
fBotto. — Spes lucis eetcms. 



aXialiKon, of 90{)forli I^ou0e, co^ iao0common. 

HuBBRT Kelly Waldron, Esq. of Ashfort House, J.P., fourth son of Francis 
Kelly, Esq. of the Hanker, by his first wife, Mary Kelly, of the Charleville 
family, and grandson of Thomas Kelly, Esq. of the Hanker, in Drumsna, co. 
Leitrim^ by Elizabeth his wife, dau. of Thomas Blakeney, Esq. of Abbert, co. 
Galway, derives from Sir Richard Waldron, Knt. who went to Ireland^ 
from Dorsetshire, in 1609, and settled at the Castle of Dromellan, co. Cavan, 
where James L had allotted to him an extensive estate. (See Burke's Landed 
Gentry), and bears — 

flrnifll. — Arg. three bulls' heads cabosscd sa. armed vert. 
Crf0t. — A lion passant. 
^OttO> — Virlule et valore. 



apacqueen, of Corrptirougl)* 

The tribe, of which this family is the head, is known in the Highlands as the 
clan Revan^ and is of great antiquity, being originally of the Macdonalds, 
Lords of the Isles ; the connection with whom, after a separation of more 
than three centuries, was recognised so recently as 1778, by Alexander, Lord 
Macdonald, who, having raised a Highland regiment, conferred the commis- 
sion of lieutenant on a son of Donald Macqueen, of Corrybrough, intimating 
his appointment by letter, dated 26th Jan. 1778> (now in possession of the 
Macqueens,) in which his lordship thus writes : " It does me great honour to 
have the sons of chieftains in the regiment, and as the Macqueens have been 
inyariably attached to our family, to whom I believe we owe our existence, I 
am proud of the nomination.'' 

Early in the 15th century, Roderick Dhu Revan Macsweene, or Macqueen, 
quitted the Isles on receiving a grant of territory, including amongst others 
the lands of Corrybrough, since which period his descendants have formed a 
branch of the powerful clan Chattan, under whose standard they fought at 
the battle of Harlawe in 1411. The other families of Macqueen are branches 
of this clan, the chieftainship being vested in Macqueen of Corrybrough as 
lineal representative of Roderick Dhu Revan. — See Shaw*8 History of Province 
of Moray, p. 97 ; Documents in possession of Mackintosh of Mackintosh, 
chief of clan Chattan j also the public records in the Register House, Edin- 
burgh, where this family is entered in the Land Register of Scotland from 
1563, downwards. (For the detailed genealogy, see Burke's Dictionary of 
the Landed Gentry,) 

The late Donald Macqueen, of Corrybrough, J. P. for co. Inverness^ m. 




PLATE Lxxxiii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

27 Aprils 179^, Elizabeth^ dau. of Hugh Eraser of Brigbtmony, great-grand- 
son of Malcobn Fraser, of Culdutbel^ and d. in 1813> leaving issue surviving: 

Donald, Captain 2nd Madras Cayalry, J.P.co.InTeme88,m. Margaret, 
dau. of Grant of Bught, co. Inyemess, and died in 1827, leaving 

* ' a'dau. Maijory. 

Hugh, W.S. J.P., for CO. Invemess. 

James, Military Cadet, d. at Woolwich. 

Alexander, M.D. H.M. 3rd Foot. 

William, Captain 25th Madras Infantry, d, 1829. 

Simon, Captain H.M. 44th Regt., J. P. for co. Inverness. 

^neas. Lieutenant 49th Madras Infantry d. 1837. 

John Fraser, of Lincoln's-inn, barrister-at-law, J.P. and Deputy 
Lieutenant, for co. Inverness, m. Greorgina, dau. of the Bev. George 
Dealtry, A.M. Rector of Stoke, and Vicar of Hinckley, Leicester- 
shire. 

Lachlan, Captain 3rd Cavalry, Deputy-Judge-Advocate-General, 
Madras, 
flmtfll. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. three wolves' heads, couped sa. Second 
and third, or, a hand in armour, ppr. holding a cross crosslet fitch^ or. 
The present family is also entitled to quarter ihe arms of Frassr. 

Cre0t. — ^An heraldic tiger rampt. erm. holding an arrow point downwards, arg. 
pheoned g^. 

Sbupporteni.— Two wolves, erm. 

4ftottO. — Constant and fisiithful . 

^aMer, of Hongpamlb ^U0e, to. f^mtn. 

Peter Hawker, Esq. of Longparisb House, co. Hants, D. L., Lieut.- CoL of 
tbe Nortb Hants Militia, is only son of tbe late Peter Ryves Hawker, 
Esq. of Longparisb, Lieut. Col. of tbe 1st Reg. of Horse Guards, grand- 
son of Capt. Peter Hawker, of Longparisb, by Aretbusa, bis wife, only dau. 
and beiress of George Ryves, Esq. oi Ranston, co. Dorset, and great-grand- 
son of Peter Hawker, Esq. of Longparisb, Col. of Dragoons in 1715, and 
Governor of Portsmoutb in 171 7> wbo was son of General Peter Hawker, and 
grandson of Peter Hawker, Esq. Capt. of Queen Mary's Dragoons in 1694. 
He bears tbe arms of Hawker, quarterly witb tbose of Ryves, and carries an 
escutcbeon of pretence, in rigbt of bis wife Julia, only cbild of Hooker Bart- 
telot, Esq. late Major Soutb Hants Militia. Col. Hawker^ wbo retired witb a 
temporary pension from tbe 14tb Lt. Dragoons, wben senior Capt., in con- 
sequence of a severe wound received in tbe Peninsula, was appointed in 1815 
Major of tbe Nortb Hants Militia, and Lieut. Col. in 1821, by tbe Duke of 
Wellington, at tbe special desire of His late Majesty,- tben Duke of Clarence. 
Tbis gentleman is tbe autbor of tbe celebrated work on Sporting. 

flnmi. — Quarterly. First and fourth, sa. a hawk standing on a perch arg. beaked 
and legged or, for Hawkbr. Second and third, arg. three mascles in bend betw. 
two cottises sa. for Ryves. 

Cte0t. — ^A hawk*s head erased or. 

motto. — Accipiter prsdam, nos gloriam. 

iFiQmaudce* of Duagt) ^ou0e, co* ifterti?. 

Oliver Fitzmaurice, Esq. of Duagb House, son and beir of tbe late Maurice 
FiTZMAURicE, Esq. of Duagb House, by Margaret bis wife, dau. of Oliver 
Stokes, Esq. J.P., and grandson of Ulyses Fitzmaurice, Esq. J.P. of Duagb 
na Fealla, by Agnes bis wife, dau. of Maurice Studdert, Esq. of Elm Hill^ co. 
Limerick — represents a younger brancb of tbe Earls of Kerry, derived from 
Garret, second son of Jobn, fiftb Lord of Kerry, and bears tbe ensign of tbat 
noble bouse. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

flnm. — Arg. a saltire gu. and a chief erm. 

Cmt — A centaur drawing a bow and arrow ppr. the part from the wrisi arg. 

Hlotto.— Yirtute non verbis. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plai k lxxxiv. 

ffl)0le, of iftirfelcg l^all, co* jRortbumbcrlann* 

The Rkv. John Savile Ogle, of Kirkley Hall, Prebendary of Durham, son 
of the late Rev. Newton Ogle, D.D. Prebendary of Durham, and Dean of 
Winchester, by Susann.i, his wife, eldest dau. of Dr. John Thomas, Lord 
Bishop of Winchester, and grandson by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. and coheir 
of Jon.ithan Newton, Esq. of Newcastle on Tync, of Nathaniel Ogle, Es(j. of 
Kirkley, M.D., some time physician to the forces, under the great Duke of 
Marlborough, descends from Mark Ogle, Esq., who purchased Kirkley from 
Ralph Lord Eure, in the beginning of the seventeenth century, and represents 
a branch of the ancient Northumbrian family of Ogle, of Ogle, (settled there 
at the Con(}uest) derived from John Ogle, third son of Ralph, third Lord Ogle. 
(See Burke's Extinct Peerage and Landed Gentry,) 

Slrmtf. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. a fesse Lctw. three crcsccntfl, gu. for 
Oglb. Second and third, az. au orlc, arg. for Bertram. 

i!rrrtt0. — First, an antelope's head erased horned, or, for Oglb. Second, a bull's 
head or, ducally crowned, gu. armed az. for Bertram. 

^Otto.— Prcnez en gr^ 

Ulmtn, of Sarnau, co* Carmartljcn^ 

Thomas Waters, Esq. of Sarnau, co. Carmarthen, and his two brothers Ed- 
ward and Robert, sons of the late Thomas Waters, Esq. by his wife, a dau. 
of Ormond of Trynewydd, co. Pembroke and grandsons of Thomas Waters, 
Esq. J.P. for co. Carmarthen, who was son of Thomas Waters, Esq. of Pen- 
ally Court, CO. Pembroke, descend from Sir Richard Waters, father of the 
celebrated Lucy Waters of the court of Charles II. (See Burke's Landed 
Gentry.) 

flrms. — Erm. a griffin segrcant within a bordure engrailed, az. 

Crwt. — A dcmi griffin, az. 

fClottO. — Honor pietas. 

©lipbant, of ®as&, co. iperti). 

James Blair Omphant, Esq. of Gask, J.P. and D.L. son of the late Lawuknck 
Olipiiaxt, Esq. of Gask, by Christian, his wife, only child and heir c T Dr. 
Joseph Robertson Blair, of Ardldair, grandson of Lawrknck Oliph.^nt. Esq. 
of Gask, by Margaret, his wife and cousin, dau. of Duncan Robertson, Esq. 
of Strowan, and great-grandson of Jamks Oliphant, Esq. of Gask, who was 
fifth in direct descent from William Olipiiaxt, of Newton in Perthshire, 
younger brother of Laurence, third Lord Oliphant — succeeded his brother 
Laurence, 3lst Dec. 18*24, and on the 18th Aug. 1839 was served heir male 
of Francis, tenth and last Lord Oliphant, (sec Burkf/s Landed Gentry.) He 
bears the ensign of that ancient and ennobled house. 

3rms. — Gu. tlircc crcsccnls, arc. 

(Trcflt. — A unicunrs head crmpcd arg. armed and inaned, or. 

fdctto. — A tout pourvoir. 



PI.ATB Lxxxiv.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



This ancient family is descended from- Reinbovd de Yarker, a 'German 
Knight, who came over to England^ during^he Civil'^Wars between the two 
Royal Houses of York and Lancaster/ and according to the title dcMs of the 
family estates, and other authentic records, appear to have been settled at 
Leyburn, in the North Riding of Yorjtshire/since the 'year 15O0 (temp. Hen. 
Vn.) (see Burke's Landed Gentry). The direct elder line is now represented 
by the Rkv. Luke Yarkbr, of Leyburn, A.M. Vicar of Cbillingham, co. Nor- 
thumberland, one of H.M. Justices of Peace for* the counties of Northumber- 
land and Durham, and also in the commission of. the Peace for the North 
Riding of Yorkshire and a younger branch, by Joseph Yarkbr, Esq. Col- 
lector of H.M. Customs at Ulverston, co. Lancaster. 

^IrmS.^Long borne by the family, and duly confirmed by the Herald's College 
31 Geo. II.), Gu. on a chev. between three unicorns passant or, as many human 
hearts of the field. 

* Ctr0t. — A stork rising arg. collared, btakcd and legged gu. reposing the dexter 
claw on a like human heart as in the arms, and holding in the beak, an oak branch 
fructed ppr. 

iHotti.—La fin couronne les oeuyres'. 

The Rev. Luke Yarker quarters with his family coat, the arms of Forstir, viz. Arg. a 
chcy. vert.^ betw. three .bxigfa horns' 8a.,-stri])ged or; aild bears in right of his wife, an es- 
cutcheon of pretence, of eight quarterings, viz. 
I. "Arg. three horse shoes sa; for South. 
XI.-. Gu. oh a bend.arg.,- thi^^swans ppr. for Clarkb. 

III. Arg. a cross of Igzenges vert., over all a bend cheqny erm. and az., for Braddtll. 
rv. Or, a lion passant sa. oh a chief sa. a trefoil of the field, for Rishton. 
v. Az. in chi^f two stars, in point a crescent or, for Doddino. 
* vi;'*Or, a fesse dancette,' betw. three crosses cro'sslet fitch^ gu., for Sandys. 
' VII. l^arty per fesse g^. and az. a castle counterchanged, lor Rawson. 

VIII. As the first. 
And Joseph Yarker, Esq. bears his family coat quarterly, with the arms of Leyboume, viz. 
Az. six lioncels ramp. arg. three, two and one, and carries in right of his wife, an escutcheon 
of pretence. Quarterly^ First and fourth, barry of ten or and sa., over all a bend gu., for 
Barker. Second, barry of twelve, arg. and az. over all three lions ramp, gu., for Wood- 
BURNB. Third, quarterly arg. and ermines, in the first quarter a fleur-de-lis gu. for Letham, 
and in a canton the arms of Smith, viz. sa. on a fesse engr. or, between three squirrels 
scjeant arg. each holding a marigold slipped ppr. as many roundels barry of six arg. and az., 
quarterly with those of Stanley, viz. arg. on a bend az., three bucks* heads cabo^ed or. 



@l)ulD|)am> of a^atlesforo ^aU, co. ^uSblft. 

. ■' • • « ■ 

William Shuldham, £sq. of Marlesford Hall, only son of the late Samuel 

Siiulduam, Esq. by Frances, his wife, dau. and heir of Oliver Deave, Esq. of 
Reydon, co. Suffolk, and grandson of John Shulham, Esq. by Rebecca Cooke, 
his wife and great-grandson of Nathan Shouldham, Esq. of Fulmodeston, Bar- 
rister at Law, by his second wife Dorothy, dau. of Robert Keddington, Esq. 
of Hockham— represents a very ancient Suffolk family derived from Sir Wil- 
liam DE Shouldham, Lord of the Manor of Shouldham, 34 Henrt III. (See 
Landed Gentry.) 

21rm0. — Az. an eagle displayed or, beaked and membercd gu. 
CTrrfit. — A griflSn passant arg. 
/Hotto.— Post nubila Phoebus. 



TLATK f XXXV.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

^cobell, of JlSancealDeme, co^ ComtoalU 

JonN UsTiCKE SjCOBELL, Esq. of Nancealverne, elder son and heir of the late 
JAhn ScoBBtL, Esq.lby his first wife Susanna, only child and heiress of William 
Usticke, Esq;' of Leha, co. Cornwall, (son of Wulfem Osticke,fisq. of Leha, 
grandson of William Usticke,Esq.of the same place, and great -grands'oft. by Ann 
Roscrowe, of Iloscrowe, his wife, a coheiress of thfe'old Cornish family of that 
name settled at Roscrowe from the time of Hbnby VIII., of OUvor Usticke, 
Esq. of Leh?, son and heir of Charles Usticke, Esq. who purchased ^e estates 
from Mr. Groose), descends through the Nutcombe branch, from th6. family of 
Scobbahull, of Sbobbahull, co. Devon, (^ee Bubke's Landed Gentry), and 
repiresents maternally a branch of the ancient Cornish family of Usticke. 
He bears the arms of Scobeix, Ubtxckb and Roscbowe, quarterly, with an 
escutcheon of pretence, for Langford, in right of his wife Frances Skey, 
second dau. and coheir of Richard Langford, Esq. late of Montvale House^ 

CO. Somerset. 

9rnt^. — Quarterly. First and fourth. 1 . Scobell. Arg. three fleurs-de-lis gu. in 
chief, a label of three points azure. 2. Usticke. Gules, three eaglets displayed or, 
between two bendlets arg. 3. RoscROYn^* Per fesse nebulae arg. and sa. three sea- 
dogs counterchangcd. ©n an <K?0tutc$ron of Vrrtencr, LaKgford. Paly of six 
arg. and gu., on a chief azure, a lion passant guardant or. 

CrrstS. — 1. A demi lion arg. holding in the dexter paw a fleur-de-lis gu., the 
sinister paw resting on the wreath, gorged with a label of three points azure, for 
ScoBBLL. 2. An eagle proper, for Usticke. 

a^urrap, of SDanciBifietti, co. TBucfeg. 

Charles Robert Scott Murray, Esq. of Danesfield, J.P. only son and heir of 
the late Charles Scott Murray, Esq. t)f Danesfield, by Augusta Eliza his wife, 
dau. of John Nixon, Esq. and widow of John Bailer, Esq. of East Looe, M.P., 
and grandson by EHza, his wife, sister of Robert Scott, Esq. of Danesfield, of 
Charles Murray, Esq., fourth son of John Murray, Esq. of Philiphaugh, co. 
Selkirk ^M. P. by Eleanor Kis wife, dau. of Lord Basil Hamilton, of Beldoon, 
(see Burkie's Landed Gentry), bears the Antts of Murray, quarterly with those 
of Scott. 

^rntll. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. a bugle horn, ppr. stringed gu. on a 

chief az. three mullets of the first, for Murray. Second and third, or. on a bend az. 

an estoile between two crescents, and on a bordure engr. sa. eight escallops of the 

first, for Scott. 

Crrst. — A demi savage wreathed about the temples and lions holding a bugle 

horn ppr., for Murray. A stag trippant, for Scott. 
^Otto. — Hinc usque supema venabor. 

^artin, of ca3orsbro\ co. |por&. 

WiLtiAM Bennett Martin, Esq. of Worsbro', J.P. Captain in the 1st W. R. 
of Yorkshire Yeomanry, eldest son of the late Henry Martin, Esq. of Colston 
Basset, co. Notts., M.P. for Kinsale, and Master in Chancery, by Maria Eliza- 
beth his wife, elder dau. and coheir of Francis Edmunds, Esq. of Worsbro*, 
J.P., by Hannah Maria, his wife, younger dau. of Joseph Offley, Esq. of Nor- 
ton Hail, CO. Derby, and sister and coheir of Edmund Offley, Esq., (see Burke's 
Landed Gentry), descends maternally from Thomas Edmunds, Esq. of Wors- 
bro'. Secretary to Thomas, Earl of Strafford, and inherited the Edmunds 
estate of Worsbro' wwdcr the will of his tmcle. He bears a shield of nine quar- 
terings • Martin, Edmunds, Wantworth, Car rington, Vincent, Nbwce,Off- 
ley, Clarke, and Bohun, and impales the arms of Chaloner, having married 
in 1831, Augusta Maria, only dau. of the Rev. J. Ghaloner of Newjon Kyme. 
9nn0. — Quarterly. First, arg. two bars gu. for Martht. Second, per chev. embat- 
tled or, and sa. three fleurs-de-lis count crchanged, for Edmunds. Third, sa. a chev. 
between three leopards* faces, or« for Wrntworth. Fourtl), sa. on a bend arg. three 
lozenges of the field, for Cakrington. Fifth, or, on a pile az. three quatrefoils 
arg. pierced, for Vincent. Sixth, sa. two pales arg. a canton enn. for Newce. 
■ Serenth, arg. a cross flory a7. between four Cornish choughs sa. beaked, and 
legged gu. for Offley. Eighth, per fcss dancett^ az.and gu. three greyhounds* 
heads erased or, and collared, for Clarke. Ninth, gu. a crescent enn. within 
an orle of martlets or, for Bohun ; impaling sa. a chev. between three angels' 
heads winged or, for Chaloner. 

Q^tt^H. — First, an ape admiring himself in a looking-glasR, ppr. Second, a ship 
in full sail ppr. surmounted by the /Botto, Votis tunc rclis. 
fBottO. — Sans tache. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxxvi. 



e^abat, of 2jOooiilanii0, co« ®ometm. 

Martin-Ciiarles Mauer, Esq. of Woodlands, Captain in the Army, and Cap- 
tain and Adjutant of the West Somerset Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry, 
only son and heir of the late Daniel Maher, Esq., by Margaret his wife, dau. 
of Charles Byrne, Esq. of Boolybeg, derived from the Byrnes of Tiniogue, 
in the Queen's County (see Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry) — bears 
the arms of the ancient Irish family of O'Meagher, from which he descends, 
and on an escutcheon of pretence the arms of Wintle, in right of his first 
wife, Mary-Anne, dau. and coheir of Henry Francis Wintle, Esq. of Walworth, 
CO. Surrey. He also impales the coat of Mackenzie, in right of his present 
wife, Matilda Pugh, third dau. of Charles Mackenzie, Esq. of the £. I. C. Civil 
Ser\'ice, Bengal, and relict of Capt. Thomas Blair, of the E. I. C. Naval 
Service. 

Slrnitf. — Az. two lions ramp, combattont or, supporting a sword in pale of the 
last, in base two crescents arg. 

Sin £0rutr%ron Ot VfCtenrc. — Per chev. cngr. crm. and az. in chief three mart- 
letts of the last, and in base an escallop arg. within an annulet or, for Wiktle. 

Impaling^MACKBKziB. 

iETtTftt. — An eagle or, perched on its prey. 
fCtottOfS. — Tn pcriculis audax, and Firmitas in codIo. 



^diteitiet, of f^mWtnU to, f^mu 

John Charlks Schreiber, Esq. of Henhurst, a magistrate for the countiefl 
of Kent and Sussex, b eldest son and heir of the late William Schreiber, Esq. 
of Hinchesley Lodge, Hants, Tewin House, Herts, and Henhurst> co. Kent, 
by Mary, his wife, eldest dau. and coheir of James Sewell, Esq. of Alton 
Hall, CO. Suffolk, and grandson of James Charles Schreiber, Esq. of Tewin 
House (son of Carl Schreiber, of an ancient family of Durlach, in Swabia), 
who came over and settled in London, about 1721. (See Burke's Landed 
Gentry,) 

flrmil. — Enn. three griffins' heads erased, yert 

Cre0t. — A dexter arm embowed in armour ppr. garnished or, holding in the hand 
a dagger, the point towards the dexter, also ppr. pomel and hilt gold. 

Motto. — Deutlich und wahr. 



i^ctlp, Capt. ia.il9. 

Benbdictus Marwood Kelly, Esq. Capt. R.N., second son (by Mary, his 
wife, dau. of Arscott Coham, Esq. of Holsworthy), of the late Benedictus 
Marwood Kklly, Esq. of Holsworthy, co. Devon, who was fourth son of 
Arthur Kelly, Esq. of Kelly, co. Devon, who d, 1762, descends from the very 
ancient family of Kelly of Kelly, whose pedigree is given in detail, in the 
Dictionary of the Landed Gentry, and bears a quartered shield for Kelly, 
Crewks, Talbot, and Handcock, with an escutcheon of pretence for Price, 
in right of his wife, Mary-Ann, eldest dau. and coheir of Richard Price, Esq. 
of Highfields Park, co. Sussex. 

The Crewks' quartering was brought in by the marriage of Capt. Kelly's 
ancestor. Sir John Kelly, Knt. of Kelly, living 44 Edward HI. with Elinor, 
dau. und coheir of John Crewes, of Bradstone ; that of Talbot, by the mar- 
riage, temp. Hen. VI., of Thomas Kelly, of Kelly, with Elizabeth, dau. and 
heir of William Talbot^ Esq. of Talbotswyke, co. Devon ; and that of Hand- 
cocK, by the marriage of Arthur Kelly, Esq. of Kelly, who d. in 1712, with 



PLATE Lxxxvi.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

Susanna^ unly dau. and heir of William Handcock^ Esq. of Hendra St. Ger- 
main. 

» • • • 

^tVM. — Arg. a chey. between three billets gu. for Kbllt, quartering Crkwes, 
Talbot, and Hanpcock. On an escutcheon of pretenccf, Price/ 

Crest. — Out of a ducal coronet gu. an ostrich's head arg. holding in the beak a 
horse-shoe or. . • .,':'•. 

^OttO. — In Deo confide nil desperandum. : ;* . 



C^oma0, of WelUeiJO f^omt, co* iRamtor. 

Edward-David Thomas^ Esq. of Welfield Hous^^ M.A., of .W*^^™ College, 
Oxford, a magistrate, and Deputy-Lieutenant of the counties of Bjrecon and 
Radnor, and High Sheriff of the latter in 1843, eldest son and heir of the 
late David Thomas, Esq. of WelBeld, J. P., D. L., and High Sheriff of Rad- 
norshire in 1829, by Catherine, his wife, eldest dau. of William Jones, Esq. of 
Ysbrad-Walter, co. Carmarthen ; grandson by Anne, his second wife, dau. of 
Peter Jones, of Degoedy, co. Carmarthen, of Edward Thomas, Esq. J. P. for 
Brecon (whose younger brother David, of Welfield, Deputy- Paymaster of the 
Forces for many years^ and Esquire to Lord Keith, K.C.B., left his estate of 
Welfield, to his nephew David, aforesaid), represents a younger branch of the 
ancient family of Thomas, Of Llwyn-Madoc, co. Brecon, descended from one 
of the younger lines of the House of Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Ferlys, 
(see Burke's Landed Gentry), and bears the arms of Thomas, with an 
escutcheon of pretence, vnih the ensigns of Go^vland, Pricb, and Green, in 
right of his wife,* Arabella-Emma,' younger of the two daus. and coheiress of 
John-Samuel Gowland, Esq. o£ Cagebrook House, co. Hereford, by Amelia, 
his wife, only surviving child of Francis-Toukyns Price, and Mary, his wife, 
only surviving chili^ of Moore Green, Esq. 

$3mi0.— -Per pale arg. and gu. on a chev. engr. t^o griffins' passant, combattant 
counterchanged, . on a chief wavy az. . three cinqucfoiis argent, lur Thomas. An 
escutcheon of prot^nce^' Quarterly. JPirst and fourth, for Gowlamd. Second, for 
Pricb." Third, for GiBBN. 

' Crat— ^ut of a nhiral crown arg., a dcmi sea-horse gu. ermcd or, charged on 
the shoulder with a cinquefoil arg. and in the paws an anchor erect sa. resting on 
the mural crown; . * . * 

^otto— I bdaw bo'r dioloh. 




^rat)e0«®aU)le, of Penttce, co. Cotntoall, .IBatt. 

Sir Joseph Sawle Graves-Sawle, Bart, of Penrice and Barley House, co. 
Devon, who assumed by Royal Licence, in 1815, the' surname of Sawlr only, 
but, .by another licence dated 18 Nov. 1837 , he resumed the name of Graves 
in^ addition to, and before that of Sawlb, is only son and heir of tliejate Ad- 
miral John Graves, by Elizabeth, his wife, dau. and eventually sole heir of 
Richard Sawle, Esq. 'of Polmangan, co. Cornwall, who was son and heir (by 
Grace, his wife, youngest dau. of Sir Thomas Carew, Knf. of Barley 9buse» 
CO. Devon, and coheir to her brothers, Thomas and Richard,) of Francis 
Sawle, Esq., youngest surviving son of Joseph Sawle, Esq. of Penrice. Fran- 
cis Sawle's elder brother, Joseph Sawlb, Esq. of Penrice, left a dau. Mavly 
Sawle, who d. unm. in 1803, and devised her estates to her kinsman. Sir 
Joseph Sawle Graves-Sawle. 

^rvxn, — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. three falcons' heads erased, within a 
bordure or, for Sawlx. Second and third, gu. an eagle displayed, in chief, a naval 
crown between two bombs or, fired ppr. for Graves. 

dt%t. — An eagle displayed or, supporting with the dexter claw, a staff erect 
ppr. therefrom a ppnnant forked, and dying to the sinister gu. with the inscription 
" Per Sinum CuJiinum." 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxxvii. 



jeotlep. Of Comde ^ptienbam l^alU anti Ctiillington 

^ouse, CO. Somerset. 

Jambs-Thomas B£nedictu8 Notley, Esq. of Combe SydeDham^ and Chilling- 
ton House, elder son and heir of the late Rev. George Notley, by Mary his wife, 
third dau. of James Mar wood, Esq. of Avishays House, co. Somerset, and 
Sutton Court, co. Devon, and coheir to her brother James-Thomas Benedictus 
Marwood, Esq. of Avishays — (see Landed Gentry), bears the quartered coat 
of Notley and Marwood. 

flnn0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, or, on a bend cottised az. three roundles, 
for Nutlet. Second and third, gu. a chev. erm. between tluree goats' heads erased 
arg. for Marwood. 

Crnft. — Out of a mural crown, a lion's head. 

Motto.— Noli mentiri. 



ei^acnamara, of Doolen, co. Clare. 

William Nugent Macnamara, Esq. of Doolen, M.P. for Clare since 1830, 
eldest son and heir of the late Francis Macnamara, Esq. of Doolen, by Jane, 
his wife, dau. of George S tamer, Esq. of Camelly, co. Clare, and Honor, his 
wife, dau. of Christopher O'Brien, Esq. of Inistimon, and Mary, his second 
wife, dau. of Randal Macdonnel, Esq., and grandson of William Macnamara* 
Esq. by Catherine, his wife, dau. and heir of Francis Sarsfield, Esq. of Doolen 
(see Burke's Landed Gentry), represents a branch of the ancient Milesian 
family of Macnamara, of Clare, and descends maternally from the leading 
line of the illustrious House of Thomond and Inchiquin, from the Mac- 
donnels, Earls of Antrim, the O'Neils, Earls of Tyrone, &c. Major Mac- 
namara bears the arms of the ancient sept of Macnamara. 

9rm0. — Gu. a lion rampant arg. in chief two spears' heads, or. 
Crr0t. — A naked arm grasping a scimitar, ppr. 
/Hotto. — Firmitas in coelo. 



Constable^a^artDell, of dBMetin^wxi, co. ^oxk, ano Car^ 

Iat)erocii> co. i)umftie0. 

William Constable-Maxwell, Esq. of Everingham Park, co. York, and 
Carlaverock Castle, co. Dumfries, J. P. and D.L., and High SheriJET of York- 
shire in 1833, eldest son and heir of the late Marmaduke- William Constable 
Maxwell, Esq. of Everingham Park, and Carlaverock Castle, who was eldest 



PLATE Lxxxvii.J HERALDIC ILLUSTRATEONS. 

son and heir (by Lady Winifred Maxwell, his wife, only dau. and heiress of John 
Maxwell, Earl of Nithsdale,) of William Haggerston Constable Esq., second 
son of Sir Camaby Haggerston, Bart, (see Burke's Landed Gentry), bears the 
arms of Maxwell quarterly, with those of Constable and Haggerston. 

9nn0. — Quarterly. First and fonrtli, org. an eagle displayed sa. beaked and 
mcmbercd gu. surmounted of an escutcheon of the first, charged with a saltire of 
the second, and surcharged in the centre with a hedgehog, for Maxwell. Second, 
quarterly, gu. and vaird, over all a bend or, for Constable. Third, az. on a bend 
cottiscd arg. three billets sa. a crescent for cadency, for Haogbrston. 

. Cre0t0. — First, a stag ppr. attired arg. couchant, before a hollybush ppr. Second, 
a ship in full sail or. 

ahipportew.--Two stags. 

motto. — Revirescimus. 



]PotDelI> of Bmttos, co. CatHigan. 

William-Edward Powell, Esq. of Nanteos, Lord Lieutenant, M.P. and 
Colonel-Commandant of the Militia of Cardiganshire, is elder son and heir of 
the late Thomas Powell, Esq. of Nanteos, by Elinor, his wife, eldest dau. of 
Edward Corbet, Esq. of Ynys-y-Maengwyn, and grandson, by Elizabeth, his 
wife, eldest dau. and coheir of Athelstan Owen, Esq. of Rhewsaeson, co. 
Montgomery, of the Rev. William Powell, L.L.D., who was third son (by 
Avarina, his wife, dau. and coheir of Cornelius le Brun, a native of Cologne, 
by Anne, his wife, dau. and coheir of Col. John Jones, of Nanteos), of Wil- 
liam Powell, Esq., and grandson of Sir Thomas Powell, Judge of the King's 
Bench in 1688, who derived in direct descent from Edwin-ap-Grono, Lord of 
Tegaingl, Founder of the XIIL Noble Tribe of North Wales and Powys. Col. 
Powell bears a shield of nine quarterings, and impales in right of his wife, 
Harriott Dell, widow of George Ackers, Esq. of Moreton Hall, the quartered 

coat of HUTTON. 

flmm. — Quarterly. First, arg. on a cross flory engr. sa. between four Cornish 
choughs ppr. on a canton of the second, a cher. between three spears' heads arg. 
Second, arg. a lion passant sa. between three fleurs-de-Iys gu. Third, sa. a chief or. 
Fourth, arg. three boars' heads sa. Fifth, gu. a lion rampant, reg^ardant or. Sixth, 
or, a raven sa. Seventh, per fess sa. and arg. a lion rampant counterchnnged. 
Eighth, az. an arm in armour embowed, holding a red rose leaved, all ppr. Ninth, 
as first. Impaling the quartered coat of Hutton. 

Crr0t — A talbot's head ppr. collared gu. ringed or. 

- fiSlotto. — Inter hastas et hostes. 




Cttan0> of IBapmount, co. Dudlin, ano IRotiingtoton, co. 

.2iQe0tmeatl). 

This ancient family deduces its descent from the renowned Elystan Glodrydd, 
Prince of Fferlys, Founder of the IV. Royal Tribe of Wales. In the six- 
teenth century, two of the family settled in Ireland, Robert Evans, of whose 
line we have to treat, and John Evans> ancestor of the Lords Carbery, in the 
Peerage of Ireland, Evans of Portrane, Evans of Miltown Castle, and Ash 
Hill Towers, &c. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



PLATE LXXXVII.] 



VMtrt WM^nn, whose will dated 20 July, 1604, was proved in the PrerogatiTe 

Court, Dublin, soon afterwards. 



Patrick, who had a son Francis, of 
Philipstown, King's co. whose wUl 
is dated 20 March, 1658. He left an 
only dau. and heiress, Frances. 



1 1 

Michael Evans, Esq. Janet. 

Michael Evans, Esq. 

J 



Hugh Evans, Esq. of Ballinrobe, co. Mayo, left by Catherine, his wife, 
(will dated 24 Feb. and proved 8 May, 1718.) 



Michael, of Ballin- Hugh, of 
robe, had by Ca- Ballin- 
therine, his wife, robe, 
a son, Hugh, who 
d. a minor. 



Francis Evans, 

Esq. of Dublin, 

m. in 1738, d. 2 

June, 1780. 



spMartha, dau. and 

heiress of Joseph 

Sherwood, Esq. 

of Dublin, d. 16 

April, 1774. 



Honor, m. to the 
Rev. Nicholas 
Forster, of S trad- 
bally, Queen's co. 

Anne. 



Nicholas Evans, Esq. of^pMary Thomas, sister of 



Baymount, co. Dublin, 
and Robinstown, co. 
Westmeath, elder son. 



Lieut.-Gen. William 

Thomas, Lieut-Gov. of 

Teignmouth Castle and 

Cliflf Fort 



Alicia, dau. of Wil-^ 
liam Ogle, Esq. of 
Newry, co. Down. 



FrancisEvans,£8q.=p Anna, 



of Baymount and 
Robinstown, m. 
2ndly, Fanny, sis- 
ter of Le Chevalier 

Berthom^ La 
Motte, of the Le- 
gion of Honor, and 
niece of the cele- 
brated Sir Fred- 
erick Flood, d. 
about 1833. 



dau. of 

Hickey, 

Esq. ft., 

licence 

dated 5 

Nov. 

1793. 



I I ; I I ] 

Nicholas, William, ]ate=f= Anne- 
Lieut. Lieut.-Col. Sarah, 
41st Beg. 41st Regt., m. eldest 
d. ttitm., 20 Feb. 1819, dau. of 
2nd son. d. 12 June, the late 
Four other 1843, aged 64, 



'FrancisEvanStEsq. 

of New Forest, 

CO. Westmeath, 

2nd son. 



Harriet, ay=Francis, of 



sons, d. 
young. 



universally 
regretted. 



dau. of 

John 

Locke, 

Esq. of 



William Watham- 
Sloane, stow, d. 
Esq. of in 1821. 
Tobago, 

d. 29 

June, 

1830. 



Monks- 
town, CO. 
Dublin, m. 
2dly, Han- 
nah Anne, 

dan. of 
Mij. John 
Gurdiner, 

of Farm 

Hill, CO. 
Mayo. $.p. 



Esq. now 
of Bay- 
mount 
and Ro- 
binstown. 



^ Mary. Francis, Wil- Mary- Charles William Henry Anne- 
Anne, in Holy liam, Anne. Bidgood, S]oane,of Hill, 6. Sloane, 



i I 



dau. of Orders,of Lient. 

(Jsher London 41st 

Philpot district, Regt., 

William- Upper d.unm. 

son, Esq. Canada, Two 

of Dro- m. Maria, daus.d. 

more, co. dau. of young. 

Cork. Rev. Mr. 
Lewis, of 
Taunton. 



6.14 Feb. Trinity 
1820. College, 
Cam- 
bridge, 
b. 21 Aug. 
1823. 



F'rancis John Marjr. 
Locke, Ogle, Alicia. 
7 Feb. m. 12 m. Annar m. Harriet. 
1825. Nov. Maria Emily 
1842, to Stewart Stew- 
the Rev. art 

P.T. 4s 

Drayton, 
B.A., of 
Shore- 
ham. 



I 



flnn0- — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. three boars' heads couped sa. Second and third, ga. a 
lion rampant, reguardant or, quartering Tudor Trevor, and Sherwood. 

Cmt. — A demi lion rampant reguardant or, holding between his paws a boar's head conped sa. 
^Otto.— Libertas. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxxviii. 



CiQalter0#btlippi8i> of 9I)et0la0nep, co. Catmattben. 

John Walters-Philipps^ Esq. of Aberglasney^ a magistrate for the counties 
of Carmarthen, Cardigan and Pembroke, and High Sheriff of the first named 
shire in 1841, only son and heir of the late Abel-Griffiths Walters, Esq. of 
Perthygerent, by Bridget his wife, sister of Thomas Philipps, Esq. of Aber- 
glasney, and grandson of John Walters, Esq. of Perthygerent, assumed his 
maternal surname and arms of Philipps, in addition to his paternal — on suc- 
ceeding his maternal uncle in Aberglasney, and bears the arms of Philipps, 
quartered with his paternal coat of Waltbbs. 

flrmt. — Quarterly. First and foiirth, or, a lion, ramp., sa., between two fleurs- 
de-lis, in chief, az., a stag's head, erased in base, gu., for Puiupps. Second and 
third, gu., three snakes, interlaced between two spears' heads, erect in chief, and a 
rose in base, arg., barbed and seeded, ppr., for Walters. 

Creft. — First, a lion rampt. sa., holding between the forepaws an escutcheon or, 
thereon three snakes interlaced ppr., the dexter hind-paw on a fleur-de-lis, also or, 
for Phiupps. Second, an eagle displayed erm., the body entwined by two snakes, 
respecting each other, ppr., and holding in each claw a rose, gu., slipped and leaved, 
vert. 

Hlotto. — Fy Nuw a Chymry. 



iSietMCfi, of ^O0terstier0> co. €oxk, ano iBurrane, co. 

Clare. 

William Maunsell Reeves, Esq. of Vostersberg and Burrane, Barrister at 
Law, a magistrate for the county of Tipperary, son of the late Robert Reeves, 
Esq. of Platten, co. Meath, by Mary, his wife, dau. of William Maunsell^ Esq. 
of Limerick, and grandson of Robert Reeves* Esq. by Grace, his wife, dau. 
of Thomas Spaioht, Esq. of Bunratty Lodge and Burrane, co. Clare, descends 
from Robert Reeves, son of a very respectable family in Sussex, who be- 
came a major in the army, called himself Reeves, and settled in Ireland. (See 
Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

flmt0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, or, on a chev. engr. between three escallops 
az., as many eaglets displayed of the first, for Rietis. Second and third, arg. on a 
fess, sa. three pbeons of the first, for Spaioht. 

Crrft.— A dragon's head erased or, collared az. over it an escrol, therein the 
words •* Animum rege.*' 

motto.— Virtute et fidelitate. 



CIiitton> of Ctiotlton ^atl> co. Ctiester. 

Thomas Charlton CLUTTONyEsq. of Chorlton Hall, a Magistrate and Deputy 
Lieutenant for the counties of Chester and Salop, sixth in descent from the 



PLATE Lxxxvni.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

marriage of Roger Clutton, Esq. living temp. HsHi VUI. with Anne^ dau. and 
heir of John Alder8ey9 Esq. of Chorlton^ represents a branch of the very 
ancient family of Clutton, derived from Roger db Clutton, living temp. Hen- 
III. (see Burke's Landed Gentry), and bears a shield quarterly of six : 
Clutton^ Wabren^ Courthyn, Malvosyne^ Parker, and Aldersby. 

9nR0. — Quarterly. First, arg. a chev. erm. cottiaed sa. between three annulets, 
gu. for Glutton. Second, chequy, arg. and sa. a crescent for difference, for War- 
BBN. Third, sa. a sling or handbow between two pheona, arg. for Ccurthtn. 
Fourth, gu. three bends arg., for Malyosynb. Fifth, arg. a chev. sa. between three 
buck's heads cabossed, gu., for Parker. Sixth, gu. on a bend, engr. arg. between 
two cinquefoils, or. three leopards' faces, Tert, for Aldbrsbt. 

Crest — A cock, or. 



jeetDton, of ei^iciileotier, co« Der{ip« 

Robert-Newton Leaper-Nbwton^ Esq. of Mickleover^ formerly High Sheriff 
of Derbyshire, and his brother William Leaper-Newton, Esq. of Leylands, 
CO. Derby, sons of the late John Leapbr^ Esq., who assumed by sign manual, 
15 Dec. 1789> the surname and arms of Newton, on succeeding to the Mick- 
leover estates, descend from the ancient family of Newton^ of which was 
John Newton, Esq. of Horsely, M.P. for Derby, 12 and 17 £dw. IV. (See 
BuRKE*s Landed Gentry), 

flrmi . — Sa. two human shin bones in 'saltire arg. the sinister surmounted of the 
dexter. 

Crett— A naked man, kneeling on his sinister knee, and holding a sword ppr. 
the point downwards, hilt and pomel or. 

Aftotto. — Huic habeo non tibi. 




. <0otitiarti, of CUflfe Pppatu, co. mm. 

Horatio Nelson Goddard, Esq. of Cliffe House and Purton House, both in 
Wiltshire^ M.A. of Brasennose Coll. Oxon. J. P., D. L. and Capt. in the Wilts 
Militia, eldest surviving son and heir of the late Rev. Edward Goddard, of 
Cliffe Pypard, represents the senior branch of the Goddards of Wiltshire, a 
family of great antiquity, and mentioned in Domesday Book (see Dictionary 
of the Landed Gentry). 

fttnif.— Gu. a chev. vair betw. three crescents arg. 

Ctfft — A. stag's head affront^, couped at the neck, gu. attired or. 

fSUfttO. — CerrCUi non serrus. 



L 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate lxxxix. 

*' La dionidad de Duque de Losada, ^s de Italia^ Por Rea]; titulo expedido 
en Carinena, ei 2 de Diciembre de 1759> Consta que teniendo, S.M., muy pre- 
sente el largo y distinguido merito del Duque de Losada^ su sumiller de corps, 
la Nobleza y Esclar cermiento de su Casa y familia^ tubo a bien concederte 
en Barcelona, el 17 de Octubre de dho ano la Grandeza de Espana, de 1** 
clase^ para durante su vida libre de Lanzas y Medecis Ematas." 

The foregoing extract was taken at Madrid from the Archives of the Cham- 
ber of Castille. The celebrated Due ds Losada to whom it refers, was 
chamberlain to Charles, King of Spain, and a Grandee of the First Class, 
He died s. p, and was succeeded in the representation of his ancient and noble 
house by his kinsman Emanuel Baruh db Lousada, Esq. of the Island of 
Jamaica, founder of the English family of the name, whose arms were re- 
cognized and recorded by the Herald's College, London, under patent dated 
in 1777. The present Chief and Representative of this, the English branch, 
lineally descended from the said Emanuel Baruh de Lousada of Jamaica, is 

IsjLAD DB Lousada, Esq. of London, who is a widower with three sons, and 

four daughters, viz. — 
Emanubl, of Brussels. 
Francis, who m. Marianne, dau. of Sir Charles Wolselcy, Bart. 

of Wolseley, co. Stafford, and has issue. 
Herman. 

Emma, m. to Count Vander Burgh, of the Netherlands. 
Sarah, m. to her cousin, J. B. de Lousada, Esq. of London. 
Bertha, m. to Monsieur Gustave de Nicolie. 
Anna-Maria. 

flmtf .— Az. on a cher. between three doTos reguardant arg. wings expanded or, 
two sugar-canes of the last, sprigged Tert. 

Crest.— On a mount yert a dove as in the arms, charged on the neck with a 
bar gemelle or, a sprig in its beak ppr. 

AftottO. — Honneor me guide. 



Q^Ojsetep, of iBuiimoaiB! Patft^ co. ^aIop« 

Walter Mosblby, Esq. of Buildwas Park, co. Salop, High Sheriff of that 
county in 1833, (eldest son and hdr of the late Walter Michael Moseley, Esq. 
of the Mere, hy Anne Elizabeth, his wife, dau. of Richard Sockett, Esq. of 
Worcester, and great great-grandson of Walter Moseley, Esq. of the Mere, 
High Sheriff of Staffordshire, 9 Queen Anne, by Jane his wife, only dau. and 
heiress of William Acton, Esq. third son of Sir Edward Acton, first Baronet 
of Aldenham) descends from the ancient Staffordshire family of Moseley, of 
Moseley, (see Burkb*s Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) bears their arms, quar- 
tered with those of Acton, and impales — in right of his wife Elizabeth Sarah, 
fourth dau. of S. E. Steward, Esq. of Myton House, co. Warwick — the coat 
of Steward. 

9niUI< — Quarterly. First and fourth, sa. a cher. between three mill picks argent, 
for MosELBT. Second and third, gu. two lions passant arg. between nine crosslets 
fitch^ or, for Acton. lMrALiNo---Quarterly, per fesse indented sa. and arg. in the 
first quarter, a lion guardant or, for Steward. 

Cffit— An eagle displayed erm. 

A^ttO.— Honorate diligite tlmete. 




PLATE Lxxxix.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



i)rmeroti, of Ci?ttie0lep ann detidutp^ 

Georgb Ormerod^ of Tyldesley in Lancashire, and of Sedbury Park in Gloa- 
cestershire, Esq. Hon. D.C.L. Oxford, F.R.S. F.S.A. and F.G.S., is repre- 
sentative of this collateral branch of Ormerod of Ormerod, the arms of which 
are given in the engraving annexed, together vnih three of his maternal quar- 
terings j namely — 2, Johnson of Tyldeslev j 3, Wabeinq of Walmersley j 
4, Crompton of Hacking — all of Lancashire. 

The descents of the parent line and of this branch are recorded in the C!ol- 
lege of Arms, and will also be found in the several Histories of Lancashire 
and Cheshire, Dr. Whitaker*s History of Wlialley, and Burke*8 Landed Gen- 
try. Heraldic allowance of the arms was first made in Camden's Visitation 
of Somersetshire in 1623, but they had long been borne prescriptively by the 
eldest line, which, as early as the reign of Henry III., had assumed its name 
from its estate of Ormerodb, a dependency of the Honour of Clithero, within 
which it is situated, being once (as shown by the local as well as Saxon im« 
port of the word) an '* Essart," or " Rode,*' detached from the original forests 
of that wild and mountainous region. 

The Impalement contains a selection, from a numerous series of quarter- 
ings belonging to the wife of the present representative of this branch of the 
family, Sarah, daughter of the late John Latham, M.D. F.R.S. of Bradwall 
Hall, Cheshire, sometime President of the Royal College of Physicians of 
London. 

flmm of ORifBROD. Or, three bans gules, in chiefs a lion passant of the second. 

Crr0t — On a wreath, a wolfs head, barry of four pieces or, and gnles, couped 
at the neck, in the mouth an ostrich feather erect, ppr. 

^ftottO.'^Dedit meliora dabitque. 

QUARTBRINGS in the lUTALBHBNT. 

I. Lathah, of Bradwall, v. ORRBBY,of Alvanlbt, vni. Ctvblioc, fifth Earl 

Cheshire. Justitiary of Chester, Palatinb of Chester. 

II. Mbrb, of Mbrb, Che- 1209. ix. Donb, of Utkinton, 

shire. vi. Dr Montalt, Palatine Hereditary Forester 

III. Booth, Palatine Baron Baron of Hawardrn, of Dblambrb, Che- 

of Dunham- Massrt, and Hereditary Sen- shire. 

Cheshire. eschal of Chester. 

IV. Abdrrnb, of Alpford VII. D' Albini, third Earl 

and Alvanlbt, Che- of Arundal, Heredir 

shire tary Cup-bearer of 

England. 

^U0be0t of i)annin0ton Ptiorp, co. TBtxisi. 

On the demise, in 1748, of Thomas Wood, Esq. of Hillingdon, Middlesex, 
without surviving issue, his maternal nephew and heir, Thomas Hughes, 
afterwards Incumbent of Llanfwrog and Llansilyn, North Wales, substituted, 
as appears,* the arms of Wood for those borne by his father, Myndic Hughes, 

* The arms assigned by the Heralds' College to the Woods' of West Hoadley, correspond 
with those on the dexter of the Rev. T. Hughes' seal, impaling those of his wife, Elizabeth 
Salufbnxy : as also, with those impaled on the seal of the father of the present Archdeacon 
Neweomet of Ruthhi, in right of his wife, Elizabeth Hughes, their daugnter. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate lxxxix. 



last heir of the then alienated estate of Gelle-Ffowler, in Flintshire^ which 
have been continued by his successors} quarterly, as regards the present 
John Hughes of Donnington, Esq. with those of the late Rev. Geo. Watts, 
J. P. for Wilts and Berks, and Richard Head,* Esq. of Newbury -, in right of 
his mother, as surviving heiress of those gentleman^ her father and maternal 
grandfather. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

9rm0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, sa. a fease cotUsed between three lions' 
heads erased arg. Second, az. three arrows, points downwards, or, on a chief of 
the second three Moors' heads couped, side-faced, sa. Third, arg. a chev. ermines 
between three unicorns' heads couped, sa. 

Crest. — A Lion's head erased and crowned.' 

^OttO.— Y GwSr yn Erbyn y Byd. 

* Last male heir of the Burgess of that name, liying at Newbury, in ] 643. Of this family, 
by maternal descent, are the Rev. Dr. Penrose, of Shaw Place, Newbury ; the late Richard 
Budd, M.D. of London ; John Vincent, Esq. of Lincoln's Inn Fields ; his late brother, 
CapL Vincent, R.N., distinguished at the taking of Copenhagen, and others of Berkshire 
extraction. 



^iMtmn* of l^atpetlep IPatfc, co. Duttam. 

George Hutton Wilkinson, Esq. of Harperley Park and Seaton Carew, a 
Deputy Lieutenant for the county of Durham, Recorder of Newcastle upon 
Tyne, and one of H. M. Commissioners for inquiring into Municipal Corpo- 
rations in England and Wales, descends from a family long settled in the 
Palatinate, and bears their arms quartered with those of HpTTON : with an 
escutcheon of pretence in right of his late wife, Elizabeth- Jane, only child 
and heiress of George Pearson, Esq. of Harperley Park, by Betty, his wife, 
eldest dau. of Henry Chaytor, LL J>. Prebendary of Durham. 

Ami. — Az. a fesse erminois between three unicorns passant arg., for Wilkinson, 
quartering Hutton. An Escutchion of prbtincb for Pbakson ; per fesse embattled 
az. and gu. three suns or. 

Cref t. — Out of a mural crown gu. a demi unicorn rampant erminois, armed and 
maned or. 

Motto. — Nee Bege, nee populo, ted utroque. 

John Wilkinson, Esq. of Stockton-upon-Tee8» co. Durham, afterwards 
of Worcester, son of John Wilkinson, of Stockton, merchant. 

T 



1. Hooper- 2. WU- 

John, Capt. liam, of 

in the army, Streath- 

d, unm. am Com- 



3. Thomas npJuio dau. 



mon. 



X 



Wilkinson, 
Esq. of the 
Manor House, 
Slokeslcy, m. 
about 1783. 



Thomas 
Hutton 
WUkin- 
son, Esq. 
of Wals. 
ham le 
Willows. 
CO. Suf- 
folk. 



and coheir 
of George 
Hutton,Esq. 
of Skelton, 
CO. York. 



4. George, l.Doro- 
ofWalsham thea, m. 
le Willows, George 
CO. Suffolk. Curling, 
Esq. 



2. Anne,m. 
to WiUiam 
Hoar, Esq. 
(afterwards 
Harland.) 



Hooper- John Wilkinson, Esq. 
of Walsham Hall, co. Suffolk. 



Heorge^ 
ihtttoii 

ineon, 

Esq. of 
Harpcr- 
leyPark 
CO. Dur 
ham. 



: Ist wife.= 
Eliiabeth- 
Jane, dau. 
and heir 
of George 
Pearson, 
Esq. 



= 2nd wife. 
Catherine- 
Heyden, 
dau. of Ma- 
jor Skene, 
and relic of 
Richard 
Smith, Esq. 



1 1 1 I 1 1 

William Octa- Jane,«==Rich. Dalton, Esq. 

Hutton, Tius-Ro- of Candorcr, Hants. 

in Holy bert, of Margaret,=John Hughes, 

Orders, Eaton Esq. of Donnington Pri- 

of South- Socon, ory, Berks. 

ampton, m. and EUzabeih- Harrisons^Geo. 

m. and has is- Gataker, Esq. of Milden- 

has is- sue. hall. 

sue. Dorothea, d. 





*^^* -f^" 




iiio».ti wincfn ■«\\.«.\'*wi»,wv 



"V 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platb xc. 



a^atsl), late of Bett)er0ole, noto of ^natie a^anot anti 

31t)p Cburcft, CO. Kent. 

Edward Marsh, Esq. of Snave Manor and Ivy Church, only surviving son of 
the late John Marsh, Esq. of those places^ by Sophia, his wife, dau. of John 
Henry Pakenham, Esq. (in direct line from William de Pakenham, ancestor 
of the Earls of Longford) descends from a very ancient family seated at East 
Langdon, near Dover, Kent, in the reign of Edward III. a. d. 1326. (See 
Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) He quarters with his family arms those of 
Nethersole and Saunders — the former in right of the marriage of his an- 
cestor Thomas Marsh, of Brandred, with Anne, dau. of John Nethersole, Esq. 
and sister of Sir Francis Nethersole, of Nethersole House, Womingswould — 
and the latter, in right of the marriage in 1637 of another ancestor, John 
Marsh, Esq. with Anne, dau. and heir of Henry Saunders of Canterbury. Mr. 
Marsh impales the arms of Forlong in right of his wife, Jane Inglis, dau. of 
the late W. Forlong, Esq. of Welshott House, co. Lanark, N. B. 

flrms. — Quarterly, gu. and arg., in the first and fourth quarters a horse's head 
of the second, for Marsh, quartbbino Nethkrsolb and Saundkrs, and impaling 
Forlong. 

Ctfft.— A horse's head arg. ducally collared or, issuing from a mural crown gu. 



laamstiDttiam of fl)lli MIU ®tanli, ann fotmetl]? al0o of 

Centre ([lale> Coomoroen. 

Jambs Ramsbotham, Esq. of Old Hall, a magistrate for the West Riding of 
Yorkshire, eldest son and heir of the late Thomas Ramsbotham, Esq. of 
Centre Vale, by Esther Openshaw, his wife, of the ancient family of Open- 
shaw of Redvales, near Bury, and grandson of John Ramsbotham, Esq. by 
Rebecca his wife, dau. of James Bury, Esq. of Holcolme, (see Burkb's 
Landed Gentry,) bears — 

flrms. — Arg. on a fesse gu. between ten pellets, a fleur-de-lis or. 
Crff t. — Out of a ducal crown or, a ram's head couped ppr. 
IHottO. — Non vi, sed virtute. 

£DiaetU|?. of iKnocft atitiep, co. loutl). 

The ancestors of the great Irish sept of O'Reilly were Princes of East 
Brbfny, and derived their descent from Brian, fourth Milesian King of Con- 
naught. The chief existing lines are the O'Reillys of the Hbath House, 
Queen's County, the O'Rbillys of Knock Abbey, co. Louth, the O^Reillys 
of Baltrasna, CO. Cavan, the O'Reillys of Spain (now represented by Don 
Manuel O'Reilly, Conde d'0*Reilly, Marquis de Buena Vista, Grandee of 
Spain, &c.), the O'Reillys of Belmont, &c. &c. For detailed particulars 
refer to Burke's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry, Supporters have always 



rt^AiK xcO HERALDIC ILIX'STRlTIOXS. 




\fti^ l>omc by this funOj, and tbeir rie^t to iImb adBowiedecrf W tke Col- 
lci;«f 'if Aniif both of EoglaxMl azul Irdaod. 

SnM^— i^urtprly. Fixvt asd faizrtb, Tot. a dexts ^ak£ }^ UsaCi; 
Iff twv Jloru ruBjAot w. Second, irg:. tSirpe loncBoz, " 
Oi^-f ta. 1 hJrd, ar^ on a moimd aa oak trK, 
nti^^orUA hj two liottf ppr. 

0rfifi.— Fint* oat of a dacal coronet or, an oak tfoe <«i& a 
4'^;«n4Hif iu tntnk ppf- Second, an um maikd in 
ilm $auutMrt i^wjfisg a dagger all ppr. 

flVfftrUri^— Two Uo&i, or. 

|H«tl4,— PortUndine et pradcntii. 

De CQinton, of 



:m'\ 



i'.kum UK V/mron, E»<|. now of Cliftoo, co. Gloncefto; % Migncnte and Dt- 
f/uty f /ii^utermnt for the counties of Glamorgan and Somenet, RcpreaentatiTe 
i/l a v«;ry old family founded by RoBxar db Wiittoxa, Lord of die Miaiior of 
Llafi^tjian^ rM;ar Cowbridge, who went into Glam(»ganshire with Robert Fitz- 
bamoH, ri!«umed, by royal tign manual, in 1839, together with the rest of his 
family, th<; ancient surname of De Wintov. His immedi al r ancestors had 
|/f«y|'/ualy and for a lengthened period borne the name of Wilxtx or Wil- 
9k^m%, IHvM Hi/aaa'a Landed Gentry,) 

T\h^* Junior branches arc the Da Wintons of Maeslongfa Castle, co. Radnor, 
rm\ntitktuU*i\ by WAi/rsa dr Winton^ Esq. of that place ; the Ds Wijrroxa of 
MM4'Mji'riv<«fi, ro. Brecon, whose chief is the present John Pabbt db Wnrrosr, 
¥,tui tit MiwMdf.rwttn House, &c., &c. 

SfMS*- V«r i>aU m, and arg. a wyrem vert 

€mt- A wyyttrii ppr. 

Mstls. Hyriar l)y ll(in. 

H^uttitftp of IplatojSta)oitt)> co. Vutbnm, ano (S$mtm, to. 

Borttiumtierlanli. 

'f 'if ON AS Pun VIS, Es(|. of Iluwswortb and Earsdon, Queen's Counsel, and 
lU^ut'Utr of (iruy's Inii, irt Hon and heir of the late Charles Dalston Barker, 
Ktt<|. of Kar«<lon, a Deputy Lieutenant, and a Deputy Vice-Admiral of North- 
uiulHfrliind, wlio tooli the name and arms of Purvis, in compliance with the 
will of his mother's brother, Henry Purvis, Esq. He bears a quartered shield 
Vtinviu, HAHKiiH luid Dalhton, the lujit-named quartering having been brought 
ill by the marriage in 17'iO« of his great-grandfather, Joseph Barker, of Ears- 
don, with Anne, dau. and coheir of Charles Dalston, Esq., grandson of Sir 
C'hriiitopher Dalston, of Acornbank $ for lineage, see Burke's Landed Gentry ; 
and for further infonuatioii, see Hodgson's History of Northumberland, 2d part 
of vol. ii. pp. 191, 194, 353, and 354 ; and Nicholson and Burn*8 History of 
H^'fjttmoreland and Cumberland, vol. i. p. 383, and vol. ii. p. 316, where full 
pedigrees are to be found. 

Unns.— Quarterly. First and fourth, erm. a griffin segrcant, for Purvis. Se- 
cond, per fesse nubuUe az. and or. three martlets counterchanged for Barrrr. 
Third, aig. a chev. engrailed sa. between three daws' heads erased sa. beaked or. 

Crist. — A Saracen's head and bust affront^e ppr. 

AftottO. — Nee temerd nee timid^. 




*. ▼■ 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [iiaik xcii. 



George WHiELDox^Esq. of Spriiigtield House, a Magistrate and Deputy Lieu- 
tenant for Staffordshire, eldest son and heir of the late Thomas Whieldon, Esq* 
of Fenton Hall, co. Stafford, by Sarah, his wife dau. of John Turner, Esq. of 
Cumberland Place, Loudon, (see Burke's Dictionary of tfie Landed Gentry,) 
bears — 

flrms. — Gu. on a chcv. arg. betw. three pears stalked and leaved, or, as many 
crosses couped sa., a chief cnu. charged with a lion passant of the fourth. 

Crest. — On a mount vert betw. two branches of oak ppr. a fcr de moUne fesse- 
ways su., thereon perched a parrot vert, collared gu. holding in the dexter claw a 
pear stalked and leaved, ppr. 

iBotto. — Virtus procstaiitior auro. 



^mit{), of iBtttestoeU }^an> co. iLeicestet. 

William Corbett Smith, Esq. of Bitteswell Hall, late Captain in the King's 
Dragoon Guards, son and heir of the late George Smith, Esq. of Sfietsbury, 
CO. Dorset, Goldicote House, co. Warwick, and Chute House, Wilts, by 
Frances, his wife, dau. and coheir of Thomas Grace Smith, Esq. of Nor- 
manton Hall, co. Leicester, and grandson of Thomas Smith, Esq. of Tot- 
tenham Park, CO. Middlesex, (see Dictionary of Landed Gentry), bears a 
quartered shield, and impales the arms of St. John, in right of his wife, 
Emily Arabella -Jane, youngest dau. of Viscount Bolingbroke. 

flrntfi. — Arg. on :; bon<l bccwcou two unicorns' heads az. three lozenges or, with 
three quuricriiigs, inipiiUng arg. on a chief gu. two mullets or, for St. John. 

Crcbld. — Fir>t, a unicorn's head erased az. ; second, out of a ducal coronet, a 
man's head side-Uced, i«pr., on the head a cap turned up, erm. 

Motto. — Virtus in arduis. 



Cbamberiapne, of a^augeristiurp, co. Gloucester. 

Joseph Chamberlayne Chamberlaynb, Esq. of Maugersbury House, repre- 
sentative of the great and ancient House of Chamberlayne, of Maugersbury, 



PLATE xcii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

derived from John, Comte de Tankerville, of Tankemlle Castle, in Normandy^ 
(see BuRKE*8 Dictionary of the Landed Gentry), bears a shield of eleven qnar- 
terings, and carries an escutcheon of pretence, in right of his wife^ Hxifmi- 
btta-Cathirine, dau. of the Rev. George Fairfax, younger son of Tbomas 
Fairfax, Esq. of Newton-Kyme, co. York. 

Arms. — Quarterly. First and fourth, gu. a cher. betareen three escallops ■». 
Second and third, gu. on a fesse engrailed arg. between three griffins* heads eraseo, 
or, as many crosses patt^e fitch^ sa. Quartering, Chambbrlatnb (oneteitf), Gatis- 
DBN, MoRTEiN, Eknby, St. John, Lovbimb» Abbll, Bbdingfsld, Atbutow and 

HODQBS. 

On an escutcheon of pretence, the arms of Fairfax. 

Crests. — First, out of a ducal coronet an ass's head. Second, a lion's head 

erased, charged with three trefoils. 

fSLoUo. — Virtuti nihil inviam. 



a^agot, of Pentienton H^ount, co. ComtnalL 

John Penberthy Magor, Esq. of Penventon House, co. Cornwall, J.P.f is 
only son of the late Reuben Magor, Esq. of Redruth, by Mary Penberthy, 
his wife, and grandson of John Magor, of the parish of Kenwyn. (See Dictionary 
of the Landed Gentry,) 

Arms. — Gu. an anchor ppr. on a chief arg. three roses. 
Crest. — A greyhound's head erased and collared. 




e^atiotiu of cotlUamtoooti. 

James Maxwell-Grauam, Esq. of Glasgow, representative of the Maxwells 
of Williamwood, and the Maxwells of Marskworth, the former of whom 
derived from a younger son of the ancient family of Pollock (see Dictionary 
of the Landed Gentry) ^ bears a shield quarterly of four. 

Arms. — First and fourth, or, on a chief erm. three escallops of the first, for 
Graham. Second, arg. on a salt ire sa. an annulet ur, stoned az. within a bordure ' 
of the second, for ^lAXWELL, of WilliHmwood. Third, arg. on a saltire sa. a mart- 
let or, irithin a bordure inuecked gu. for Maxwell, of Marksworth. 

CrrstS* — First, an eagle regardant, rising from a rock, all ppr. with the ^Otto 
** Souvenez." Second, A stag's head cabosscd, with the IBottO '* Propero sed 
curo.»» 



\ 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATLONS. 



[PLATK XCIII. 



C{)omUn0on, of iBlencogo, ano ailonti]?, co* Cumtierlanti* 

This family is a branch of the old House of Thomlinson, of Gateshead, 
CO. Durham, recorded in the Visitations of that county. Anthony Thomlin- 
son, Esq. of Gateshead, having left with other issue, a son Edward Thomlin- 
son, who, in 16^24, purchased the Blencogo Hall estate 3 from him in the 
fourth descent was 
John Thomlinson, M.A., of St. John's College, Cam-s=Katherine, 3rd dau. of Jamet 



bridge, b, in 1692, Rector of Glcnficld, Leicestershire, 
and Lord of the Manors of Blencogo and Allonby, 
Cumberland. 



Winstanley, Esq. of Braunston, 
CO. Leicester. 



John Thomlinson, Esq. of=r=Anne, only child of the Rot. William=2nd husband. Dr. John 



Blencogo, Allonby, and Car- 
lisle, CO. Cumberland, d. 
1765. 



Plaskett, Vicar of Brampton and Law, Lord Bp. of El- 
Ganton, by the relict of Thomas phin, brother to the Ist 
Wallace, Esq. of Brampton. Lord Ellenborough. 



1. JohnThomlin-2 
son, Esq. of Blen- 
cogo,Allonby, and 
Bnsco HiU, High 
Sheriff for Cum- 
berland, 1806, d. 
1811, 8.p. 



= Sarah Pene- 
lope, coheiress 
ofHarryLong- 
ford, Esq. of 
Stockport, d. 
1843. 



2. William=f=Anne, dau. of the 



Thomlinson, 
Lt..Col.l8th 
Foot,d.l810. 



1. Anne Thom-s^SamuelWyndowe, 



linson, of Blen- 
cogo,Allonby, and 
Bristo HiU, d. 
1835. 



Esq. Capt. in Ist 
Royal Dragoons, 
d 1829. 



Rev.Wm. Plumbe, 
of Aughton, Lan- 
ca8hire,by his wife, 
a grand daughter of 
Wm.Tatton, Esq. 
of Whitenshaw, 
CO. Chester. 



3. Katherine 
Thomlinson, 
wife of the Rer. 
Oliver Cary, of 
Hazlebrook, co. 
Roscommon. 



2nd. husband. Jas. 
son of Sir Henry 
Jardine, of Edin- 
burgh, d. ] 839. 



2. Cathe-e^John Swann, 



rine • Eliza- 
beth Thom- 
linson, d. 
1840. 



T^^^ 



Esq. of Ask- 
ham, CO. 
York. 



I I I I. 



1st. Oliver Thomlinson- Five other Anne Thomlinson Robert Swann. Four other 
Wyndowe, Esq. of Blen- children. Jardine. children, 

cogo and Allonby. 

flrms. — Per pale arg. and vert, three greyhounds' current, counterchanged. 

Crfft. — A greyhound per pale as in the arms. 

Price, of (©langtoillp, co. Catmattben. 

Joiin-Lloyd Price, Esq. of Glangwiliy, a Magistrate for the counties of Car- 
marthen and Cardigan, and High Sheriff in 1840, eldest son and heir of the 
late Jeremiah Price, Esq. of Glangwiliy, by Jane, his wife, dau. of Daniel 
Lloyd, Esq. of Laques, co. Carmarthen, and grandson of Jeremiah Price, Esq. 
of Radnorshire, by Jane, his wife, elder dau. and eventually sole heiress of 
John Lloyd, Esq. of Glangwiliy, descended from Kodri Mawr, king of all 
Wales (see Burkk's Dictionary of the Landed Gentry, p. 1071), bears a shield 
of six quarterings. 

2lrm0. — Arg. a lion rampant, rcguardant sa. langued gu. with five quartcrings. 

Crwt. — A wolf rampant arg. 

iBottO. — Spes tuii>bimu cuclis. 

l^enneD]?, of IKnoclgra?, co. ItUrftcuDbtigbt 

Alexandkr-Kk.nnkdy Clark-Kknnedy, Esq. of Knockgray, Col.in, the Army 
A.D.C. to the Queen, C.B., and Knight of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order, 
late Lieut. Col. of the 7lh Dnigoon Guards, who is eldest son of the late John 
Clark, Esq. of Nunland, Deputy Lieutenant for Kirkcudbright, by Axxe his 
wife, elder dau. of Alfxandkr Kknnedy, Esq. of Knockgray, assumed under 
the will of his maternal aunt Mary Kennedy, of Knockgray, the surname of 
Kennedy, and bears the arms of that ancient family, with an honourable aug- 
mentation granted to him in commemoration of liis having, when in com- 
mand of the centre squadron of the Royal Drngoons at theBattle of Waterloo, 
captured the Eagle and ( olours of the 105th regiment of French Infantry, 
with his own hand. 

flnn0. — Arg. a cliev. gu. betw. three crosses crosslcts fitch^e sa. in chief a fleur- 
de-lis, and for honourable augmonution, on a canton erm., the Eagle and Colours of 
tlic l()Otli regiment inscribed, '* L'Eoipereur Napoleon au 105me regiment d'infantrie 
do lijoie," and a sword crossed ppr., aboro them the word '* Waterloo." 

Crrst0.— First, a demi Dragoon of the lloyal Dragoons, holding in his dexter 
hand u sword, and in his sinister, an eagle all ppr. Second, a dolphin ppr. 
iBotto.~Avi!,c la flue. 



PLATK XCIII.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



The Rev. Alexaader Kennedy, Minister of Straiton,=r=£lizdbeth, only dau. of John Chal- 



and Chaplain to the Earl of Cassilis, (6. 1663, son 
of John Kennedy, living at Dalmorton, co. Ayr, 
temp. Charles II.)« acquired the estate of Knock- 
gray, d. 1730. 



mers, of Bonnington, by Mar> 
garet Douglas, his wife. Ist wife, 
d. in Jan. 1713. 



John Kennedy, Esq. of Knockgray, b. 1689, m.^y^Griasell, only child of Andrew Ew- 
1714, d. in AprU, 1732, eldest son. art, of Molloch, by his 1st wife. 



Alexander Kennedy, Esq. of Knockgray, =T=Chri8tina, sister of Walter Riddell, Esq. of 
only son, m. 6 Feb. 1 744, d. 28 Aug. 1771. Glen-Riddell, co. Dumfries, d. 18 Feb. 17B4. 

I 1 i 1 > 

Alexander Kennedy, Grizell, Anne Kennedy,=pJohnClarke^Esq. Mary, of Other chil- 

ofKnockgray,6. 18 d. 1758. m, 10 Sept, 

May, 1761, d.ttitm. 1781, d, 4 

23 Nov. 1802. March, 1795. 



of Nunland,D.L. Knockgray, drendin- 
for Kirkcud- d. unm. 13 fants. 
bright, d. 1813. Nov. 1835. 



Col. fliexanlrer lim- 
nelrsdariie itenitf - 

Up, C.B.,K.H., and 
A.D.C. to theQueen, 
late 1st Col.7thDrag. 
Guards, b, 1782, as- 
sumed the surname of 
Kennedy under his 
maternal aunt's will. 



HarrietRcbekah, 
dau. and coheir 
(with her sister 
Margaret Elea- 
nor, wife of her 
cousin, Lt.-Col. 
Purvis, of Dars- 
ham), of John 
Randall, Esq. 



JohnClarke,: 
ofSpeddoch, 
CO. Dum- 
fries, M.D. 
Deputy In- 
spector Gen. 
of army hos- 
pitals, 
F.R.S.E., 
Knt. of the 
Hanoverian 
Guelphic 
Order. 



Mary, 
only 
child 
and 
heir of 
DrGil- 
christ, 
ofSped- 
doch, 
m. 
1824. 



I r 

Walter Jane, 

Clarke, d. 18 
b. 12 Jan. 
June, 1839. 
1787, 
an offi- 
cer in 
E.I.C.S. 
lost in 
the ship 
Hindus- 
ton, U 
June, 
1803. 



Lt,-Col. Christi- 
George anna. 

Max- 
well, of 
Carruc- 

han. 



I 1 — r 

►hn, 6. Alexander-Kennedy, George Mary- 

1 Sept. b, 12 Jan.1821, Lieut Arthur, Anne, 

1817, 46 Regt. Madras N.I. b. 1829, d. Sept. 

Oapt. m. 1842, Harriet, 2nd d. same 1819. 

Royal dau. of the late Archi- year. 

sh Re- bald Ewart, Esq. 

mcnt. E.I.C.S. and has a 

son Alexander, b. 9 

Oct 1843. 



1 \ 1 

Hariett- Mary- Char- 
Sarah. Jane, lotte- 
Anne. 



John Alex- 
Gil- ander 
Christ, Gil- 
&.1880. Christ, 
6.1831. 
<;.1842. 



I T 



1 



Mary- Mary. William 

Anne, Anne, Maxwell, 

</.1828. <;.1843. Esq. of 

Carruc- 
han, only surviving son, 
(heir male to the Earldom 
of Nithsdale, which title 
was attainted in the per- 
son of William, 5th Earl, 
inl715^, m. 2 Sept 1839, 
Janet, dau. of J. Berries 
Maxwell, Esq.of Munches. 



Stetoatt, of TBinnp, co* ILmlitbgoto* 




John Stewart, Esq. of Binny, a Magistrate, Deputy-Lieutenant and Con- 
vener of the county, son of the late Robert Stewart, Esq. of Binny, by 
Magdalen, his wife, dau. of Sir James Dalzell, Bart, of Binns, represents a 
branch of the Royal House of Stewart, derived from Sir Robert Stewart, of 
Torbolton, second son of Walter, third Lord High Steward of Scotland 
(See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

Armtf. — Or, a bend gu. charged with a mullet in chief of the first, over all a fess 
chequy az. nnd arg. 

Ctfftt. — A dexter hand holding a plumb-rule, ppr. 

AftottO.— Candide. 

^tepbeniB, of Cregenna Ca0tle> co. Cotntoall. 

Henry Lewis Stephens, Esq. of Tregenna Castle, High Sheriff of Corn- 
wall, in 1844, son of the late Samuel Stephens, Esq. of Tregenna Castle, M.P. 
for St. Ives, by Betty, his wife, only child and heir of Samuel Wallis, Esq. 
Commissioner R.N., descends from a family which has possessed estates in 
Corawall, for fiill four centuries, and to which arms were granted temp. 
Henry VHL 

flmif. — Per pale gu. and vert, a fesse indented arg. guttle dc sang, between three 
eagles displayed or. 

Ct9$L — A lion rampant arg. guttle de sang. 

IKnttO. — Virtutia amore. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate xciv. 



^altonD, of CalDet IParIt co. lanarft. 

Theodore Walrond, Esq. of Colder Park^ only son, by Elizabeth, his wife, 
dau. of John Day, Esq. of the late Charles Wills Walrond, Esq. who was third 
son of Main Swete Widrond, Esq. of Anti^a, by Sarah, his wife, sister and 
heir of William Lyons, Esq. of the same island^ and grandson of Theodore 
Walrond, Esq. also of Antigua, by Elizabeth, his first wife, dau. of Thomas 
Wills, Esq. of Wivelscombe, descends from a branch of the very ancient 
Devonshire family of Walrond, of Bradfield, seated at Bradfield or Bradfelle, 
in uninterrupted male succession, since the reign of Henry II. ; and bears a 
shield of twenty quarterings. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

SInnf .— Arg. three bulla* heads cabossed sa. armed or, quartering. 
Creit. — An heraldic tiger sejeant sa. pellet^. 
motto.— Paix et peu. 



0@aitlanli, of SDuntirennan, I^irftcutitingbt 

Thomas Maitland, Esq. of Dundrennan, a member of the Scottish bar, and 
Solicitor-General for Scotland, in the administration of Lord Melbourne, in 
1840-1, derives from William Maitland, a distinguished Scottish Ecclesiastic 
during the latter part of the seventeenth century, and a lineal descendant of 
an early branch of the Lauderdale family, who acquired considerable estates 
in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright. Mr. Maitland bears the arms of the Noble 
House of Lauderdale, with a quartering, as proprietor of the Barony of Dun- 
drennan, on which stands the Abbey of Dundrennan, which afforded a tem- 
porary shelter to Mnry, Queen of Scots, in her flight from the disastrous field 
of Langside. (See Burke's Landed Gentry), 

flnnf . — Quarterly : first and fourth, or, a lion ramp, couped at all the joints, 
within a double treasure flory countt-iflory gu. a border, embattled of the last, for 
Maitland ; second and third, arg. the ruins of an old abbey on a piece of ground, 
all ppr. 

Crrftt. — A domi monk, vested grey, holding in his dexter hand a crucifix arg., 
and in his sinister, a ro^tary ppr. 

IBottO. — Esse quani Tiiieri. 



@tcVDarti> of Ji3orfolit« 

Timothy Steward, Esq. of Ileigham Lodge, Norwich, eldest son of Timothy 
Steward, Esq. of Great Yarmouth, by Mary, his wife, dau. of John Fowler, 
Esq. of the same place, descends from Nicholas Steward, of Wells, who d, 
about the year 15^0, and who, according to Noble's Memoirs of the House 



PLATE XCIV.] 



HEILVLDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



of Cromwell, deri\ cd from Sir John Steward, who accompanied Prince James 
of Scotland to'this country. 

9rm0.'-QuarleTly : or and arg.,on a fess az. three fleurs-de-lis gold ; in the first and 
fourth quarters a fess chequy arg. and az. ; in the second and third, a lion ramp, 
gu. dcbruised by a bend, or. 

Crrdt. — On a mount, rert, "within a crown yallcry or, a lion ramp. ga. armed and 
large d az. 

IBottO. — Proesto et persto. 



TiM«iTiiY Stewart or Steward, of Wells, co.^Hannah, dau. of Christo- 
Xorfulk, afterwards of Great Yarmouth, b, pher Harbord, of Yar- 
1696, d. 1769. mouth, d. 1770. 



Timothy Steward, of Great Yar-=^Mary, dan. of Ambrose Palmer, of 
mouth, b, 1733, d. 1793. j Yarmouth, d. 1829, aged 86. 

William Steward, TiMOTHT=y=Mary, dau. Harriot, dan.=pAmbrosc Harbord^ Sarah, 



of Yarmouth, Jus- Steward, 
tice of Peace for of Yar- 
Norfolk, b. 1760, mouth, b. 
d. 1841, m. Anne, 1762, d. 
dau. of J. Browne, 1836. 
of Halrergate, co. 
Norfolk, and had 
issue, six children. 



of John of William 
Fowler, of Heath, of 
Yarmouth, Hemblingtoa 



d. 1837, 
aged 72. 



Hall, CO. Nor- 
folk, b. 1771. 
d. 1807. 



Steward, of Stoke 
Park, CO. Suffolk, 
High Sheriff in 
1822, for Suffolk, 
a Magistrate and 
Deputy Lieut. 



dau. of J. 
Bleadon, 
of Stoke 
Hall. CO. 
Suffolk. 



Ambrose 
Steward, 
Rector of 
Warden, 
CO. Kent, 
b, 1797. 



Harriot, m. 
to her cou- 
sin Charles 
Stewart,; 
Esq. of 
Blundeston 
House. 



Frances, m. to 
O.N Segrare, 
Esq. 6th Dra- 
goons. 
Kate, m. to 
Alexander 
Rolls,Esq. 
4th Dragoon 
Guards. 



~1 1 I 

Louisa- Cha8.Wm. 

Maria, m. Henry 
Nicholas Steward, 
Power, 6. in 1816, 
Esq. of m. Anne, 
Brighton, dau. of 

Col. Natt- 
all Greene, 
of Kilmanahan 
Castle, CO. Water- 
ford, and has issue. 



Cfmotds^trtD- 
atU of Nor- 
wich, b, 1795, 
m. Lucy, dau. 
and heiress of 
John Tuthill, 
of Norwich, 
has issue, six 
children. 



Thomas Fow- 
ler Stew^ard, of 
Yarmouth, b, 
1796, m. Isabel 
Russcl, dau. of 
Robt. Travers, 
of Cork, Ire- 
land. 



Charles = 
Steward, 
of Blun- 
deston 
House, 
6. Feb. 16, 
1798. 



. . , , 

-ilis cousin Arthur George Mary- Amelia, 
Harriot, Steward, Steward, Anna. <f. 1842. 
dau. of A. of Yar- Hon. £. I. 
H. Stew- mouth, b, Compa- 
ard, of 1800, m. ny's Ser- 
Stoke Mary, dau. vice, 6. 

Park. of Thomas 1805. 

Burton. 



Charles-John Steward, 6. 1839. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platb xcv. 

i>'a^aUe?> of tbz tonstt co. ^a^o* 

Thr O'lMallcys nre among the oldest families in Mayo, and their Prince reigned 
as sovereign over a great extent of territory on the western coast of Irehmd. 
They were possessed of great maritime power, and still enjoy a traditionary 
reputation as the most persevering and successful opponents of the Danes. 
(See Burkk's Landed Gvntrij.) The late Cdarlks O'Mali.kv, Esq. of the 
Lodge, son of George O' Mai ley, Esq. of Prospect House, co. Galway, and Snug- 
borough, CO. Mayo, m. in 1/95, Jane eldest dau. and coheir of Capt. John St. 
Clair, of the 17th Light Dragoons, and had issue — 

I. CiiARLF.8 O'M ALLEY, Esq. of thc Lodge, b. 1798, one of Her Majesty's 
Counsel in Ireland, tn. Mary only dau. of Anthony Denny, Esq. of eo. 
Fernianapli, lato M. P. for Tralee, and has i<suc a son, Frederic-Wil- 
liam, b. 183G. and a dau. Frances Wilhclmina. 
II. St. Clair O'Mallry, Esq. b. 22 Dec. 1800, J. P. m. in Aug. 1830, 
Marcella, eld. dau. of Patrick Boyd, Esq. of Mount Gordon, co. Mayo, 
and has a son, William-Boyd, b. in Dec. 18.32, and a dau. Mar}'. 

III. (lEORGK BlllMINUlIAM O'Mallky, E>q. b. 1802, d. li:<2i). 

IV. Pethr-Frkdhiuck O'Mallky, Esq. b. 9 March, 1804, Barrister at Law 
(at thc English bar) m. 20 Auir. 183U, Emily, second dau. of William 
liodwell, Esq. of Ipswich, and has surviving issue, Edward-Loughlin, 
b. 17 Feb. J 842; George-Hunlor, b. in April, 1811. 

I. Margaret- Jank-St.-Clair, d. 12 July, 1819. 

flrmf .— Or, a boar, passant, gu. 
Cfrtt. — A horse, in full speed, arg. 
Motto. — Terra mariquc potens. 

I^a0ler, of aiDingtioume, co. ^usser. 

Richard Hasler, Esq. of Aldinghourne, descends from a family long resident 
in Sussex. He married in 1830. a dau. of the late Honourable William 
Wyndham^ and has issue. 

flntif . — Per chcT. gu. and sa. three lions ramp. arg. each charged on the shoulder 
with a cross pattee az. 

(Emt. — A squirrel, sejant, cracking a nut, ppr. collared gcmel az. between two 
branches of palm. 

fClottO. — Qui nucleum vult^ nucem frangat. 

lLot)eDa?> of ^iUtamscote, co. ^xtoxn, 

John Lo^eday, Esq. of Williamscote, a magistrate for the counties of Oxford 
and Warwick, and a Deputy Lieutenant for the former, for which he served 
as High SherifTin 1841, eldest son and heir of the late John Lovoday, Esq. by 
Anne, his wife, dau. and heiress of William Taylor Loder,Esq. of Williamscote, 
grandson by his first wife, Anna-Maria, dau. of William Goodwin, Esq. of 
Arlescote, co. Warwick, of .Tohn Loveday, Esq. (who w. secondly, in 1745, 
Dorothy, dau. of Harington IJagshaw, Esq., and thirdly, in 1756, Penelope, 
dau. of Arthur Forrest, Escj. of the Island of Jamaica, see Burkk's Landed 
Gentry f) bears the arms of Lovkday, quartered with those of Loder. 

iSlrntfi. — Quarterly : first and fourth, per pale indented, arg. and sa. an eagle 
displayed with two hfads, on the breast an escallop, all counterchanged, armed, 
membered and ducally gorged, or, for Lovepay ; second and third, erm. on a chief 
indented sa. three escallops arg. for.LoDKR. 

Crwt. — An eagle displayed with two heads, as in the arms. 

Motto. — Cum primA luce. 

a23bite, of jpcotiiU co* Somerset 

William Lambert White, Esq. of Yeovil, Lieut.-Col. of the East Somerset 
Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry, until its dissolution in 1828, eldest son of 
the late William White, Esq., by Nelly, his wife, one of thc daus. and even- 



PLATK XCV.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



tual coheirs of John Mervin, Esq., bears a shield quarterly : First and fourth^ 
White ; second, Mervin ; third, La&ibert ; and impales, in right of his wife, 
Anne, dau. of Moulton Messiter, Esq. of Wincanton, the arms of Messiter. 

^I>U10. — Quarterly. First and fourth, per pale or, and az. on a fesse engr. arg. 
between tliree greyhounds, courant counterchanged, a fleur-de-lis between two 
lozenges gu., for Whitb. Second, arg. a demi lion rampant sa. charged on the 
shoulder with a fleur-de-lis or, for Mervin. Third, arg. on a bend engr. between 
two lions rampant sa. three annulets or, for Lambert. Impaling — Az. a chev. 
chequy betwceu three garbs or, on a canton vert, a cornucopia ppr. for Messiter. 

Creftt. — An arm embowed, habited or, charged with two bends wavy gu. holding 
in the hand a stork by the legs, wings expanded ppr., beaked and legged of the first. 

IBottO. — Do Dieu tout. 

George LuDLOW=pEdith, dau. of Lord Windsor. 

r-rn r"* i i i i 

Bridget, dau. and heir of =i=Sir Edmund Ludlow, rf. be-=y= Margaret Manning, relict of 
Robert Coker, Ist wife. fore 16G6. Thos. Howard, Viscount Bin- 

don, 3rd son of Thos. Duke of 
Noifolk, 2nd wife. 



I I I I 



T-y 



T~l 



nr 



Henry Ludlow,=T=L<Etitia, dau. of Lord De 
b. 1587. I la Warre. 



I t I I I I I I 



Edmund Ludlow, =j=Elizabeth Penny. 

d. 1644. 

, 

Elizabeth Ludlow,— Sir Hen. Coker, 

Knt., b. 1620, 
d. 1681. 



Sir Henry Ludlow, rf.=r=Eli*abeth ... . 
in 1643. 

' i I I I : I 



only chUd,rf. 1716. 



\~T~T 



I i r 



TT 



Edmund Ludlow, " the Ilepub-=Elizabcth- 
lican," h. 1620, d. 1693, a.p, Thomas. 

Thomas Lambert. E3q.=j=Elcanor, dau. of 

Edward Topp, 
Esq. 

1 I I I I 



of Boy ton, d. 1602. 



j i—r 

Jane Coker, ft.=T=Rev. Thomas Lambert, M.A., 



12 Oct 1670. 



r 



T-r 



Rector of Boyton and Sher- 
ington. 



"I 



EUzabclh, b. 1796, «/.=pUriah Messiter. =pAnn Hus- John Mervin, fr.^Eleanor 'Lambert, 
1722. I band. 1704, rf. 1765. 6. 1704, rf. 1766. 

' 1 [ I I 1 



T 



TT 



Moulton Messiter, d, 1786.— Mary Ring. William White, 6. 1726,-f=Nelly Mervin, b. 1737, 

(/. 1810. I £/. 1816. 



r-T 



i r 



[ 



I I I I I I 



Anne Messiter,=f=512ainiam llamftrrt Wi'^iXt, Esq. 
6.1761. I 

LoDlitia- Messiter. 



COing^fielti, of SDnsIoto, co. @alop. 

John Wing field, Esq. of Onslow Hall, Lieut. Col. in the anny, and High 
Sheriff of Shropshire, in 1824, eldest son and heir of the late Rowland Wing- 
field, Esq. of Preston Brockhurst, (who purchased the estates of Onslow,) by 
Mary, his wife, sixth dau. of Sir^Walter Wagstaffe Bagot, Bart, of Blithfield, 
grandson of Borlase Wingfield, Esq. of Preston Brockhurst, by Ellen, his 
wife, sister of Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., and great-grandson of Tliomas Wing- 
field, Esq. of the same place. High Sheriff of Salop, in 1692, by Anne, his 
wife, dau. and coheir of William Borlase, Esq. of Great Marlow, Bucks, de- 
rives from a junior branch of the very ancient and knightly family of Wing- 
field, of Lethcriiigham, co. Suffolk. (See Landed Genlrij), 

Srmfl.— <^iartcrly. First, arp. on a bend. pu. cottised sa., three pairs of wings 
conjoined of the first, for Wingfirld. Second, quarterly : or, and sa. for Bovilb. 
Third, quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a lion rampant or : second and third, chequy 
or and nz. ; fourth, erm. on a bend sa. two hands and arms issuing out of the 
clouds at the elbows, all ppr. rending a horse-shoe or. 

Crest. — A high bonnet or cap, per pale sa. and arg. banded gu. betw. two wings 
displayed, all guttle counterch«uigei). 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [i"i.ate xcv. 

SD'^allc^, of tbt iLoDge, co. ^apo. 

The O'lNIalleys are among the oldest families in Mayo, and their Prince reigned 
as sovereign over a great extent of territory on the western coast of Ireland. 
They were possessed of great maritime power, and still enjoy a traditionary 
reputation as the most persevering and successful opponents of the Danes. 
(8ee Burkb's Lauded Gentry.) The late Charles O'Malley, Esq. of the 
Lodge, son of George O'Malley, Esq. of Prospect House, co. Gal way, and 
Snugborough, co. ]SIayo, lu. in 1795, Jane, eldest dau. and coheir of Captain 
John St. Clair, of the 17th Light Dragoons, and had issue: — 

I. Charles O'Mallky, Esq. of the Lodge, h. 1798, one of Her Majesty's 
Counsel in IrcluiHi. m. Mary, only dau. of Anthony Denny, Esq. of co. 
FcrmanaRh, late M.l*. for Tralee, and has issue, a son, Frederick- Wil- 
liam, b. 18^6. and a dau. Frances- Wilhelmina. 
II. St. Clair O'xMalley, Esq. 6. 22 Dec. 1800, J. P., m. in Aug. laiO, 
Marct'lla, eldest dau. of Patrick Boyd, Esq. of Mount Gordon, co. Mayo, 
and haji a son, William- Boyd, b. in Dec. 1832, and a dau. Mary. 

III. Gkorge Birmingham O'Mallby, Esq. 6. 1802, (i. 1829. 

IV. Pktkr-Frbdbrick O'Mallby, Esq. b. 9 March, 1801. Barrister-at-Law 
(at the English bar) m. 20 Aug. 1839, Emily, second dau. of William 
Rod well, Esq. of Ipswich, and has surviving issue, Edward-Loughlin, 
6. i; Feb. 1842; George- Hunter, 6. in April. 1844. 

I. Maroarbt-Janb-St.-Clair, (i. 12 July, 1819. 
flrms. — Or, a boar passant, gu. 
CTrwt. — A horse rampant, arg. 
IBottO. — Terra mariquc potcns. 

^asler> of 9It)ingtioutne> co. ^usser. 

Richard Uasi.kr, Esq. of Aldingbourne, deseends from a family long resident 
in Sussex. He m. in 1830, a dau. of the late Honourable William Wyndham, 
and has issue. 

flrntfi. — Per chev. gu. and sa. three lions ramp, arg., eaeh ciiarged on the shoulder 
with a cross patt^e az. 

<!rrf9t. — A squirrel, sejant, cracking a nut, ppr. collared gemel az. between two 
branches of palm. 

IBottO.— Qui nucleum vult, nucem frangat. 

lotieDa)?, of COiUtamscote, co. SDrforD. 

John Lovbday, Esq. of Williamscote, M.A., of Brazenose College, Oxford, 
a Magistrate for the counties of Oxford and Warwick, and Deputy-Lieutenant 
for the former shire, for which he served the ofHce of High SherijflP, in 1841, 
descends from a family seated in Warwickshire, in the reign of Elizabeth, and 
bears the arms of Lovbday, quartered with those of Lodbr, in right of his mo- 
ther, Anne, only dau. and heiress of Wm. Taylor Loder, Esq. of Williamscote. 
2lrm0.— Quarterly. First and fourth, per pale indented arg. and sa. an eagle dis- 
played with two heads, on the breast an escallop, all counterchanged, armed, mem- 
bered, and ducally gorged or, fur Loved at. Second and third, erm. on a chief 
indented sa. three escallops arg., for Lodbr. 
CTrrst. — An eagle displayed with two heads, as in the arms. 

fClottO. — Cum primflL luce. 

John Loybdat, <rf Wolnty, eo. Warwick. 

r 
laabel Allen, Ut wife. <f.«.p.=TnoMAa Lotbdat, of Lo»da n ,- ,^ MarT. dau. of Michael North, 
LetiUa, dau. of Sir (nement d. 13 Dec. IdSl, ag«d 63. | '^^ London, 3rd wife,rf. circa 

Throipnorton, of Hakeley, co. I 17^> 

Warwick, Bart. Sad wife. I 

TnoMAB LovBDAT, of Fe«neac==Sarah, dau. of WUllam Lethienllier, of Clapham, Surrey, who waa areat 
Manor, co. Bcrka, m. in irosTT grandaon of John Lalhieulliar, of VaUancine, m Renault, martyred for 
d, June, 1780, aged 40. | religion there, in the tint 0* the Duk« of Alra'a peraecuUona. 

Anna Maria, daa.==:JouN Lovbd a v, of=Dorothy, dau. of Har.ss=Pen«lop«, dau. of Martha.w. the Iter, 

of William Good. Caveraham.co.Oxford, rington Bagahaw, of [ Arthur Forreat, of VV illiain Gibion, 

^ ' MA., of Mairdalene Bromley, co. Kent, Jamaica, m. 81 aon of F^mund 

College. Oxford, b. ft m. 36 Feb. 1744.6. d. Sept. I75«, d, 18 Gibaon, Biahop of 

Feb. 17J0 II, rf. 16 18Aug. 17»4. xf-'w- »801. London. 

May. I78g,aged78. 



win, of Arleacote, 
CO. Warwick, m. 
3 8rpt. 1739. d. 
19 Not. 1743. 



JoBN LovBOAT. of Williamtcote. co. Oxford, D.C.L.,=Ai«kb. dan. and helreaa of W illiam 
J.P. for coa. Oxford and Warwick, b. 28 Nov. 1748, j TATtoa Lodbb, Eaq. of WiUiamacote, 
d. 4 March, I809. ( w. 7 Oct. 1777. d, 89 Jm. »83 7. 

Jonw LovB- The Her. WU- The Re?.Thoma8:~sMar7, only iur- Arthur LoTeda^,=pElixabeth, dau. Anne, 
DAT, Eaq. of Uam Taylor Loveday, B.D.,; " -~-- 

Williama- Loveday. of Rector of Eaat 

cote, M. A. Arleacote, co. lUIey, co. Berka, ...... .»«...^w..,i« . 

and J. P. Warwick. m. 88 July. 1631.^ ^of St. Danda. I6 Oct. 1826. xJ^Chichealer. 



TiTtni dan. of of Hampatead, 
Ralph Chorum, and I>octor*8 
M.A. ArehdMfeQO Commona, m. 



of the Rer.OflO. living 
WelU, B.C.L , in 
Prebendary of 1846 



PLATE xcv.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

^Wt, Of l^eotitl, CO. ^met0et. 

William Lambert White, Esq. of Yeovil, Lieut.-Col. of the East Somerset 
Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry, until its dissolution in 1828, eldest son of 
the late William White, Esq., by Nelly, his wife, one of the dans, and even- 
tual coheirs of John M£RViN,Esq., bears a shield quarterly : First and fourth. 
White ; second, Mervin ; third, LamIbert ; and impales, in right of his wife, 
Anne, dau. of Moulton Messiter, Esq. of Wincanton, the arms of Mssbiter. 

^XXM* — Quarterly. First and fourth, per pale or, and az. on a fease engr. arg*. 
between three greyhounds, courant counterchanged, a fleur-de-lis between two 
lozeoffes gu., for Wuitb. Second, arg. a demi lion rampant sa. charged on the 
shoulder with a fleur-de-lis or, for Mbrvin. Third, arg. on a bend engr. between 
two lions rampant sa. three annulets, or, for Lambbrt. Impalikg—- Az. a cher. 
ch^quy between three garbs or, on a canton yert, a cornucopia ppr., for MESsrm. 

Ctftt. — An arm embowed, habited or, charged with two bends wayy gu. holding 
in the hand a stork by the legs, wings expanded ppr., beaked and legged of the first. 

JttottO. — De Dieu tout. 

Gborgb LuDLOw.^pEdith, dau. of Lord Windsor. 

r—r-T T"^ 1 I I i 



Bridget, dau. and heir of=r=Sir Edmund Ludlow, d. be-=T=Margaret Manning, relict of Thos. 



Robert Coker, 1st wife. 



I I I I 



fore 1G66. 



I I I I I r"T 



Howard, Viscount Bindon, 3rd son 
of Thos. Duke of Norfolk, 2nd wife. 



Henry Ludlow,^Loetitia, dau. of Lord Sir Henry Ludlow, d.=pElizabeth.. .. 

6. 1687. De la Warre. in 1643. 

I I I I I I I I I > I [ 1 1 I 



Edmund Ludlow,^EKzabelh Penny. Edmund Ludlow, "the Republican,"=Elizabeth 

d. 1644. b. 1620, d. 1693, s.p, Thomaa. 

1 

Elizabeth Ludlow,=T=Sir Henry Coker, Thomas Lambert, Esq.^Eleanor, dau. of Ed- 

only child, d, 1716. Knt., b. 1620, d, 1681 . of Boyton, d. 1692. ward Topp, Esq. 

1 I I I ; I I I I I 1 ri II I I \ 



I I 1 



Jane Coker, d.^Rey. Thos. Lambert, M.A., Rec- 

12 Oct. 1670. I tor of Boyton and Sherington. 

. . ^^,.— p-pJ , 

Elizabeth, b, 1696, d=Uriah Mcssiter.=f=Ann Hus- John Mervin, 5.s^Eleanor Lambert, 
1722. band. 1704, d. 1765. I b. 1704, d. 1766. 

r-rn ' '' » i i i i i i i 



Moulton Messiter, d. 1796=f=Mary Ring. William White, b. 1726=pNelIy Mervin, b. 1737, 

d. 1810 d. 1816. 

I I I I J I I I I I I j 1 1 I I » I 

Anne Mcssiter,=f413iinuim tUmttert <[l®]^tte, Esq. 
b, 1761. I 

Lob titia- Messiter. 

COingaeln, of SDngloto, co« @alop« 

John Winofibld, Esq. of Onslow Hall, Lieut.-Col. in the army, and High 
Sheriff of Shropshire, in 1824, eldest son and heir of the late Rowland Wing- 
field^ Esq. of Preston Brockhurst, (who purchased the estates of Onslow,) by 
Mary, his wife, sixth dau. of Sir Walter Wagstaffe Bagot, Bart, of Blithfield, 
grandson of Borlase Wingfield, Esq. of Preston Brockhurst, by EUen, his 
wife, sister of Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., and great-grandson of Thomas Wing- 
field, Esq. of the same place, High Sheriff of Salop, in 1692, by Anne, bis 
wife, dau. and coheir of William Borlase, Esq. of Great Marlow, Bucks, de- 
rives from a junior branch of the very ancient and knightly family of Wing- 
field, of Letheringham, co. Suffolk. (See Landed Gentry,) 

2lnn0. — Quarterly. First, arg. on a bend gu. cottised sa., three pairs of wings 
conjoined of the first, for Wingfield. Second, quarterly : or, and sa. for Bovilb. 
Third, quarterly, first and fourth, gu. a lion rampant or; second and third, chequy 
or, and az. ; fourth, erm. on a bend sa. two hands and arms issuing out of the 
clouds at the elbows, all ppr. rending a horse-shoe or. 

Cve0t. — A high bonnet or cap, per pale sa. and arg. banded gu. belw. two wings 
displayed, all guttee counterchangod. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate xcvi. 



iLettit$> of (S^Ufacl), CO. Carmattfien. 

David Jones Lewis, Esq. of Gilfach^ eldest son and heir of the late Lewis 
Lewis, Esq. of Panthowcl, by Mary, liis wife, dau. of Henry Jones, Esq. of 
Brunant Cayo, and great-grandson of Lewis David, of Panthowel in Lland- 
dansaint, son of David Howell, of Penyrhin, co. Carmarthen, descends from 
Owen Gethin, grandson of Cradoc ap GwiUym, of Glyntawe, to whom King 
John gave for arms — " Az. a buck tripping arg. bearing a royal crown between 
his horns.*' (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

2lnn0. — Quarterly : first and fourth, az. a back tripping^, arg. bearing a royal 
crown betw. his horns ; second and third, az. a chev. bctw. three eagles' heads 
erased, or. 

Crr0t0. — A buck trippant, and an eagle's head, as in the arms. 

iBottO.— Byddwch Gyfiawn ac nag ofnwych (be just and fear not.) 



IPeel, of accrington, co. iLanca0ter, atiD flavMmtte, 

Jonathan Peel, Esq. of Accrington House, and Knowlmerc, of the Middle 
Temple, Barrister at Law, eldest son and heir of the late Robert Peel, Esq. 
of Accrington House, by Anne, his wife, dau. of VVilliam Peel, Esq. of Peele 
Fold, and Church Bank, and grandson of Jonathan Peel, Esq. of Accrington 
House, son of Robert Peel, Esq. of Peele Fold, represents the Accrington 
branch of the family of Peel. (See Burke's Landed Gentry). 

flntl0. — Arg. three sheayes of as many arrows ppr. banded gu. on a chief ai. a bee 
Tolant or. 

Crfit. — A dcmi lion raropt. argt gorged with a collar az. charged with three 
bezants, holding bctw. the paws a shuttle, or. 

iCIOttO . — Industrie. 
Robert Peel, of Peele-Fold, eldest son of William=p Elizabeth, dau. of 



Peele, of Peele-Fold, Oswaidtwistle, by Anne, his 
wife, dau. of Laurence Walmcsley, Esq. of Upper 
Darwcnt, and 5th in descent from Robert Peele 
of Hole House, co. Lancaster, who d. in 1608. 



Edmund Haworth, 
Esq. of Walmesley 
Fold, m. in 1744. 



1. William, 2. Edmund, 3. Rotert, 4. Jona-f=2nd._Es- 5. t 
of Church- m. Miss created a than, of 
Bank, and Wright,and Baronet, Accring- 



Peele-Fold, had a son, 
m. in 1766, Robert, of 
Mary, dau. Exmouth, 
of Thomas decroMedy 
Haworth, and two 
M. D. daus. 



in 1800. 



ton, m. 
Ist, Ann, 
dau. of 
GilcnHa* 

worth, 
Kbq. 



aw- 6. Joseph, 7. John, \, Anne, 
ther Bol- renco of of Bowes, of the m. Ist, 
ton, who Ardwick, nearLon- Pastures, the Rer. 



d. in m. twice, don, m. co. Staf- Borlase 

1841. and had and had ford, m. Willock, 

issue (see issue. and had and 2dly, 

BuRKB*s issue. to the 

Landed Rev. Geo. 

Gentry.) Park. 



T 



1. Thomas, 2. Rohrrt, 



of Peele- 
Fold, and 
Tronant 
Park, M, 
and had 
issue. 



ofTalU 
aris, CO. 
Carmar- 
then, m. 
and had 
issue. 



3. Edmund, The Ripht 

of Church Hon. Sir 

Bank. KoBEKT 

1. William, Pkel, Bart. 

of Burn- and other 

ley. issue. 

Jonathan. 
G. John, of 

Burton. 

1. Elizabeth. 

2. Anne, m. Robert Peel, Esq. 

of Accrington. 



5. 



Kobert 9eel Esq. 

of Accrington, (fa- 
ther of Jonathan 
PsEL, Esq. of 
Accrington and 
Knowlmere), and 
other issue. 



— I 
Jonathan 

Bolton, and 

other issue. 



PLATB XCVI.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



mmtt. Of Dalrp, auwotbiam 

Jambs Walker, Esq. of Dairy, one of the Principal Clerks of Session in Scot- 
land, is next brother of the late Sir Francis Walker Drummond, Bart, of Haw- 
thorden, and son (by Jane, his wife, dau. of Richard Hay Newton, Esq. of 
Newton) of the late James Walker, Esq. of Dairy, Principal Clerk of Session, 
in Scotland, who was son of Francis Walker, Esq. of Mainshill, co. Hadding- 
ton, and grandson of John Walker, residing at Beanston, in the last named 
shire. The ancestors of the Walkers of Dairy, were settled for many years in 
East Lothian, and are mentioned in works of authority, (Douglas's Baronage, 
and the last Edition of the Statistical Account of Scotland), as descended from 
the family of Walker, of St. Fort, co. Fife, (see Burke's Landed Gentry,) The 
present Mr. Walker, impales with his paternal shield, the arms of Mackenzie, 
in right of his wife, Lillias, youngest dau. of Roderick Mackenzie, Esq. of 

Scotsburn, co. Ross. 

flrm0. — Or, three pallets gu. on asaltire arg. a heart of the second : on a chief az., 
a crescent between two mullets of the third. 

Impaling — Quarterly: first and fourth, az. a deer's head cabossed or; second, 
or, a rock in flames ppr. ; third, az. three legs of a man armed ppr.. conjoined in the 
centre at the upper part of the thighs, flexed in triangle, garnished and spurred, or. 

Crest. — A cornucopia ppr. 

fiHottO, — Cura et industria. 



6@oore> of ^tocfttoell, co. ^urrep. 

This family derives immediately from the Rev. Edward Moore, LL.B., Vicar 
of Over, CO. Chester, son of John More, of a Lancashire house, and in descent, 
by a junior branch, from the Chancellor More, whose arms he bore. (See 
Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

SIrntf . — Arg. a chey. between three moorcocks sa. combs, wattles, and legs, gu. * 

(ffrwt. — A Moor's head affront^e ppr. wreathed round the temples, a jewel pen- 
dent in the ears, arg. 

IHottO.— Resolve well, persevere. 

The Krb. iBt^toflrlr iHoorr, LL.B., Vicar of Over, 
CO. Chester, b. in 1696, d. in 1755. 



©lltDarIrfHoore=i=Janc,dau.of=j=Sarah-Gray, 



Esq. of Stock 
well House, CO. 
Surrey, rf. in 
1792, aged 59. 



Roger 

Rigge, Esq. 

1st wife. 



dau. of 

Joseph 

Saunders, 

Esq. 



Peter Moore, Thomas of 

Esq. M.P. for Liverpool, 

Covenlry,TO. and merchant, 

had issue. (See tn. and left 

Burkb's Landed issue. 
Gentry.) 



Robert, whose 
only son pe- 
rished in the 
" Kent" East 
Indiaman. 



Stephen- 
Roger 
Moore,Esq. 

T 

Millicent- 

Aune, m. 

Theophilus 

Fairfax 

Johnson, 

Esq. 



Henry 
Moore, 
Esq. Ma- 
jor 4th 
Dragoon 
Gds. d. in 
1810, 
aged 30. 



Edward, 
ISHuss. 
Major of 
Cavalry 
Brigade, 
d. at Lis- 
bon iu 
1808, 
aged 25. 



TheHrb. 

Wim. 
iBoorr, 

D.D., 

Preben- 
dary of 
Lincoln, 
Rector of 
Spalding, 
&c. m. in 
1807. 



Anne-Eli- 
belh, only 
dau. of the 
Rev. Mau- 
rice John- 
son, D.D., 
of Ay- 
scough-fee 
Hall, CO. 
Lincoln. 



Peter, 
in the 
Com- 
mission 
of the 
Peace, 
and De- 
puty 
Lieut. 



Charles, 
in Holy 
Orders, 
an acting 
Magis- 
trate for 
Lincoln- 
shire, 
171. and 
has is- 
sue. 



George, 
Col. and 
Brigadier 
in India, 
m. and 
has issue. 



Augus- 
tus, in 
the ai> 
my, d. 
a mi- 
nor, in 
India. 



Sarahf 
m. to 
George 
Rigge, 
Esq. of 
Wood- 
brough- 
ton 

House, 
CO. Lan- 
caster. 



Caro 
m. to 
J. Ca 
Esq. 
Thea 
ton I 

00.^ 



Maurice-Pclcr, and other issue. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATEONS. 



[plate xcvi. 



TBest, of Cfjietielep, to, 'Betfes. 



The family of Best had been, for many generations^ located in Richmondshire^ 
when James Best purchased Elmswell^ a Manor in the Parish of Little 
Driffield, co. York, early in the reign of Elizabeth. 

^vm%. — Gu. a Saracen's head couped at the neck, ppr. nayally crowned or, be- 
tween eight lions* gamba chevron ways in pairs, paws inwards of the second. With 
this coat, Head Pottinoer Best, Esq. quarters, in right of his mother Eliza, dau. 
and heir of the Rev. Head Pottinger, of Compton, Berks, the arms of Pottinger 
and Head, viz. per bend sa. and arg. four lozenges in bend between six fleurs-de-lis 
all counterchangcd for Pottinger, and sa. a chev. between three unicorns' heads, 
erased arg. for Head, and impales for his wife, Maria dau. of Thos. Duffield, Esq. 
of Marcham Park, co. Berks, the shield of Duffield, viz. sa. a chev. between three 
doves arg. 

Crest. — A cubit arm vested gu. cuff or, holding a faulcheon ppr. 

iBotto. — Optimus est, qui optim^ facit. 

HsNRT Best, son of James Best, of=7^Mary, dau. of — Holgate, Esq. <f. in 163i^. 
Elmswell. who d. in 1610 ; <;. in 1645. ) 

r ' 

John Best, of Elmswell, 6. in I619,=pSarah, dau. of J. Lambert, Esq. 

d, in 1668. I 

I 

Charles Best, of Elmswell, died in=pCharlotte, dau. of the Rev. Chas. Hotham, 



1819. 



Rector of Wigan, and sister of Sir Chas. 
Hotham, Bart. 



Francis Best, Esq. of Elmswell, d. Ln=7=Rosamond, dau. of Yarborough Consta- 
1779, aged 80. | ble, Esq. of Wassand, d. 1787, aged 87. 



1. Francis,: 
Best, Rector 
of South 
Dalton,£f. in 
1802. 



:1. Mary,dau.- 
and sole 
heir of Hen. 
Fawcit She 
d, $,p. 



=2. Mary,dau. 
and coheir 
of William 
Dobinson, 
of Carlisle. 



2. Mar- 3. Charles 

maduke, Best, d. 

d.a.p. 1813, aged 

1792. 80. 



=f=Harriott, 
dau. of 
William 
Light, of 
Baglake, 
DoTseifd. 
in 1817. 



Rosa- BsFrancis 
mond. Tolloh 
Clerk. 



The Rev. 
Francis 
Best, of 
Elmswell, 
Rector of 
South Dtd- 
ton, d. a. p, 
in 1&14. 



Thomas, 
Captain, 
in the 
army, 
killed at 
Aboukir. 



1 

Charles, Rosa- 

M. D., m. mond, 

in 1807, m. Col. 

Mary, Geo. 

dau. of Hotham. 

Thomas 

Norcliffe, 

Esq., and 

(/.inl817. 



Francis, Charles, 
d. a, p, m. Mary, 
dau. of 
the Rev. 
R. God- 
fTey,D.D. 
d.1819 



The Rev.: 

Jfamei 

mafu$ 

Beit of 
Bath. 






Rosamond, 
m. J. Ro- 
binson.Esq. 
of York. 



Mary- 
Kllen. 



Head Pottinger 
Best, Esq. son 
and heir. 



=Eliza Head,daiL 
and heir of the 
Rev. Head Pot- 
tinger, of Comp- 
ton, Berks. 



BfiMaria, dau. of 
Thomas Duf- 
field, Esq. of 
Marcham 
Park. 



Caroline Eliz. Rosamond Head 
d. in 1840. h. in 1844. 




A 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [ri.AiK xi vii. 

^O0lep> of 9ncoat0, co. lLanca0tet, I5att» 

Sir Oswald Moslev, second Bart, of Ancoats, D.C.L. F.G.S. M.R.I. , and 
late M.P. for the Northern Division of Staffordshire, eldest son of the late 
Oswald Mosley, Esq. of Bolesworth Castle, co. Chester, by Elizabeth, his 
wife, dau. and heir of the Rev. Thomas Tonman, Rector of Little Budworth, 
in the same shire, and grandson of the late Sir John Parker Mosley, 
created a Bart, in 1781, represents the very ancient family of Mosley of Rol- 
leston and Ancoats, which descend from Oswald, second son of Emald de 
Moseley, Lord of Moseley, co. Stafford, temp. King Jobn (see Burke's 
Peerage and Baronetage,) The present Baronet bears a shield of six quarter- 
ings. 

flntt0. — Sa. a cher. between three battle-axes arg. 

Q^mt — ^Ad eaglo displayed erm. 

Motto. — Mo8 legem regit. 



JFIetclier, of (KQater (tEpton, anD Cannocft, co« ^taffbrD. 

Thomas William Fletcher, Esq. of Dudley, co. Worcester, F.R.S., F.S.A. and 
F.G.S., representative of the very ancient Staffordshire family of Fletcher (sec 
Burkb*s Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) quarters with his paternal coat, 
the arms of Alport and Keeling, and impales Russell, and Best, quarterly 
in right of his wife, Jane Maria, dau. of James Russell, Esq. of Bescot Hall, 
CO. Stafford, and now of End wood Courts in that county, by Sarah, his wife, 
dau. and coheir of the John Best, M.A. Sub-dean and Prebendary of Wolver- 
hampton, Vicar of Sedgley and Incumbent of Bilston, co Stafford. 

flrms. — Quarterly. First and fourth, arg. a cross engr. sa. between four pellets, 
each charged with a pheon or, on a canton az. a ducal crown of gold, for Flbtchsr. 
Second, barry wavy of eight arg. and az. on a bend or, three mullets, gu., for Alport. 
Third, gu. between two lions rampant, or, gu. a bend engr. of the second, charged 
with three scaling ladders of the field, for Kbilino. Impalino, first and fourUi, 
arg. a fesse danccttc^ ermines, between three crosses crosslet filched, in chief and 
two in bafe sa., for Russill. Second and tliird, arg. on a cher. gu. between two 
martlets in chief sa. and a book closed in base ppr. toiee pheons or, for Bbst. 

Crrf t. — A horse's head erased, arg. gorged with a ducal crown as. 

Motto. — Sub cruce salu^. 



Thomas Fletchir, of Water-Eyton, and: 
SUarcshall. co. Staffurd, huned there 
24 Oct. 1610. 

their grfnt-creat graniton 

r ' 



'Margaret, dau. and ercntually heiress of 
Ralf Alport, Esq. of Cannock. 



Thomas Fi.ktchkr.^ Ksq. of Cannock, =^Mary, only dau. and heir of William 



hapt. 19 March, 1707, d. in Dec. 1790. 



Kerlinob, Esq. of Sedgeley Park, co. 
Stafford. 



I 

William FLRxcnRn, 2nd son, 6. 2 Oct.^Alice, dau. of Thos. Blakemore, Esq. of 



1710, d. 21 Oct. 1804. 



Northwich, co. Chester, and aunt to 
Richard Blakemore, Esq. now M.F. 
for Wells. 



Tuomrs Flstchbr. Esq. of IIandsworth,^Ann, dan. of Thomas Russell, Gent. m. 
CO. Stafford, 6. 19 Feb. 1772, heir to 10 May, 1804. 
his uncle Tlios. Fletcher, Eitq. of Can- 
nock, d. 1 April 1827. 

Cil^maft^Siltlluim ^Iftr)er, Ef^q. 

F.K.S., F.S.A., Ac. eldest son. 



PLATE XCVII.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Jambs Collins, Esq. of Walford,af=El6anor Tncy, died 9 April, 1 781 . 



I AMES i^oLLiNB, csq. oi w aiiora,a7= 
m. 1729, buried 7 June 1765. 



John Stratford Collins, Esq. of^Alice, dau. of Robert Fumey, 



Walford^High Sheriff co. Here- 
ford 1774, m. 1760, buried 25 
Feb. 178a 



Esq. of Pernstone, and widow 
of Bond, of Bedbrook. 



John STRATFORD=?=Mary, dan. of Jas. Ferdinando, Alicia ^pThe Rer. J. 



Collins, Esq. of 
Walford,m.l784, 
buried 30th Oct 
1809. 



Davies, grandson d,9,p, 
of Rich. Davies 
of Ross. 



Collins 



H. Beeston, 
Rectory, Wal- 
ford. 



Collins, OT. 
Charles 



Four 

daiig^. 

ters. 



I.JohnStrat-- 

FORD COL- 

LiNS, Esq. of 
Walford. 



:EDrrH,dau. of Philip 
JoNBS,of the Cleare, 
CO. Hereford, Esq. 
by Anns his wife, 
dau. of Wm. Hut- 
chison, Esq. and 
Sarah his wife, dau. 
of Robert Ktrle, 
son of Vandervbrt 
Ktrle, and devisee 
of John Kthle, 
"the Man of Ross." 



2. Ferdmando-Strat- 
ford Collins, of Leo- 
minster, m. Frances 
dau. of John Mor- 
ris, Esa. by Anne, 
his wife, dau. of 
Beebee, of WilleT 
Court, CO. Hereford, 
and has issue. 



3. James Collina, 
of Woolhope, CO. 
Hereford,in.EIisa 
dau. of — Gwil- 
lim, of Brange, 
CO. Hereford, and 
has issue. 



I 1 1 r— T — r— ! 

John Stratford Collins. William Hutcheson Collins. Kyile Collins. Four daughters. 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [platbxcvih 



CCletit), of a^aiDiaitotDn, co. llmettclt. 

Daniel Jamkb Webb, Esq. of Maidstown, resident at Woodville Lodge, near 
Templemore, co. Tipperary, of which county, and of Limerick, he is a Justice 
of the Peace, is only son and heir of the late Major James Webb, by Eliz. his 
wife, dau. of Sir John Oglander, Bart, of Nunwell, and relict of Sir Gerard 
Napier, and grandson of Daniel Webb, Esq. of Maidstown Castle, co. 
Limerick, by Dorothea, his wife, dau. and heir of M. Leake, Esq. of Castle 
Leake, co. Tipperary. The family of Webb went to the county of Limerick 
at the end of the l6th or beginning of the 17th century, from Gloucester- 
shire, and in which county, and in Wiltshire, different branches had been 
settled from the reign of Edward I. 

flrm0. — Quarterly. First and fourth, enninois, a cross couped sa. on a chief gu. 
a heron between two crosilets fitchde arg. Second aud third, arg. on a saltire engr. 
sa. nine annulets or, for Lbakb. 

Crf0t. — A demi eagle displayed gu. wings elcrated erminois, in the beak a cross- 
let fitch^e or, from the collar a cross couped arg. 

motto. — Quid prodest. 



®^nnot, of iBallpmo^er $>ou0e, co« armagb* 

Marcus Synnot, Esq. of Ballymoyer House, co. Armagh, High Sheriff in 
1830, is elder son, by Jane, his wife, dau. of John Seton, Esq. (representa- 
tive of the Setons of Parbroth), of the late Sir Walter Synnot, Knt., who 
was second son of Mark Synnot, Esq. of Drumcondra House, co. Dublin. 
(See BuRKB^s Landed Oentry,) 

The Synnots of England and Ireland claim descent from a common ancestor 
with the French family of the same name, and are stated to derive from a 
marquis of Lusignan, who came to England either with William the Con- 
queror, or some time after. 

flrmi. — Arg. three swans inpale sa. ducally gorged, or. 

Crf0t. — A swan sitting sa. ducally crowned and pierced in the breast with an 
arrow or. 
iCIottO. — Sine macula. 

1st wife. Jane, dan. ofJidin^Siti Walter Synnot, Knt. or=p2nd wife. Annc-Eliz. dau 



Seton, Esq. and sUter of 
Isabella, Lady Colcy. 



Hiillymoyer, son of Mark Syn- 
not, Ksq. of Drumcondra house, 
d.9 Aug. 1821. 



of the ReT.Robert Martin. 



r f ' J 

MARCt's Synnot, Walter Synnot, Cupt. Maria-Eli- RichardWal-=T= Henrietta Eliz. wife 

Eaq.ofBallymover, 66thrcgt., married three z&,d.ttnm, ter Synnot, </. ' dau. of of the Ker. 

6.inl771,m.inr814 timcs,andbad issue by in 1800, 20April 1841, • Henry Fitzgibbon 

Jane,dau.of J.Gil- his two first wives. He aged 24. aged29,6vnerf Thornton Stewart, 

■on, Esq. is now settled in Van at St. Paul's Esq. 

Diemen's Land. (See Church, Clap- 

BuHKi's Landed Gen* ham. 

rn r-ri : • 

I. Marcus Syunot, 2. Mark-Seton Synnot, 3. Parker-Geo. L Mar^. 4. Barbara 5. Julia- 

m. Anne, dau. of m.Anne- Janc,third dau. Sjmnot 2. Mana- Cecilia. Hewit. 

William Parker, of Mark Synnot, Esq. 4. William- Eliza. 

Esq. of Hauthorpe of Drumcondra. Forbes 3. Jean- 

CO. Lincoln. ^^p Synnot. nette Ag- 

4s net. 



PLATE xcviii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

^en|)PU0e> of Jl^etberball anD iBatroto f^omt, to. 

CumlienanD. 

Joseph Pocklinqton Senhouse, Esq. of Neiherhall and Barrow House, son 
of the late Roger Pocklington^ Esq. of Carlton House, co. Notts, by Jane, his 
wife, dau. of Sir James Campbell, Knt. of Inverniel, co. Argyll, and grandson 
of Roger Pocklington, Esq. of Wenthorpe Hall, Notts, by Mary, his wife, 
eldest dau. and coheir of William Rob, Esq. of Sudbrookc Hall^^co. Lincoln, 
descends from the very ancient family of Pocklington, which is supposed to 
have derived, at an early'period, its appellation from the town of that name, in 
the East Riding of Yorkshire (see Burke's Landed Gentry), Mr. Pockling- 
ton Senhouse assumed his present surname, by Royal Licence 27 Sept. 1842, 
having married 13 Oct. 1835, Eliz. eldest dau. and coheir of Humph rbt Sbn- 
HousE^ late of Netherhall, Esq., representative of the ancient and eminent 
family of Senhouse. 

fltin0. — Quarterly. First and fourth quarterly, first and fourth, or, a parrot ppr. 
a canton sa., for Sbnhousb ; second and third, erm. three bends af . on a chief or 
three martlets sa., for Pocklington. Second and third, gu. on a bend between three 
garbs or, banded of the field, three cross-crosslets fitch^e 8a.» for Rob. An escutcheon 
of pretence, for Sbnhousb : quarterly of ten 1. Sbnhousb, 2. Ponsonbt, 3. Copb- 
LAND, 4. Lucy, 5. Eaglbsfibld, 6. Blbnnbrhasset, 7. Flbmmino, 8. Grbaves, 
9. Lbt« 10. Sbnhousb. 

Cre0t0. — A parrot, as in the arms, with a label in its beak, inscribed "Deo gratias," 
for Sbnhousb. A demi leopard rampant ppr. holding in the dexter paw an ostrich 
feather arg., for Pockukoton. 

Motto. — Vae Tictis. 

^acDonalo, of Eammer$cale0, co. Dum(tie0. 

William Bell MacDonald, Esq. of Rammerscales, son and heir of the late 
Donald MacDonald, Esq. by Mary, his wife, sister of William Bell, Esq. of 
Rammerscales, and great-grandson of Donald MacDonald, a cadet of the 
family of Boisdale (see Burkb*8 Landed Gentry), quarters with the paternal 
coat the arms of Bell. 

Arms. — Quarterly. First and fourth, for MacDonald. Quarterly : first, arg. 
a lion rampant gu. ; second, or, a dexter hand couped, holding a cross-crosslet fitch& 
gu. ; third, or, a lyinphad or galley sa. ; fourth, yert. a salmon naiant arg. Second 
and third, for Bbll. Az. three bells or. 

CTrrst. — A dexter hand, holding a cross-crosslet fitch^e. 

^Otto. — Nee tempore nee fato. 

Copbam, of a^iimieliam ^ali, co« ^otL 

Christopher Topham, Esq. of Middlcham Hall, eldest son of the late Christo- 
pher Topham, Esq., by Jenny, his wife, dau. and coheir of Mark Bulmer^ Esq. 
of Middleham, and grandson of William Topham, Esq. of Caldbergh, Kild- 
wick and Middleham, by Judith his first wife, dau. of Henry Newby, Esq. of 
Kildwick^ lineally descends from Lawrence Topham, Esq. of Caldberg in 
Coverdale, N. R. of Yorkshire, who d. about 1599> and bears a shield of four 
quarterings with an escutcheon of pretence, in right of his wife, Anne^ only 
child and heiress of John Dixon, Esq. of Middleham and Brighton. 

flmtS. — Quarterly. First and fourth, argt. a chev. gu. betw. three pewits* heads 
erased sa., for Topham. Second, or, three crescents, each surroundea by an estoile 
gu., for Batbman. Third, gu. billetee or, a lion rampt. of the last for Bulm br. On 
an escutcheon of pretence or, a cross floiy, betw. four eagles displayed sa., for Dixoh. 

Crist. — ^Two serpents entwined round a cross patee fitchee. 

motto. — Cruce, non prudenti& 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate xhx. 

laabett, of iBtamfielo ^aU> co« Suffolk. 

The Rev. Reginald Rabett, M.A., of Bramfield Hall, Lord of the Manor of 
Kettleburgh, in Creatingham, and Vicar of Thornton-cum-Bagworth, co 
Leicester, elder son and heir of the late Reginald Rabett, Esq. of Bramfield Hall 
and Huntingfield, by Mary, his wife, only sister of the present Gen. Sir Edward 
Kerrison, Bart. M.P., grandson of Reginald Rabett, Esq. of Bramfield Hall and 
Huntingfield, High Sheriff of Suffolk, in 1778, by Mary Newson, his wife, 
and great-grandson of Reginald Rabett, Esq. of Bramfield Hall, High Sheriff, 
in 1737, descends from a family of Norman extraction, which was established 
in England at the time of the Conquest 5 and which has been seated from an 
early period in the county of Suffolk; Willielmus Rabett de Bramfield, Arm. 
occurring as M. P. for Dunwich so far back as the 8th Edward IV., and 
Reginald Rabett, Esq. of Bramfield, having served as High Sheriff, in 1587. 
(See BuRKB*8 Landed Gentry.) The present representative of this long de- 
scended line bears the ancient shield of his ancestors, impaled with the arms 
of BiCKERTON, in right of his wife, Mary, eldest dau. of Richard Bickerton, 
of Roden, co. Salop, Esq., of an old family of that name, related to the late 
Admiral Sir Richard Bickerton, Bart. The Rev. Reginald Rabett, has one 
brother. Lieutenant George William Rabett, of the Royal Navy, who m. the 
Lady Lucy Louisa-Maria Turnour, second dau. of the late Earl of Winterton j 

and one sister, Mary, wife of Lord Viscount Maynard. 

flnn0. — Arg. a chev. sa. charged with five giitlcs d'or, between three rabbits' 
heads couped, of the second \ impaling sa. on a chev. arg. three pheons of the field, 
for Bickerton. 

CTrwt. — A demi rabbit rampant sa. guttle d'or. 

fBottO. — Supcrabit omnia virtus. 

^mitf)> of 9nn0tirooit ann ideatieg* co. ^eatb. 

Hrnry Jeremiah Smith, Esq. of Annsbrook and Beabeg, a Magistrate and 
Deputy Lieutenant and High Shcrifif for co. Meath, in 1819, eldest son and 
heir of the late Henry Smith, Esq. of Annsbrook, by Martha, his wife, dau. 
of Laurence Steele, Esq. of Rathbride, co. Kildare, and grandson of Jeremiah 
Smith, Esq. descends from the Smiths of Coolestown and Maine, co. Louth, 
who were originally from Yorkshire. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

9rm0. — ArfT. on a bend between two bulls* heads erased az. armed or, three lo- 
zene<'8 of the lust. 
Crrst. — A demi bull salient az. armed and unguled or. 
^OttO. — Delcctat amor patriae. 

llopD, of lLaques> co. Carmartbcn. 

William Lloyd, Esq., now of Laques, representative of the Lloyds of Llan- 
stephan, is son and heir of the late William Lloyd, Esq. of the same place, 
High Sheriff of Carmarthenshire, in 1807, by Maria-El enora, his wife, dau. 
of John Colborne, Esq. of Swindon, co. Stafford, grandson of Daniel Lloyd, 
Esq. of Laques, Barrister- at- Law, High Sheriff of Cardiganshire, in 1*60, 
by Kathcrine, his wife, dau. of Francis Meare, Esq. of Corston, co. Pembroke* 



PLATE XCIX.] 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



^ 



and great-grandson of William Lloyd, Esq. of Laques, who was grandson of 
Daniel Lloyd, Esq. of Laques, second son of Rees Lloyd, Esq. of Plas Llan- 
stephan, the representative of the ancient family of Llotd of Llanstbpban. 
(See Burkb's Landed Gentry, Supplement,) 

flnm.—Gu. on a bend between three daggers arg. a lion passant sa. Second, 
arg. on a cher. gu. three garbs. Third, arg. two lions reguaraant sa. Fourth, sa. 
an eagle with two heads displayed or. 

CrfSt. — An eagle preying on a bird. 

laosiiell, of lLanca$|)tte. 

This family is supposed to be descended from a younger son of the ancient 
Westmoreland House of Rosgill, of Rossgill, which was seated at Rosgill 
Manor House, in 1216. (See Burkb's Landed Gentry,) 

ULrxM. — Erminois, a crescent sa. within an orle of ten martlets gn« 

Crrst. — A dexter cubit arm in armour ppr. charged with a martlet as in the 

arms, issuant from a wreath of oak or, in the hand also ppr., a cross-crosslet 

fitch^ gu. 
^otto. — Ros celL 



Nicholas Roskbll, of Garstang, co.^ 
Lancaster, son of George Roakell, 
of the same place. 



i^ennet, dan. of John Fox, 
Esq. of Forton, co. Lan- 
caster, m. in 1 772. 



1 i 1 T~Zr^ rn 

Eliza- ey=l. RoBBRT=p Anne, 2. Gbo. Romkbll, 3. John Roskbll, 4. Thos. I.Mary, 

dan. of Esq. of Flint, J.P., Esq. of Wilton Roskbll, m. to 

John Migor county mi- Crescent, London, of Ample- Richard 

Kaye, litia, m. twice, by banker at Preston, forth Col- Arrow- 

Esq. of his Ist wife, Mary- 6. 9 Feb. 1780, m. lege, near smith. 

Liver- Anne, dau. and 3 July, 1803, Anne* York, b, Esq. of 

pool, sole heir of James eldest dau. of Jas. 4 Aug. 

2d wife. Potts, Esq. of Sidgreaves, Esq. of 1787. 

Stockyere.co. Flint, Ingiewhite Lodge. 

has had numerous 



beth, 
dau. of 
Wm. 
Tarle- 
ton, 
Esq. of 
LiTcr- 
pool, m. 
3 July, 
1 797, d. 
1807.. 



RoSKBLLy 

Esq. of 
Gateacre, 
CO. Lan- 
caster, d, 
27 July, 
1773. 



Preston. 
2. Eli- 
heth,a 
nun. 



issue. 



William, of 
Birkenhead, 
m. Eliza, dau. 
of Michael 
Gibson, Esq. 



John. 

Richard But- 
ler. 
Joseph Kaye. 



Maiy-EU- 
beth. 



I ' 1 r-r-r , 

Nicholas, of Robert, m. Elizabeth. 

Liverpool, Mary, dau. Jennett. 

m.ElIen,dau. of John Catherine, 

of Thomas Kaye, Esq. m. to John 

Tftsker, Esq. of Liverpool, Kendal,E8q. of Knotty Ash, 

of Billinge, and has is- of Kensing- near Liverpool, 

and has is- sue. ton. and has issue. 

sue. 

Salomons, of iBurrstoooti anti l5room^^tll> co. Slent 

David Salomons, Esq.of Burrswood and Broom-Hill, son of Levy Salomons, 
Esq. of London, by Matilda de Mitz^ his wife ; a Magistrate for the counties 
of Kent and Sussex, and Deputy-Lieutenant of the former, served as High 
Sherifif of London and Middlesex in 1835-6, having been the first member 
of the Jewish persuasion who filled those offices. The family has long been 
connected with London, the father, grandfather, and great-grandfather of the 
present Mr. Salomons having been merchants of that city. (See Bukke's 
Landed Gentry.) 

struts. — Per chev. gu. and sa. a chev. vair between two lions rampant double 
gucned in chief or, each holding between the paws, a plate, charged with an ermine 
spot, and a cinquefoil in base erminois. 

Crrst. — A mount vert, thereon issuant out of six park pales or, a demi lion ram- 
pant^ double guened gu. holding between the paws a bezant, charged with an ermine 
spot. 

iClottO. — Doo Adjuvnntc. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



[plate c. 



^urrap, of IPbtltpbausI)^ co. @)el&trft. 

Jaiirs Murray, Esq. of Philipbaugh^ son of the late John Murray, Esq. of 
Philiphaugh, M.P., grandson of John Murray, Esq. M.P., by Eleanora, his 
wife, dau. of Lord Basil Hamilton, and great-grandson of Sir James Murray, 
of Philiphaugh, Lord Register of Scotland, in 1705, represents the ancient 
family of Murray, of Falahill and Philiphaugh, of which was John Murray, 
the celebrated " Outlaw Murray,** who acted such a conspicuous part in the 
time of James II. of Scotland, and is the subject of the popular ballad in the 
Scottish minstrelsy. (SeeBuRKK*8 I.aiided Gentry.) 

flrms. — Arg. a hunting horn sa. stringed and gamiithed gu., on a chief ax. three 
stars of the first. 
Crrtt. — A dcmi naked man winding his horn ppr. 
4^0ttO.— Hiue usque superna veuabor. 



auotoap, of tbt Dertte0> dueen'0 Countp. 

RoBBRT MoRELLKT Alloway, Esq. of the DerrieSy a Magistrate for the 
Queen*8 County, descends from an Ayrshire family of the same name^ and 
bears their arms. (See Burke's Landed Gentry, Supplement,) 

flinni.— -Gu. a lion salient between two crescents in chief, and two swords in 
base arg. 

Crff t. — An eagle's head erased, 
blotto.— Soli Deo. 

WiLLUM Allowat, of DubUu, 'Esq., descendcd^^Grace, dau. of Archi» 



from Theophilus A Ho way, of Minehead, co. 
Somerset, son of Marmaduke Laird, of Alloway, 
CO. Ayr. 



bald Montgomerie, 
Esq. of Ayrshire. 



BaNJAMiif AlxjOWay, Esq.: 
m. 1st. Lydia, grand-dau. of 
Robert tfarclay, of Urie, 
Aberdeenshire, the Apolo- 
gist of the QuiJcers, and by 
her had a son, the late John 
Barclay Alloway, Esq. of 
Mount Pleasant, co. Dub- 
lin, who d, $, p, in 1831. 



:Anne, dau. 
of William, 
Johnson, 
Esq. of 
Dublin, 2nd 
wife. 



Hannah, who m. Jonas 
Duckett, Esq., and was 
grandmother of the pre* 
sent JohnDawson Duck- 
ett, Esq. of Duckett's 
GroTe* cow Carlow. 



William Johnson Alloway, Esq.>^^Margaret, eldest dan. of the late 



of the Derries, Queen's County, 
d. 2 Oct 1829. 



IfUWt 

0IIIolpas*B«q-ofthe 

Derries, a Magis- 
trate for the Queen's 
County, m. in 1833. 



Hon. Robert Johnson, Judge of 
the Common Pleas» Ireland. 



JHorfllet^Mary-Anne, Arthur- William, George* John-Parker. Anne. Maria, 

only dau. of late of the 4th or Holmes, 

William King's Own Re- M.D. 

Lewis Esq. giment, married. 



L 



Robbkt-Marmaovkb, 6. 8 June, 1840. Dora*Grace, h. 19 June, 1838, 



Cletlanii« 

Major-Genbral William Douglas Cleiland,E.I.C.S., son of Robert Cleiland, 
Esq., Lieutenant R.N., descends from and bears thearmsof the ancient Scottish 
family of Cleland, of that Ilk, which is stated to have derived its ensigns from 
the office it held of hereditary forester to the Earls of Douglas. James Cleland, 
uf that Ilk, the patriotic associate of Wallace, received from Robert Bruce, 
several lands in the Barony of Calder, West Lothian, and was ancestor of 
William Clkland, of that Ilk, who in the reign of Jambs IH. m. Jean, dau. 
of William, Lord Somerville, and was progenitor of the Clelands, of Cleland, 



PLATE c] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

of Faskiue, Monkland and Cartness ; the last-named famll j ended in an 
heiress, m. to Sir William Weir, of Blackwood. 

Alexander Cleland, of that Ilk, and his cousin, William Cleland, of Fas- 
kiae, both fell on the fatal field of Flodden. In the time of Jambs V. Jaubs 
jClrland, of that Ilk, a distinguished man of his day, m. a dau. of Hepburn, 
of Bonnytoun, and was father of Alexander Cleland, of that Ilk, a stanch 
adherent of Queen Mary, who m. Margaret, dau. of Hamilton, of Hags, and 
had a son and heir, VVilliam Cleland, who m. a sister of Walter. Stewart, 
first Lord Blantyre, and was succeeded by his son, Alexander Cleland, who 
m. the sister of John Hamilton, Lord Bargany, and had a son and successor, 
who sold the lands of Cleland to a cousin of his own name. 

Colonel Robert Cleiland, of Cnrnbel, co. Fife, grandson of Major William 
Cleland, the tenth Cleland of that Ilk, d. in 1760, in command of H. M. 63rd 
Regiment, then stationed in Guadeloupe, leaving two sons, Robert, of whom 
presently, and Moles worth. Lieutenant Royal Artillery, killed in North Ame- 
rica, in 1777. The elder son, 

Robert Cleiland, Esq. Lieut. R.N., was third Lieutenant of H.M. ship 
Fame, in Rodney's action of the 12th April, 1782 ; he was twice married ; by 
his first wife, he had three sons, who all died young, and by his second wife, 
he had with two daus. one son, the present William Douglas Cleiland, Esq. 
Major-General of Infantry on the Bombay Establishment. 

flmtfi. — Az. a hare salient arg. with a hunling horn yert, hanging about the neck, 
garnished gu. 
Cre0t. — A falcon standing on a sinister hand-glove ppr. 
Jbupportetfl. — Two greyhounds ppr. collared and ringed or. 
IBotiO. — i^Over the Crest) Non sibi; {Under the Amu) Jepense a qui penseplus. 

^utci)tn0on, of WiUtttm f^omc, co. Dutfiam* 

George Hutchinson, Esq. of Whitton House, a Deputy Lieutenant for the 
Palatinate, son and heir of the late George Hutchinson, Esq. of Whitton and 
Stockton, by Catherine, his wife, dau. of Francis Forster, Esq. of Buston, by 
Frances, his wife, dau. of Charles Bathurst, Esq. of Skutterskelf, M.P. for 
Richmond, descends paternally from a branch of the Hutchinsons of Corn- 
forth, in Durham, and maternally from the Forsters of Buston, a younger 
branch of the Edderstone family. (See Burke's Landed Gentry), He bears 
on his paternal shield, an escutcheon of pretence, in right of his wife, Char- 
lotte-Barbara, dau. and coheir of Thomas Dawson, Esq. of Tanfield, co. 
Durham. 

9nn0. — Per pale gu. and az. sem^e of cross-crosslets, and a lion rampant or ; an 

ESCUTCHEON OF PRBTKNCE for DaWSON. 

Crf5l. — Out of a ducal coronet, a cockatrice az. 
IBottO.— Nihil humani alienum. 

Meatier, of ^eatb Dall, co. armag^. 

Thomas Seaver, Esq., of Heath Hall, Captain in the Armagh and Monaghan 
Militia, J. P. and High Sheriff for co. Armagh, in 1816, is son and heir of the 
late Jonathan Seaver, Esq. of Heath Hall, High Sheriff in 1807> by Nicholina, 
his first wife, only child and heiress of John Pockrich, Esq. of Derryluck, co. 
Monaghan, grandson of Thomas Seaver, Esq. and great-grandson of Jona- 
than Seaver, Esq. of Trea, co. Armagh, High Sheriff of the county in 1748. 
(See BuBKR*8 Landed Gentry), The ancestor of the Seavers came from 
Germany to Ireland, an officer in the army of Cromwell, and settled at Trea, 
near Armagh, which property is yet in the possession of a junior branch of 
the family. 

Srmfi. — Arg. a chcv. gn. between three doves picking sheaves of wheat ppr. 
Crwt. — A hand and arm, holding a sword erect, encircled by a laurel wreath, 
5ul I'jir. 
/BottD. — Siune sup<.'rbiain qussitam mentis. 



.4 % 



v»*!„ 



^^j .;r-v x^. 




HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate ci. 

button, Of laosiStoap, co* Dett0. 

Robert Sutton, Esq. of Rossway, a Magistrate and Deputy-Lieutenant for 
Herts and Bucks, and High Sheriff of the former shire, in 1823-4, only sur- 
viving son and heir of the late James Sutton, Esq., by Anne, bis wife, dau. of 
the Rev. John Shergold, represents the only existing branch of the Sutton 
family, which were settled for many years in Wiltshire, and derived from the 
Suttons of Lexington. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) 

flmtft.— Arg. a canton sa. 
CrfBt. — A griffin's head erased. 
fBotto. — Prend moi tcl que je suis. 

Park Percy Plantagenet Neville, Esq., Major 63rd Regiment, bears, as 
a lineal descendant of the Nevilles of Raby, the armorial ensigns of that great 
and eminent Baronial House, attainted in the person of Charles Neville, Earl 
of Westmoreland, IS Queen Elizabeth. Sprung from the Raby family^ were 
Lieut. -General Charles Neville, Lieut.-Colonel John Neville, and Captain 
Richard Neville, all of the Austrian service, who d.s.p, with the exception of 
John, who was father of three sons, Richard, Percy, and John. The eldest 
of «vhom, Richard Neville, Esq. accompanied George I. to England. He 
m. Miss Richards, of Pauls, co. Wexford, and had a son and heir, Arthur 
Neville, Esq. who m. Miss Pepper, of Ballygarth, co Meath, and had issue: 

Arthur-Richard Tudor Neville, Esq. of Belmont Lodge, co. Wicklow. 

John Edward-IIenry Neville, Esq. deceased. 

Park Percy PLAhTACBNBT Neville, Esq., Major G3rd Regiment. 

firms. — Gn. on a saltirc arg. a rose of the first seeded or, barbed vert. 
Crnit. — Out of a ducal coronet or, a bull's head pied ppr. attired of the first, 
cliarged on the neck with a rose gu. seeded of the first, barbed vert. 
IBottO. — Nevilc Tclis. 

®nepti, of 90t)com() anu l5eImont, co. ^tafforo. 

William Sneyd, Esq. of Ashcomb and Belmont, Deputy-Lieutenant for the 

county, derived from William Sneyd, Esq. second son of William Sneyd, 

Esq. of Keel, and the thirteenth in descent from Henry de Sneyd^ of Tunstall 

and Sneyde — (See IUrke's Landed Gentry) — bears a shield of twenty quar- 

terings : 

a rmfi.— Quarterly. 

I. Arg. a scythe, the sncdc in bend sinister sa. in the fessc point a flcur- 

df-lis of thi? srrond, for Sneyd. 
II. Sa. a hart lodged arg., for Downs. 

III. Quarterly arg. and sa. four leopards' faces counterchanged, for Lrd- 

HIIAM. 

IV. Sa. a double crosR-croaslet arg., for Lbdsham. 

V. Or, throe tortcaux, each charged irith a fleur-de-lis of the first ; on a 

chief az. a hunting horn between two pheons arg. for BAttitowB. 
VI. Vert, a cross rngrailrd erm., for Wbttbnilall. 
VII. Art;, a lion rampant between three cross-crosslets fitchde gu., a murt- 

U-t az. in chief for difference, for Bowter. 
VIII. Az. three upadcs arg., for Kntpihslbt. 
IX. Az. two bars arg. in chitrf as many plates, for Vbnableb. 
X. Az. a bend or, and bordure erm., for (xrosvenor. 
XI. Az. six martlets three, two and one, or, for Bucknall. 
XII. Arg. on a bend cottised gu. three bezants, for Heywood. 
XIII. Arg. a flame ppr. issuaut from between the horns tf a crescent sa., for 
Stony LOWE. 




PLATE CI.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

ziv. Az. a chey. between three carpenten* squares, for EoMOirDS. 
XV. Ax. a lion rampant within an orle of ccooses croaslet arg., for Ktn- 

NBaSLBT. 

XTi. Arg. three horse-shoes sa., for Fbrbbrs. 
xvn. Arg. a fease yaire or and gu. between three eaglets displayed, for 

DSTHieKB. 

XYin. As. on a fesse engr. arg. three mullets of the first, for 9alway. ' 
xrx. Arg. a chey. gu. between three hunting horns sa., for Pbttit. 
XX. Arg. on a chey. gu. between three pellets, as many crescents of the 
first, for Walkbr. 
CTrfft.— A lion passant guardant. 
^OttO.— Nee opprimere nee opprimL 

^aioHep, of alien l^ill, co. Detfi^. 

The Rev. John Francis Thomas Wollby, M.A., of Allen Hill, in the parish 
of Matlock, CO. Derby, Vicar of Beeston, co. Notts, the fourth son of the late 
Charles Hurt, Esq. of Wirksworth, by Susanna, his wife, only dau. of Sir 
Richard Arkwright (see Burke's Landed Gentry), m. 6 Aug. 1822, Mary, 
eldest dau. and coheir of Adam Wolley, Esq. of Allen Hill and Matlock, 
in compliance with whose last will and testament, he, his wife, and their 
issue, assumed by Royal Sign Manual, 25 Sept. 1827» the surname of Woi«- 
LET only, and also the arms of Wolley. 

The family of Wolley (de Woley, or Wolegh, in HoUinworth), was settled 
in Longdendale, co. Chester, as early as the reign of King John ; it remained 
there until the reign of Hbnrt VI. when the representative of the eldest 
branch, on his marriage with the heiress of the ancient family of Riber, re- 
moved to Matlock, CO. Derby, where, first at Riber, afterwards (from the time 
of Queen Elizabeth, to the extinction of the Riber branch in the 21st 
Charles II.) at Riber and Allen Hill, and then at Allen Hill only, the family 
has resided until the present generation. Its name appears amongst the gen- 
try of Derbyshire in the visitations, since the time of Henry VI. 5 and the 
crest and arms herein set forth as confirmed by the Heralds in 1636, and 
1662, are known to have been borne by the family at least as early as 1308, 
2nd Edward II., and 1333, 7th Edward III. (See Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

Arms. — Quarterly. First and sixtli, sa. a chev. yaire or, and gu. between three 
maidens' heads affrontd, couped at the shoulders ppr. crined of Uie second, a can- 
ton erminois, for Wollby. Second, sa. a fesse between three cinquefoils or, for Hurt. 
Third, gu. a wolf preyant arg., for Lowb, of Alderwasley. Fourth, ax. a stag strip- 
pant arg., for Lows, of Denby. Fifth, arg. a bugle horn between three crescents 
sa. each charged with a besant, for Fawne, of Alderwasley. 

An B8CT7TCHEON OF PRETBNCB. Sa. a chev. yaire or, and gu. between three maidens' 
heads affrontd, couped at the shoulders ppr. crined of the second, for Wollbt. 

CTrestS.— First, a knight's head in profile, couped at the shoulders and habited in 
chain mail armour, all ppr., for Wollby. Second, a hart passant, ppr. homed, 
^ membered, and hurt in the haunch with an arrow or, feathered arg., for Hurt. 

Motto. — Honest^ audax. 

nous, of Coutt^tala, co. Glamorgan* 

Thomas Bates Rous, Esq. of Courtyrala, elder son of the late George Rous, 
Esq. of Moor Park, co. Herts. M.P., by Charlotte, his wife, dau. of the Rev. 
Dr. Thomas, Dean of Ely, and grandson of Thomas Rons, Esq. of Piercefield, 
by Mary, his wife, dau. of Thomas Bates, Esq. of Northumberland, repre- 
sents the ancient family of Rous, of Edmerston, derived from the marriage 
of William le Rous, son of Sir Robert le Roiis, Knt. Banneret, Governor of 
Cherbourg, temp, Richard II., with Alice, dau. and heiress of Thomas Ed- 
merston, of Edmerston. 

9rm0. — Or, an eagle displayed az. quartering Edmerston, Hill, Revel, Lbigh, 
Barnhousb, Kirkuam, Dbnnis, Scodel, and Weyb. 

Crest. — A dove arg. 

Motto --Vescitur Christo. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate cii. 

IPufft), Of UlanercftpUoU co* Q^ontgometp* 

David Pugh, Esq. of Llanerchydol, Major of the county militia, J.P., D.L., 
and High Sheriff of Flintshire, in 1823, descends from Hugh ap Cadwala- 
der, of Llanerchydol, b, in 1657. He is son of the late Charles Pugh, Esq. 
by Jane, his wife, third daughter of William Lloyd, Esq. of Montgomery, by 
Mary, his wife, dau. and heiress of Griffiths, Esq. of Weston, co. Salop, and 
grand-nephew and heir of the late David Pugh, Esq. High Sheriff of Mont- 
gomeryshire, in 1785. (See Burkb*8 Landed Gentry.) Major Pugh bears 
an escutcheon of pretence, in right of his wife, Anne, only dau. and heiress of 
Evan Vaughan, Esq. of Beguildy, co. Radnor, descended from Cadwgan, son 
of Elystan Glodrydd, Prince of Fferlys. 

Arms. — Arg. a lion passant guardant sa. crowned or, between three fleiirs-de-lis 
gu. An ESCUTCHEON OF PRETENCE — Quarterly. First and fourth, gu. a lion rampant 
reguardant or. Second and third, or, three boars' heads erased gu. 

CTrtit. — A lion, as in the arms, holding in the dexter paw a fleur-de-lis gu. 

Jilotto. — Qui invidet minor est. 



llocljfott, of ClO0renane> co* Carloto. 

HoRACB William Noel Rochfort, Esq. of Clogrenane, J.P., D.L., and High 
Sheriff of the county in 1839> is son and heir of the late Colonel John Staun- 
ton Rochfort, of Clogrenane, by Hariette, his wife, dau. of Sir Horace Mann, 
Bart., grandson of John Rochfort, Esq. of Clogrenane, and Dorothea, his 
wife, dau. of Thomas Burgh, of Bert House, co. Kildare, and great-great- 
grandson of John Rochfort, Esq. of Clogrenane, who was second son of 
Robert Rochfort, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons in 169S, and 
Chief Baron of the Exchequer in 1707> and brother of the Right Hon. Geo. 
Rochfort, M.P., ancestor of the Earls of Belvedere, and of the Rochforts of 
Rochfort. The ancient family of Rochfort, in old deeds and writings styled 
De Rupefortif was established in Ireland at the time of, or soonafter^ the first 
invasion of the English ; for so early as 27 Henrt III. we find Sir Richard de 
Rochfort and John de Rochfort, Lords of Crom and Adare. (See Burke's 
Dictionary of the Landed Gentry,) 

9nn0. — Az. a lion rampant arg. 
Crfft. — A robbin ppr. 
motto. — Vi vel suaviiatc. 



(I3au0{)an, of Court iFtelti, co« a^onmoutl)^ 

William Michael Thomas John Vaughan, Esq. of Court Field, a Magistrate 
and Deputy-Lieutenant for the county of Monmouth, for which he was High 
Sheriff in 1833, and a Magistrate for co. Hereford, is only son and heir of the 
late William Vaughan, Esq. of Court Field, by Frances, his wife^ dau. of 



PLATE cii.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

John Turner, Esq. of Hampstead, grandson of Riqhard Vaughan, Esq., by his 
wife. Donna Francisca, dau. of Don Guillermo Fuort-y-Mamman, a Spanish 
Noble, and great-grandson of John Vaughan, Esq. of Court Field, by Elizabeth 
his second wife, dau of Philip Jones, Esq. oiF Llanarth Court. (See Burke's 
Landed Gentry.) Richard Vaughan, the grandfather of the present represen- 
tative of the family, was outlawed after the battle of CuUoden, and died in 
the Spanish service. 

ISLtXM. — Per pale az. and gu. three liona rampant arg. 

Crtit. — A cluld*8 head couped at the shoulders, and entwined round the neck 
with a snake. 

fAotUitfi, — Duw a digon. Simplices sicut pueri, sagacea sicut serpentes. 



(BWifi'-Uinett of XaUffettiottb* to. ^Iouce0ter, tain avenue 

^dUjBie, CO. WLotcmet, 

Joseph Ellis-Viner, Esq. of Badgeworth and Avenue House, J. P., fourth 
son of the late Daniel Ellis, Esq. of Minsterworth and Elmore, co. Gloucester, 
by Mary, his wife, dau. of William Viner, Esq. of Gloucester, succeeded to 
the estates of his uncle, the late William Viner, Esq. of Badgeworth and 
Gloucester, 11 May, 1811 3 and in compliance with that gentleman's wish, 
assumed by Royal Licence, the additional surname and arms of Viner. (See 
Burke's Landed Gentry.) 

Awnm. — Quarterly. First and fourth, per bend az. and gu. on a bend or, a Tine 
branch ppr., a chief erm. thereon a saltire engr. of the second between two Cornish 
choughs ppr., for Vinbr. Second and third, (quarterly, as. and gu. on a cross erm. 
between four nags* heads erased or, a cinquefoii pierced between four crescents sa., 
for Ellis. Impalino — (Mr. Ellis- Viner having married Anne, eldest dau. of Capt. 
John Twisden, R.N. of the Rock, near Tiverton, co. Devon, and now of Bradboume 
House, Kent) — the arms of Twisdbn, viz. : Gyronny of four arg. and gu., a saltire 
between four crosses crosslet, all counterchanged. 

Cre0t0. — First, a dexter arm embowed in armour or, encircled at the elbow with 
a wreath of vine, and holding in the hand a gem ring, for Vinbr. Second, a horse*^ 
head erased erm. gorged with a plain collar arg. charged with a cinquefoii between 
two crescents sa. and holding in the mouth a trefoil slipped, ppr. 

^Otto. — Lahore et honore. 



S 



Cfiomton, of TBroclibalU co- iQortbampton- 

Thobias Reeve Thori^tfon, Esq. of Brockhall, J. P. and D.L., and High She- 
riff, in 1798, eldest son and heir of the late Thomas Lee Thornton, Esq. of 
Brockhall, by Mary, his wife, dau. of William Reeve, Esq. of Melton-Mow- 
bray, and grandson of Thomas Thornton, Esq. of Brockhall, by Frances, his 
wife, dau. and heiress of William Lee, Esq. of Cold Ashby, co. Northampton, 
represents the very ancient family of Thornton, of Newnham, derived from 
the marriage of John Thornton, with Lettice, sister and heiress of Thomas 
Newnham, Esq. of Newnham. (See Bcjrke'b Landed Gentry,) 

flrms. — Arg. on a bend gu. three escarbuncles or, with many quarterings. 
Creitt. — A demi lion rampant gu. charged on the shoulder with an escarbuncle or. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate cm. 



Q^ignon, of a^fgnontiflle. 

The family of Mignon is originally of English extraction, and deduces its 
paternal descent from Sir William de la More, the ancestral chief of the an- 
cient house of that name, who possessed More Hall and Bank Hall, both in 
the county palatine of Lancaster, for a long series of generations. Sir Wil- 
liam accompanied Edward III. to France, fought at the battle of Cressy in 
1346, and was advanced to the highest military order in the days of chivalry, 
that of a Knight Banneret, on the field of Poictiers. About a century after- 
wards, the successors of this Sir William dc la More raised a corps of archers* 
and hastened to the relief of Louis XI. King of France, when besieged by 
Charles Duke of Burgundy, and on their being presented at court, His Ma- 
jesty observing their handsome [and martial appearance, exclaimed — " Ce ne 
sont pas la des Mores, mais des Mignonsj" from which the surname of 
" Mignon" has remained to them. 

In the 16th century, during the reign of Charles IX. vhen ciTil irar broke out between 
the Catholic and Protestant parties, Mignon's lineal descendant adopted the latter faith, and 
iras one of the most distinguished chiefs of the Huguenots, and took a conspicuous part in 
the numerous yictories of his party, between the years 1580 and 1586, in conjunction with the 
celebrated Duke de Sully. At the battle of Coutras in Guienne, Mignon was chief Command- 
ant of Artillery, and to his exertions was the King of Navarre, (afterwards Henry IV.) princi- 
pally indebted for that brilliant victory : for his services on this occasion, Henry IV. tent 
him the baton of a Marshal of France, the highest military honour which could be paid to a 
Protestant nobleman, but he was killed soon after at the seige of Nonan Court. His son and 
successor became page to Henry IV. on that monarch's accession, and was (as his father 
had likewise been) the confidential friend of the Duke dc Sully. The family continued in 
undisturbed enjoyment of their estates, until the revocation of the edict of Nantx, when the 
representative of this ancient and noble family was compelled to fly his native country, 
and arriving at Plymouth, settled himself there as a merchant. 

One of the chief ancestors of the different branches of the family of Mignon which flourished 
in France in the reign of Philip of Valois, acquired the lands of Mignonville near Mantes, 
William de Landes, Lord of Mignonville, was upwards of a hundred years old when he died. 
His son allied himself with the noble and ancient House of De la Chauss^ of Poitou, which 
held the Government of Poictiers in 1635. This family also intermarried with the illustrious 
house of Bre(;onnet of Tours. Francis Bre^onnet, the second of his name. Lord of Leveville, 
Ac, was father of William Bre9onnet, by his wife, Anneda Landes, Countess of Mignonville. 
Ho was President of the Council, and d, in 1674 ; by his marriage with Margaret, dau. of 
John Amelot and Catharine dc C'reil, he had several children, of whom one only survived, 
John, Lord of Mignonville, who c/. 25 Dec. 1698, leaving an only son Count db la Chaus- 
SBB, who came into Devonshire, as already stated, and had issue — 1 . John, a merchant, who </. 
at Plymouth, Feb. 1754. 2. Stephen, of whom presently. 3. Mary, m. to Peter Par^, Esq. 
the lineal descendant of the celebrated Amboise Par^, Surgeon to Francis I., and Henry II., 
Kings of France. 4. Elizabeth, m. Capt. Pitman, R.N. and was grandmother of Admiral Sir 
Richard John Strachan, Bart. G.C.B., so distinguished during the late war. The second son — 

Stepubn Mignon, m, 11 March 1746, Mary, eldest dau. of the Rev. Thomas Bishop, of 
Barnstaple, grand-dau. of Sir John Davie, fifth Bart, of Creedy, and had, — with two elder 
sons both </. young, and two daus. vis. Alary, m. John Innes, Esq., and Elizabeth Mussell, 
m. to Joseph May, Esq. of Plymouth, — an only surviving son — 

Gborob Mionon, CoL in the army, who served with great distinction in the campaigns in 



PLATE cm.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 

India, under Generals Goddard and Abercrombie, and Lords Comwallis and Harris. At the 
assault at Seringapatam, he led the whole flank companies of the Bombay Army, and ob. 
tained, immediately after the battle, a divisonal command through the recommendation of the 
Duke of Wellington (then Sir Arthur Wellesley). Col. Mignon m. a dau. of Robert Taylor, 
Esq. of the Bombay Ciyil Service, and d. in Nov. 1819, leaving, with other issue, a son — 

RoBBRT Mignon, Esq. 6. 17 Oct. 1803, Capt. in the Fusileers, Bombay Army, who m. 14 
May 1822, Mary Margaret dau. of Joshua Johnson Oddy, Esq. of Rasing Hall, and Damal, 
both in CO. York, and has issue : 

1. Robert-James, b. 14 Oct. 1823. 

2. FrankUn-Phillipps, b. 31 July, 1829. 

3. Edward-Adolphus Seymour, 6. 21 July, 1831. 

4. George Strachan, b. 2 March, 1 833. 

5. May Jephson James, b, 13 Feb. 1839. 

6. Anne, d, an infant. 

7. Mary-Margaret. 

8. Charlotte Sleigh Innes. 

Arms. — Gu. between two fleurs-de-lis arg. a bend vaire surmounted a bendlet or. 
Creitt. — A gauntlet holding a baton all ppr. 
^otto. — ^Tiens ta foy. 



WMQtu Of I5tlbam ^ou0e, co. f^otii. 

The Rev. Godfrey Wright, M.A., of Bilham House, bears a shield quar- 
terly Wright and Drake -, the latter as the descendant and one of the repre- 
sentatives of the family of Drake, whose ancestors, the De Schepdens of 
Nether Schepden near Halifax, assumed the surname of Drake, temp. Ed- 
ward I. 

^WM. — Quarterly. First and fourth, az. on a fesse arg. betw. three mullets or, 
as many eagles* heads erased of the field, for Wright. Second and third, paly of 
six arg. and erm. a wivern gu. a chief of the first, firetty of the third, for Draxb. 

Crest. — On a mount vert, in front of a garb erect or, a unicorn reguard. az., the 
dexter fore paw resting on a mullet, gold. 

^Ofto. — Aquila non capit muscas. 



Sir Edmund Lyons, Bart. Capt. R.N. K.C.H., Minister Plenipotentiary at 
Athens, is son of John Lyons, Esq. of Lyons, in Antigua, by Catherine his wife> 
dau. of Main Swete Walrond, Esq. of Montrath, co. Devon. (See Burkb*8 
Peerage and Baronetage.) 

2lrm0. — Sa. on a chev. between three lions sejant guard, arg. as many castles 
triple towered of the field. 

Crtit. — On a chapeau gules, turned up erm. a lion's head erased, gorged with a 
naval crown, and holding in the mouth a flag-staff with pennant flying, inscribed 
" Marack." 

^Otto. — Noli irritare leones. 



HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. [plate cm. 



Slnffbam, of agarton, in Cratien, co- i^orfe* 

Tbbophilus Hastings Ingham, Esq. of Marton House, Barrister at Law and 
a Magistrate for the^West Riding of Yorkshire, son and heir of the hite Ig- 
natius Inohabi, Esq. of East Marton, by Elizabeth Moone his wife, and 
grandson of the Rbv. Benjamin Ingham, of Queen's College, Oxford, Rector 
of Aberford near Leeds, the friend and coadjutor of John Wesley, descends, 
through his grandmother Lady Margaret Hastings, wife of the said Rev. 
Benjamin Ingham, and dau. of Theophilus Seventh Earl of Huntingdon, 
from the most ancient and distinguished of the noble families of England, as 
well as from the heiress of the Royal Line of Plantagknet, Catherine Pole, 
Countess of Francis, second Earl of Huntingdon, who was dau. and coheir of 
Henry Pole, Lord Montacute, brother of Cardinal Pole, and son and heir of 
Sir Richard Pole, K.G., by Margaret, Countess of Salisbury, his wife, dau. 
of Geoflfrey Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, brother of King Edward IV. 
and sister and heiress of Edward, Earl of Warwick, last heir male of the 
Royal House of Plantagenet. Mr. Ingham married in 1829i Mary, only 
child of the late J. Thomson, Esq. of Lancashire. 

2|flll0. — Quarterly, or, and vert, a cross moline quarterly countcrchanged, on a 
chief arg. a maunch sa. 

Ctff t. — Two arms embowed, rested vert, cuffed or, holding between the hands 
a maunch sa. 

IBottO. — In veritate Victoria. 
Francis Hastings. 2nd Earl of Hunt-^CATHBRTNu, dau. and coheir of Henry Pole, 



ingdon, a.d. 1552, representative of 
the great and illustrious House of 
Hastings (see Burke's Peerage.) 



Lord Montacute, son and heir of Sir Rich. 
Pole, K.G. by Margarct,Countess of Salis- 
bury, his wifc.sLster and heiress of Edward, 
Earl of Warwick, the last male Planta- 

OBNBT. 



George Hastings, 4th Earl of Hunting-=f=Dorothy, dau. of Sir J. Port, of Etwall, 
don, successor to his brother, the 3rd 1 co. Derby. 
Earl. I 

Francis Hastings, d.vitd patris,^Szx9Jtit sister of Lord Harrington. 
I 



Henry Hastings, 5th Earl of Hunting-=^Elizabeth, dau. of Ferdinando Stanley, Earl 
don. I of Derby. 

r • 

Ferdinando llastinf^, Gth Earl of Hunt-=pLucy, dau. and sole heir of Sir John Davis, 

ingdon, d. in 1005. I of Englefield. 

f 

Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Hunt-yFrances, dau. and heir of Francis Leveson 

ingdon. I Fouler, Esq., 2nd wife. 

I ^^ — ' — ^1 1 — ; ■ 

Theophilus, 9th Ferdinando, Lady Catharine Hastings, Ladt Margaret Hast- 

Earl of Hunt- ef. unm. m. the licv.GranvilleWhee- xnos, m. the Rev. Bbnja- 

ingdon, repre- Anne, ler,Prcbendary of Durham, min Ingham, and was 

tented by the Alice, and and had issue. grandmother of the pre- 

Marqubss of Frances, all sent Theophilus Hast- 

Hastings. d. unm, ivob Ingham, Esq. of 

Marton. 



PLATE cm.] HERALDIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 



CiQpnne, of l^ajBiletnooti, to, ®Up. 

JoBN Wynne, Esq. of Haslewood, J. P.^ formerly M. P. for the borough of 
Sligo^ and High Sheriff for the counties of Sligo and Leitrinit eldest son 
and heir of the late Owen Wynne, Esq., of Haslewood, M. P., by the late 
Lady Sarah Elizabeth Cole, eldest dau. of William, first Earl of Enniskillen 
and grandson of Owen Wynne, Esq., of Hazlewood, M. P., by Anne his wife, 
sister to Robert Earl of Famham, derives in direct lineal descent from a 
distinguished Chieftain of the 12th century, Ririd Flaidd^ Lord of Penllyn, 
CO. Merioneth, within the ancient kingdom of Powys, who took the surname 
of Blaidd or the Wolf, from his maternal ancestor, Blaidd Rhudd, or the 
Bloody Wolf, Lord of Gest, near Penmorfa, whose standard bore a wolf 
passant on an azure ground. (See Burke's Landed Gentry,) Mb. Wynne 
impales with his paternal shield the arms of Butler in right of his wife. Lady 
Anne Wandesford Butler, sister to the Marquis of Ormond. 

Ami0. — Vert a chev. erm. betw. 'three wolTes* heads erased, 'arg., mvALnro 
BuTLBB, Tiz. Quarterly : First or, a chief indented ax. Second, go, three coyered 
cups, or. Third, arg. a lion rampt sa. on a chief gn. a swan, wings expanded of 
the first, betw. two annulets or. Fourth, Erm. a saltire engrailed gu. 

CTtrSt^A wolfs head erased, as in the arms. 

^OttO.— Non sibi sed toti. 



ADDENDA. 



PLATE LIV. 

In the pedigree attached to the arms of Davie9»Cooke, of Gwysaney and 
Owston^ the following errors in the last generation but one should be cor- 
rected: 

For " Philip Smith Webb. Esq. of Mu^ord," read " PhiUp Smith Webb, Esq. 

of Milford:* 
For ** The Rev. William Margesson, of Oclkey;^ read ** The Rer. William 

Margesson, of Ockley ' ' 

PLATE LXIV. 

In the shield of Money-Kyrle, of Much Marcle^ co. Hereford^ the following 
additional quarterings have been omitted : they were brought in by the mar- 
riage of Thomas Kyrle, Esq.^ Lord of the Manor of Much Marcle^ with 
Frances, dau. and heir of John Knottesford, Esq., by Jane, his wife, second 
dau. and coheir of Sir Richard Kniohtlky, of Upton, son of Sir Richard 
Knightley, of Fawsley, co. Northampton, Knt., and should be inserted im- 
mediately after xv. Knottesford, thus : 

XTX. Knioutlby. Quarterly : first and fourth, erm. Second and third, paly of 
six, or and gu. 

XVII. Pantulph. Gu. two bars erm. a crescent for difference. 

xviii. Db ViaouN. Gu. fretty or, a crescent for difference. 

XIX. DoiLLT. Gu. three bucks' heads cabossed or. 

XX. Db Stokb. Barry of ten arg. and gu. a chev. or. 

XXI. DuKSTON. Gu. a buck's head cabossed arg. 

xxii. FiTZ-NoBL. Or fretty gu. a canton arg. 

xxiii. Tregoz. Az. two bars gemell^ and in chief a lion passant guardant or. 

XXIV. FiTz Gbrold. Gu. a lion passant guardant arg. crowned or. 

XXV. EwiAS. Arg. a fess gu. between three mallets of six points sa* 

XXVI. GoLOVKR. Az. a buck's head cabossed or. 
XXVII. Di BuROH. Or, a buck's head cabossed sa. 

xxviii. Dk Burgu. Arg. on a saltiie sa. five swans of the field. 

XXIX. CowLiY. Gu. a chev. counter compon^ or and arg. between three crosses 
crosslct of the field. 

XXX. CowLKY. Arg. a lion rampant sa. within a bordure engrailed of the field. 

XXXI. CuANCous. Arg. a chcv. between three annulets gu. 

XXXII. Skknard. Arg. a chev. gu. between three hawkes* lures gu. 

xxxui. S&KNARD. Or, a chev. between three escallops az. 

XXXIV. HAawxooif. Arg. a bend, countercompony or and gu. 



ADDENDA. 

zxxv. Watbryillb. Arg. sem^ of cross crossleis gu. a fesse dancetUe of the last. 
xxxYi. Lathwath. Bendy gu. and yaire, a label of five points or. 
xxxYii. St. John. Gu. two bars arg. a canton erm. 

xxxviii. Plumpton. Az. five fusils in fesse or, each charged with a mullet gu. 
xxxn. Bagot. Arg. a chev. gu. between three martlets sa. 
XL. Lyons. A lion rampant Yaire. 
XLi. Lyons. Arg. a lion rampant gu. 
xui. Warkworth. a fess. between three crescents. 
XLiii. PiMCKNBY. Arg. ou a chief gu. fiYe fusils arg. 



PLATE LXXXII. 

Thb accompanying is a more correct statement of the ancestry of Mr. 
Lowndes-Stone than that inserted in the body of the work : 

William Francis Lowndbs-Stonb, £sq. of Brightwell Park, D.C.L., J. P., 
D. h., and High Sheriff of Oxfordshire, 1834, is eldest son of the late 
William Lowndes, Esq. of Brightwell, in the co. of Oxford, and Astwood and 
North Crawley, co. Bucks, by Elizabeth, his wife, second daughter and coheir 
of Richard Garth, Esq. of Mordon, co. Surrey, by Mary his wife, daughter 
of Peter Leheup, Esq. by his wife, daughter of William Lowndes, Esq. of 
Winslow, CO. Bucks, Secretary to the Treasury -, which Richard Garth was 
great-grandson of George Garth of Mordon, in the county of Surrey, by Anne 
his wife, eldest daughter of Sir John Carleton, Bart, of Brightwell, by Anne 
his wife, daughter of Sir Richard Houghtouy of Houghton Tower, co. Lan- 
caster^ and eventual coheir with her sister Catharine, the wife of John Stones, 
Esq. to her brother Sir George Carleton. The late William Lowndes Esq. 
assumed the surname and arms of Stone -, on the death of his mother Cathe- 
rine, daughter and coheir of Francis Lowe, Esq. of Baldwyn Brightwell, co. 
Oxon, 1789, pursuant to the testamentary injunction of the said Francis 
Lowe, who inherited the estates of his cousin John Stone. He was son of 
William Lowndes by Catherine his wife, and grandson by Margaret his wife, 
daughter and heiress of Thomas Layton, Esq., of William Lowndes, of Ast- 
wood Bury, CO. Bucks, second son of William Lowndes, Esq. Secretary of the 
Treasury, temp, William III., Queen Anne, and George I. 

PLATE LXXXII. 

The iSlotto of Richard Saunders, of Largay, Esq. is 

** Genitum se credere mundo." 



iSlottocs, 

TRANSLATED, WITH EXPLANATORY ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Accipiter prvdAia, nos gtoriam. The hawk kfter iti grty, we aRcr glory. Hawker, of 

LoDgparigh House. 
AquaUter et dilisenier. Evenly ind diligently. Moore, of Aigburlh. 
Alleii li libL Act lowardi anolhei aa thou woutdst towaidi thyself. SaTlll-Ontey, of 

Stilled HaU. 
Arnica Teritis. Tnitli a friend. Nesbilt, of WoodhalL 
Atnor sine timoie. Lore without feai. Keide, of Wood Paika. 
Anitnum rcge. Regulale the mind. Roeves, of VoslerHberg. 

Ante onmia lylva. Virg. He II. v. 62. The woods before all things. Forslcr, of Wal- 
thamstow. 

" The gods to lire in woods hare left the skies : 

And god.like Paris in lb' Idiean grove. 

To Priam's wealth prefurred ^noni^s love. 

In citiet which she built let Palliu reign ; 

Tow'n ftie for gods, but forests for the swain." 

AqnilA non eapit muscas. The eagle doci not catch flies. Wright, of Bitham (lotiM;, 

Aiotla. Inscnpiion on the banner in Ihe crest of M'Uonald, u( Dalchosnic. 

Artibui et annis. By arts and arms. Elton, Barl, 

A tout pouToir. With every exertion. Uliphanl, o( Gask. 

Audeo. I dare. Rose, of Holme. 

Anzilio difino. With divine assistance. Drake, of Nntwelt Court, BatL 

Avise la Sn. Consider the end. Kennedy, of Knockgiay. 

Avito evehor honore. I am exalted by ancestral honour. Holmes. 

Beitut and fear not. Shakespeare, H. VIII. act 3, sc. 2. Peacock, of Rauceby. 

Bjddwch GyGawn ac nag ofnwch. Be just and fear not. Lewis, of Gilfach. 

Candide. Candidly. Stewart, of Binny. 

Carpe diatn. Horace, Od. lib. 1, od. 1 1. Take advantage of Ihe day. Webster, of Penn*. 

Care lupnm. Beware of the wolf. Huband, of Ipsley. 

Cadant arma togs. Let arms yield to the gown. Reade, of Ipsden. 

The whole line of Cicero is, " CedanI anna togK, concedal lauiea lingun ;" Lei 
trmt yield to the logo, tie taurtl to Ut tongue ; the orator thereby meaning lo ehow 
how much more effective in defeating the coDipiracy of Calaline is the sagacity of 
the alalesman, than the arms of the warrior. 

Cednnt anna logK. Arms yield to the gown. Reade, of Wood Park. 

CeiTu* non Mrvus. The sug is not a alare. Ooddard, of Cliffe House. 

Claiior e flamnis. Brighter from tho flatnea. Gray, of Whamliuids. 

The bird of wonder dies, the maidan phcenii, 
Her ashes new create another heir 
As great in admiration as henelH" 

Constant and failhfiil. Maeoueen, of CoirybTOngh. 

Constant and true. Rose, or Holme. 

Coi immobile. A heart immoveable. Hyett, of Painswick House. 

Crainte refrainte. Fear repressed. Pornti, of Brockhampton House. 

Cmca non prudentii. Through suffering, not through caution. Topham, of Middlehiim 

Cum prim& luce. With (he earliaat dawn. I^vedaj, of Willianiicol«. 
Cura et induBlria. Care and industry. Walker, of Dairy. 
Dat gloria tire*. Glory gives strength. Hogg, of Gilalown. 
De Dicu touL From Gm every thing. White, of YeoviL 



MOTTOES. 

Dedit meliora dabitque. He has giyen, ftnd He will give better things. Ormerod, of Tyl- 

desley and Sedbury. 
Delectat amor patriae. The lore of country delighteth. .Smith, of Annabrook. 
De Marisco. Marsh, of Snave Court 

Deo adjuTante. God aiding. Salomons, of Burrswood and Broom Hill. 
De o non fortune. To God, not to fortune. Gardiner, of Coombe Lodge. « 
^nCus dabit Tela. God will fill the sails. Norman, of Sussex. 

'* But He, that hath the steerage of my course, 
Direct my sail." — shakbspbarb. 

Deus mihi sol. God is to me the sun. Nicholson, of Ballow. 

Deus non reliquit memoriam humilium. God has not cast aside the memory of the lowly. 

Meynell, of North Kilvington. 
Deutlich und wahr. Schreiber, of Henhurst. 
Dhanheon co Hierach. Macdonald, of Inchkenneth. 
Dieu defend le droit. God defend the right. Alderman Hunter. 

" And God befriend us, as our cause is just." 

SHAKSSPBARB. 

Dinna wakn sleeping dogs. Robertson, of Lude. 

Ditat senrata fides. Faith preserved enricheth. Papillon, of Acrise. 

Do it with thy might Fowell Buxton, Bart. 

Dominus providebit The Lord will proTide. Burton, of Dunstall Priory. 

Ductus non coactus. Induced, not compelled. Robertson, of Lude. 

Dulcis pro patriA labor. Labour for one's country is sweet. M*Kerrell, of Hill House. 

Dulcius ex asperis. Sweeter from difficulties. Ferg^usson, of KUkerran, Bart 

Dum spiro spero. While I breathe I hope. O'Reilly, of Knock Abbey. 

Duw a digon. Yaughan, of Courtfield. 

Dux vitae ratio. Reason the rule of life. West, of Alscot Park. 

En Dieu est tout In God is CTery thing. Wentworth, of Wentworth Castle. 

Esperance en Dieu. Hope in God. Duke of Northumberland. 

•* Now— Esperance ! Percy ! and set on." 

" Esperance en Dieu" is still the legend of the Percy : of whom, in relation to 
this motto, it has been elegantly said : " At one moment the provincial monarch of 
unmeasured lands, the lord of impregnable fortresses, and tne chief of countless 
vassals : the next the tenant of a prison, from which there was seldom any other 
escape than death. These vicissitudes of fortune taught them the instability of all 
human greatness, and that the only sure trust is * Esperance en DieuJ' ** — Quarterly 
Review, No. cxliii. See the able " Sketch of Uie Male Descendants of the Second 
House of Percy," by W. E. Surtees, Esq. D.C.L. 

Esse quam videri. To be, rather than to seem., Swire, of Cononly House; and Maitland, 

of Dundrennan. 
Esto vigilans. Be watchful. Okeover, of Okeover. 
Et Dieu mon appui. And Gk>d my support Hungerford, of Dingley Park. 

" He firm as stands the rock's unshaken base, 
Tet panting for a surer resting place. 
The human hurricane unmoved can see, 
And say, ' O Qod, my refuge is in Thee !' " 

BOWLIS. 

Exaltabit honore. It will exalt with honour. Smyth, of Gaybrook. 

Factis non verbis. By deeds not words. Money, of WiUthamstow. 

Fide et industriiL By fidelity and industry. Whittingham. 

Fide et marte. By fidelity and valour. Ralston, of Ralston. 

Fidelis et suavis. Faithful and courteous. Emery, of Banwell. 

Fidelia. Faithful. Waldy, of Egglescliffe. 

Fidelisque ad mortem. Faithful even to death. Taylor, of Mosley Hall ; and Taylor, of 

Strensham Court 
Firmitas in ccelo. Stability in heaven. Macnamara, of Ayle ; Macnamara, of Doolen ; and 

Maher, of Woodlands. 
Foi, Roi, Droit Faith, King, Right Lynes, of Tooley Park. 
Force avec vertu. Strength with virtue. Leigh, of West Hall. 
Fortis et'astutus. Powerful and cunning. Pott,^of BenUiam Hill. 
Fortiter et recte. Boldly and righlhr. Drake, of Nutwell Court, Bart. 
Fortitudine et prudentia. With fortitude and prudence. Hargreaves. of Broad Oak : 

O'ReUly, of Knock Abbey. 
^orlltDarll. Balfour, of Trenaby. 

Frangas non flectes. Thou mayst break, not bend. Jones, of Trewythen. 
Fy Nuw a Chymry. Walters Philips, of Aberglasney. 

Genitum*se credere mundo. To believe oneself bom for the world. Saunders, of Largay. 
Give the thankyss that are due. Plumer Ward, of Gilston Park. 



MOTTOES. 

HaUeltyah. Aylmer, of Lyons. 

Heart and hand. Matheson, of Achany. 

Hinc usque superna venabor. Henceforward I will ever hunt after heavenly things. 

Murray, of Philiphauffh ; and Murray, of Danesfield. 
Hoc Tirtutis opus. This the work of virtue. Bulwer Ly tton, Bart. 
Honeste audax. Honestly bold. Wolley, of Allen Hill. 
Honneur me guide. Honour guides me. Lousada. 
Honorate, diligite, timcte. Honour, love, fear. Moseley, of Buildwas. 
Honore, pietas. Honour, piety. Waters, of Samau. 
Hoic habco non tibi. I have for him, not for thee. Newton, of Mickleover. 
I Dduw bo*r dwlch. Thomas, of Wellfield House. 
Imperat eequor. He rules the sea. Monypenny, of Hole House. 
In cmce salus. Salvation on the cross. Mountain, of the Heath. 
In Deo confide nil desperandum. Confide in God, naught is to be despaired of. Capt. 

Kelly, R. N. 
IndostriA. By industry. Peel, of Accrington and Knowlemere 
In periculis audax. Daring in dangers. Maher, of Woodlands. 

In te, Domine, speravi. In thee, O Lord ! I have hoped. Psalm xxx. Vale, of London. 
Inter hastas et hostes. Among spears and foemen. Powell, of Nanteos. 
In Teritate victoria. There is victory in truth. Ingham, of Marton House. 
Jamais abattu. Never cast down. Lindoe, of Norwich. 
Je pense a qui pense plus. I think of him who is most thoughtful of me. Major Gen. 

Cleiland. 
Je yeux de bonne guerre. I desire fair war. Thompson, of Kirby Hall. 

" The arms are fair, 
When the intent of bearing them is just.** 

SHAKISFIARI. 

Juncti Talemus. United, we are powerful. Walker. 

Lahore et honore. With toil and honour. Ellis- Vincr, of Badge worth. 

La fin couronne les oeuvres. The end crowns the works. Yarker, of Leybum. 

Lam dearg na leirear. O'Neill, of Bunowcn Castle. 

Libertas. Liberty. Evans, of Baymount. 

Manent optima coelo. The best things remain in heaven. Miller, of Collierswood. 

" Comfort 's in heaven ; and we arc on the earth. 
Where nothing lives but crosses, care, and grief." 

SHAKBSrXARS. 

Mean, speak, and do well. Urquhart, of Meldrum. 

Mediocna firma. Mediocrity is stable. Lowndes-Stone, of Brightwell Park. 

Mens conscia recti. A mind conscious of right. Watlington, of Berkshire. 

Merere. Deserve. Currer, of Clifton House. 

Militia mea multiplex. My warfare is manifold. Toke, of Godinton. 

Mo8 legem regit. Custom rules the law. Mosley, Bart. 

My hope ia constant. Macdonald, of Inch Kenneth. 

Nee cupias, nee metuas. Nor desire, nor fear. Yorke, of Erddig. 

Nee opprimere, nee opprimi. Nor to oppress, nor to be oppressed. Sneyd, of Ashcomb. 

Nee rege, nee populo, sed utroque. Nor for king, nor for people, but for both. Wilkenson, 

of Harperfey Park. 
Nee sorte nee fato. Nor through chance, nor through fate. Rutherford, of Edgerston. 
Nee tempore nee fato. Nor by time, nor by fate. MacDonald, of Rammerscales. 
Nee temere nee timide. Nor rashly, nor timidly. Purvis, of Plawsworth ; Milward, of Hex- 

^ve Park ; Sandford, of the Isle of up Rossall. 
Nemmem metue innocens. Being innocent, fear no one. Count Eyre. 
Nerer fear. Stewart, of St. Fort. 

Ne vile Telis. Desire nothing base. Percy Neville, Esq. Major 63d Reft. 
Nihil humani alienuuL Nothing that is human ia foreign to me. Hutchinson, of Whitton 

House. 
Nil moror ictus. I heed blows as nothing. Money-Kyrle, of Much Marcle. 

The motto applies to the properties of the hedgehog, the crest of Kyrle. 
Nil sine numine. Nothing without divine interference. Weld, of Lulworth. 
Noli irritare leones. Enrage not lions. Lyons, Bart 
Noli mentirL Do not lie. Notley, of Coombe Sydenham. 
Non sibi. < Not for oneself. Major General Cleiland. 

Non sibi, sed patrie. Not for oneself, but for one's country. Baker, of Cottesmore. 
Non'sibi, sed toti. Not for oneself^ but for all. Wynne, of Haslewood. 
Non'sine pulvere palm a. A reward not without labour. Peirse, of Bedale. 
Non vi, sed virtute. Not by force, but by virtue. Ramsbotham, of Old Hall. 
Now thus, now thus. Pilkington, of Hatfield. 
Officium prcDsto. I do my duly. Pownall, of Pownall. 

Ofiiwn yr arglwydd. Let us fear the Lord. Lloyd -Williams, of Gwemant Park. 
OpUmus est qui optima facit. The best is he who does the beat Best, of Chievcly. 
Paix et pen. Peace and little. Walrond, of Calder Park. 
Palma virtutL llie palm to virtue. Palmer, of Nazing Park. 



MOTTOES. 

ParatuB ad arma. Ready for amis. Johnston, of Hilton. 

Patior ut potiar. I suffer that I may enjoy. Spottiswoode, of SpoltUwoode. 

Pax, copla, yirtus. Peace, plenty, Tirtue. Steuart, of Glenormiston. 

Pejus letho flagitium. Disgrace worse than death. Martin, of Ham Court 

Pen aur y chalon win. Watkins, of Pennoyre. 

Per ardua. Through difficulties. Drake, Bart 

Per aspera yirtus. Virtue through difficulties. Ross, of Craigie. 

Per mare, per terras. Through aea, through land. McDonald, of Dalchosnie ; Urquhart, of 

Meldnim. 
Per Sinum Codanum. Through the Baltic Sea. GraTes Sawle, Bart 
Pollet Tirtus. Virtue is powerful. Poole, of Mayfield. 

Post nubila Phoebus. After the clouds the sun. Shuldham, of Marlesford Hall. 
Pour Dieu et mon pays. For God and my country. De Lautour, of Hexton House. 
Prend moi tel que Je suis. Take me as I am. Sutton, of Rossway, Herts. 
Prenez en gr£. Take in good will. Ogle, of Kirklev Hall. 
Prest d'accomplir. Ready to accomplisL Talbot, of Talbot Hall. 
Prsesto et persto. I do and perseyore. Steward, of Norfolk. 
Pro libertate. For liberty. Wallace, of Kelly. 
Propositi tenax. Firm of purpose. Strutt, of Belper. 

Pro rege et pro patriA semper. For king and country oyer. Lawrence, of Lisreaghan. 
Pro rege saepe, pro patri& semper. For king often, for country always. Redington, of Kilcor- 

nan. 
Propero sed euro. I make speed, but am careful. Maxwell Graham, of William wood. 
Prudhomme et loyal. A man honest and loyaL Pridham, of Plymouth, anciently Prudhome. 
Quantum in rebus inane ! How much frivolity in things. Odell, of Carriglea. 
Qua pote lucet He shines whereyer possible. Bowyer Smyth, Bart 
Quid prodest What does it profit ? Webb, of Maidstown. 
Qui inyidet minor est. He who enyies is inferior. Pugh, of Llanerchydol. 
Qui nucleum yult, nucem frangat Who wishes the kernel, let him break the nut Hasler, 

of Aldingboume. 
Refulgent in tenebris. They shine in darkness. Studdert, of Bunratty Castle. 
Resolve well, persevere. Moore, of StockweU. 
Revirescimus. We flourish again. Dr. Bumes. 
Reviresco. I flourish again. Constable Maxwell, of Everingham Park. 
Ros coeli. The dew of heaven. Roskell, of Lancashire. 

Ruinam salutarunt pro rege. They have hailed death in the cause of the king. Dr. Buriies. 
Sans tache. Without stain. Martin, of Worsboro*. 
Sapere aude. Dare to be wise. Wise, of Clayton Hall. 
Semper praesto patriae servire. I am ever ready to serve my country. O'Neill, of Buuowcn 

Castle. 
Sic parvis magna.^ Thus to compare great things with small. Drake, Bart 
Si Deus, quis contra ? If God be for us, who against us ? Spens, of Inveresk. 
Simplioes sicut pueri, sagaces sicut serpentes. Simple as children, sagacious as serpent:*. 

Vaughan, of Court Field. 
Sine macule Without blemish. Synnot, of Ballymoyer House. 
Soies ferme. Be firm. Constable Maxwell, of Everingham Park. 
Sola yirtus invicta. Virtue alone invincible. Howard, of Corby Castle. 
Soli Deo. To God alone. Alloway, of the Derries. 
Solus minus solus. Leas alone, when adone. Hoskins, of Birch House. 
Souvenez. Remember. Maxwell-Oraham, of Glasgow. 
Sperantes in Domino non deficient Those who hope in the Lord will not be cast down. 

Niblett, of Haresfield Cotirt 
Spero meliorsk I hope for better things. Pew, of Scotland. 
Spero ut fidelis. I hope as one who is faithful. Baskerville, of Clyrow Court 
Spes lucis aetemae. The hope of eternal light Pitcaim, of Pitcaims. 
Spes tutissima coelis. The surest hope is in heaven. Price, of Glangwilly. 
Stabit conscins aequu He who is conscious of rig^t, will be stedfast. Charlton, of Chilwell. 
Steady. Northey, of Woodcote. 
Stet fortuna domus. May the fortune of the house remain, Holdich. 

Th' immortal line in sure succession reigns ; 

The fortune of the fiunily remains : 

And grandsires' grandsires the long list contains. 

ORYDBN. 

Sub cruce salus. Salvation under the cross. Fletcher, of Dudley. 

Sume superbiam qussitam mentis. Remove firom the mind the pride that it has acouired 

Seaver, of Heath Hall. ^ 

Superabit onmia virtus. Virtue will overcome all things. Rabett, of Bramfield House. 
Super antiquas vias. Upon the ancient track. Thorp, T),D. of Ryton. 
Sursum. Above. Hutdiison, of Ireland, 
Svn ar D3r Hun. De Winton, of Clifton. 

Tant que je puis. As much as I can. Jolliffe, of Ammerdown Park. 
Terra marique potens. Powerful by seaand land. 0*MaUey, of the .Lodge. 




MOTTOES. 

The red hand of Ireland. O'Neill, of Bunowen. 

Tiens ta foy. Hold thy faith. Mignon, of Mignonville. 

Timor Domini fons vitee. The fear of the Lord is the fountain of life. Hon. Sir Edward 

Butler. 
Utcunque placuerit Deo. Whenever it'shall please God. Darby, of Colebrookdale. 
Vae Tictis. Woe to the conquered. Senhouse, of Nelherhall and Barrow Ht.use. 
Veritas vincet. Truth will prevail. Orpen, of Ireland. 
Ver-non semper viret. Spring does not always flourish, or Vernon always flourishes. Vernou, 

of Hilton. 
Vescitur Christo. He is fed by Christ. Rous, of Courtyrala. 
Vi et virtute. With strength and virtue. Spaight, of Clare and Limerick. 
Viet suavitate. By force and mildness. Rochfort, of Clogrenaue. 
Vigila et ora. Watch and pray. Rogers, of Dowdeswell. 
Vlgueur de dessus. Strength from. above. Willington, of Killoskehane Castle and Castle 

Willington. 
Viresco vulnere. I gain strength with the wound. Oldfleld, of Oldfield. 
Virtus in ardu is. Virtue in ditficulties. Smith, of Bittcswell Hall. 
Virtus mille scuta. Howard-Vyse, of Stoke. 

Virtus praestantior auro. Virtue more excellent than gold. Whielden, of Springfield House. 
Virtus pretiosior auro. Virtue more precious than gold. Robinson, of Tottenham ; Severn, 

of WaUop Hall and Thenford. 
Virtute et fide. By virtue and faith. Collins, of Walford. 
Virlute et fidelitate. By virtue and fidelity. Reeves, of Vostersberg. 
Virtute et valore. By virtue and valour. Waldron, of Ashford House. 
Virtute non astuti*^. By virtue, not by cunning. Thomas, of Carmaithen. 
Virtute non sanguine. By virtue, not by blood. Hayward Southby, of Carswell. 
Virtute non verbis. By virtue, not by words. Fitzmaurice, of Duagh House ; and Robinson, 

of Sudley. 
Virtute avorum. By the virtue of ancestors. Watkins, of Silkstone. 
Virtute vici. By valour I conquered. Meynell, of Langley Park. 
Virtuti nihil invium. Nothing impervious to valour. Chamberlayne, of Maugersbnry. 
Virtutia amore. By the love of virtue. Stephens, of Tregenna Cai>tle. 
Virtutia fortuna comes. Fortune the companion of valour. The Duke of Wellington. 
Vi vel suavitate. By force or by mildness. Rochfort, of Clogrenane. 
Vive revicturus. Live as if about to live again. Vivian, of Singleton. 
Vixi liber et moriar. I have lived free and 1 will die so. Gray, of Whamlands. 
Volia tunc velis. With wishes as well as with sails. Martin, of Worsboro'. 
Weigh well. Urquhart, of Meldrum. 
Y Gwir yn Erbyn y Byd. Hughes, of Donnington Priory. 






vm ^Trar tfiYr 



INDEX. 



The CapiicU Letters indicate the Respective Famify Shields : those] in Roman Lettersy the 
Quarterings and Impalements ; the Figures refer to the Number of the Plate, 



AbeU, 92 

Abrahall, 79 

Acton, 89 

Adams, 59, 72 

Aldeney, 88 

AlYonley, 89 

Allowat, of The Dbrribs, 
Queen's Co. 100. 

Almor, of Almor, 54 

Alport, 97 

Amisi^GS 

Andrews, 72 

Ap Gwillim, 79 

Appleton, 104 

Ardeme, 89 

Ashe, 74 

Assheton, 75 

Atherton, 92 

Auger, 74 

Atlmbb, of Lyons, go. Kildare, 
69 

Baddlesmere, 74 

Baily, 97 

Bakbr, of Cottssmorb, CO. Rut- 
land, 68 

Baker, 55 

Balfour, of Trbnabt, co. Ork- 
ney, 67 

Balfour, 71 

Barcrofl, of Barcroft, 54 

Barker, 90 

Bamhouse, 101 

Barrowe, 101 

Baskbrvillb, of Cltrow Court, 
00. Radnor, 79 

Baskenrille, 79 

Bateman, 98 

Beaufoy, 57 

Bedingfield, 92 

Bell, 73, 98 

Berkeley, 61 

Bertram, 84 

But, of Chibvbley, co. Berks. 
96 

Best, 64, 97 

Bethune, 71 

Bickerton, 99 

Bingham, 108 

Blacket, 79 

Blaidd Rudd, 61 

Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, King of 
Powys, 54 

Blennerhasset, 98 

Boddam, 63 

Bodle, 77 

Bohun,.85 



Booth, 89 
"Bostock, 91 
Boulcott, 79 
BoTile, 95 
Bowdler, 56, 61 
Bower, 108 
Bowyer, 74, 101 
Boys, 74 
Braban, 74 
Bracebridge, 56 

BrAMLBT-MoORB, of AlQBURTB, 

near LiTerpool, 65 
Brerehaugh, 64 
Brett, 64 
Brevnton, 79 
Brokehampton, 94 
Brooke, 56, 68 
Brockholcs, of Claughton, 54 
Brotherton, 63 
Brough, 64 
Bruce, 55, 76 
Bruges, 79 
Bruly, 82 
Bucknall, 101 
Bulkeley, 91 
Bulmcr, 98 

BULWBBLYTTON.ofKNBBWORTH, 

Park, co. Herts. Bart., 81 
Bund, 82 
Burley, of Malehurst, 54 

BURMBS, of FORFARSHIRB, 55 

BuRTON,of DunstallPriort, 57 

BUTLBR, 97 

Butler, 79, 103 

Buxton, of Bbllfibld and Run* 

TON, Bart., 60 
Cadwgan, 54 
Cadwgan ap Elystan, 54 
Cambride, 64 
Canning, 63 
Carrington, 85 
Cathcart, 62 
Catterich, 75 

Ditto {andent), 75 
Chaldecot, 108 
Chaloner. 85 
Chamberlain, 74 
Chambbrlatnb, of Mauobrs- 

BURT HOUSB, 92 

Chamberlayne, (andent) 92 
Charlton, of Chilwbll Hall, 

CO. Nottingham, 76 
Charlton, 82 
Chamock, 74 
Chilesden, 74 
Christmas, 104 



CUin ap Y Blaidd Rhudd, 54 

Clarke, 60, 85 

Clbiland, Major-Gbn. 100 

Clopton, of Clopton, 54 

Cluddb, of Orlbton, 56 

Clutton, of Chorlton Hall, 
CO. Chester, 88 

Colley, 66 

Coluns, of Walford, CO. Here- 
ford. 97 

Colnett, 81 

Colwyn ap Tangno, 54 

Conbtablb-BIaxwbll, of Etb&- 
iNOHAM, CO. York, and Car- 
latbrock, CO. Dumfries, 87 

Constable, 87. 

CooKB, of OwsTON, CO. York, and 
Gwtsanbt, CO. Flint, 6ko., 54, 
and Addenda 

Copeland, 98 

Cornwall, 74 

Corrington, 75 

Courthyn, 88 

CoxwBLL, of Abunoton, CO. 
Gloucester, 67 

CreswelU 97 

Crewes, 86 

Crompton, 89 

Cross, 78 

Cunningham, 106 

CURRBR, of CUFTON HoUSB, 55 

Cyvelioc, 89 

Dabitot, 64 

Dacre, 63 

Dallingridge, 74 

Dalrumple, 106 

Dalston, 90 

Dannet, 76 

Danvers, 82 

Darby, of Colbbrooxdalb, co. 

Salop, 59 
David ap Grono, 54 
David, of Y Gwyn Lloyd, 54 
Davies, of Gwysaney, 54 
Dawson, 73, 100 
D'AIbini, 89 
De Angelo or Nangle, 72 
De Burgh (Sir John), 54 
Delahay, 79 
Delalynde, 74 
Delamere, 79 
Db Lautour, of Hbxton Housb, 

107 
Delaval, 73 
De MonUlt, 89 
Dennis, 101 



INDEX. 



De Stowford, 94 

Dcthicke, 101 

De Tour, of Shrewsbury, 54 

Deuenish, 94 

Db Winton, of Clifton, 90 

Dixon, 98 

Done, 89 

Douglas, 58 

Dowell, 108 

Downes, 81 

Downman, 97 

Down, 55 

Downs, 101 

Drake, of Nutwbll Court, co. 

Devon, Bart, 70 
Drake, 70, 78, 103 
Draper, 74 
Duffield, 96 
Eaglesfield, 98 
Earle, 81 
East, 106 
Eaton, 81 
Edmerston, 101 
Edmunds, 85, 101 
Ednyfed Vychan, 54 
Edwin, Lord of Tegaingl, 54 
EUot, 73 
Eliott, 70 

ElLIS-ViNSR, of BaDGB WORTH, 

102 
Ellis, 102 
Elton, of Clbybdon Court, co. 

Somerset, 75 
Elystan Glodrydd, 54 
Embry, of THB Grangb, 108 
Engayne, 94 
Eniayne, 79 
Emey, 92 
Ernie, 64 
Emley, 94 
Evans, of Batmount, co. Dublin, 

and RoBiNSTowN, co. West- 

meath, 87 
Ewyas, 64 
Eynsford, 79 
Eyrb, 70 
Faber, 66 
Fairfax, 92 
Fawke, 94 
Fawne, of Alderwasley, 101 

FBROU88ON,BART.0fKlLKBRRAN, 

106 
Ferrers, 101 
Fetherston, 81 
Fifield, 74 
Finamore, 64 
Fisbarre, 94 
Fitzsimons, 58 

FiTZHAURICB, of DUAOH HOUSB, 

CO. Kerry, 83 
Flemming, 98 
Flbtchbr, of Watbr Eyton 

and Cannock, co. Stafford, 97 
Fletcher, 60 
Flowerdew, 77 

Fogerty (andent and modem). 61 
ForUott,79 
Forlong, 90 

FoRSTBR, of Walthamstow, 57 
Foulis, 55 
Eraser, 76 
FuUer, 76 
Fnmival, 79 
Oambon, 74 
Gardner, of Coombe Lodob, co. 

Oxford, 63 



Gartside, 78 
Gatesden, 92 
Gervais, 94 
Gifford, 64 

G0OOARD,0f ClIFFB PyFARD, CO. 

WUta,88 
Goldwell, 71 
Growland, 86 
Graham, 70. 92 
Grant, 59, 78 

GrAVBS-SaWLB, of PbNRICB, CO. 

Cornwall, Bart., 86 

Graves, 86 

Gray, of Whamlands, co. Nor- 
thumberland, 73 

Greaves, 98 

Green, 86 

Grente-Mesnil, 63 

Greystocke, 63 

Griffin, 81 

Griffith ap Cadwgan, Lord of 
Nannau, 54 

Griffith ap Cynan, King of North 
Wales, 54 

Griffith ap Meilor ap Elidyr, 54 

Griffith Lloyd (Sir), 54 

Griffith, 104 

Grono ap Cadwgan, 104 

Grosvenor, 81, 101 

Gwys. 104 

Gybbon, 62 

Haggerston, 87 

Handcock, 86 

Hankey, 106 

Harorbavbs, of Broad Oak, 56 

Harpur, 63 

Harvey, 59 

Haslbr, of Aldinobournb, CO. 
Sussex, 95 

Haslewell, 81 

Hatton, of Clonard, 56 

HAWKBR,0f LONGPARISH HoUSB, 

CO. Hants, 83 
Haynes, 54 
Haward - Southby, of Cars- 

wbll, CO. Berks, 70 
Hayward, 70 
Head, 96, 97 
Hendover, 74 
Hereford, 97 
Heton, of Heton, 54 
Hey dock, 64 
Hey wood, 101 
HUl, 101 
Hodges, 92 
Hoding, 64 
HooG, of Church View and 

Cartron, CO. Roscommon, 80 
HoLcoMBi, of Pbmbrokshirb, 

55 
Holden, of Lancashire, 54 
Holdich, 73 
Holford, 91 
Holland, 61 
Hollwell, 64 
Holmes, 55 
Holt, 71 
Hoo, 94 
Hoppbr-Williamson, of Shin- 

CLIFFB, 56 

Hopper, 56 

HosKiNS, of Birch House, co. 

Hereford, 76 
Hough, 64 
Howard, of Corbv Ca^tlb, co. 

Cumberland, 63 



Howard-Vysb, of Stokb, 104 
Howel ap Grono, 54 
Howel ap levan, 54 
Huband, of Ipslby, CO. War- 
wick, 82 
HuoHB8,ofDoNNiNGTON Priory, 

CO. Berks, 89 

HUN0BRFORD,0fDlNOLF.YPARK, 

CO. Northampton, 73 
Huntbr, of London, 108 
Huntercombe, 64 
Hurt, 101 
Hussey, 74 
Hutcheson, 97 
Hutchison, of Irbland, 62 

HUTCHINSON.ofWHITTONHoUhB, 

CO. Durham, 100 

Hutton, 70. 87, 89 

Htbtt, of Painbwick Hou8b,co. 
Gloucester, 59 

levan ap Howell, of Henllys, 54 

Inoham, of Marton, in Cra vbn, 
103 

lorwerth ap Grono, 54 

Ithel Velyn, 54 

Ithel Vychan, 54 

Jackson, of Arslby, co. Bed- 
ford, BarT., 62 

Jodrell, 58 

John ap William, 54 

Johnson, of Tyldesley, 89 

Johnston, of Hilton, in the 
Mbrsb, 80 

J0LLIFFB,0f AmMBRDOWN PaRK, 

CO. Somerset, 73 
Jones, of Ystrad, 55 
Jones, of Trewythan and 

Rhiewport, 71 
Jone^, 55, 61, 64, 91, 97 
Keeling, 97 

Kelly, Caft. R.N., 86 
Kemp, 108 

Kendric Sais, of Englefield, 54 
Kennedy, of Knockoray, co. 

Kirkcudbright, 93 
Kentisbere, 74 
Kentish, 68 
Kewley, 75 
Kirkham, 101 
Kirklofl, 74 
Kittlesford, 74 
Knottesford, 64 
Kunedda, 104 
Kynnersley, 101 
Kynpersley, 101 
Ktrle, of Much Marcle, co. 

Hereford, and Addenda 
Kyrle, 97 
Lambert, 95 
Langford, 85 
Langley, 56 
Latham, 89 

Lautour (see Db Lautovr) 
Lawrence, of Lisrbaohan, co. 

Galway, 68 
Lawson, 73 
Layton, 82 
Leake, 98 
Ledcd, 79 
Ledsham, 101 
Leflwich, 81 
Legh, 56 
Legros, 79 
Leigh, of West Hall, IIigu 

Leigh, 58 
Leigh, 101, 106 



INDEX. 



Lbnioan, of Castlb Foobrty, 
CO. Tipperary, 61 

Lenthal, 79 

Lbwis, of GiLFACH, CO. Carmar- 
then, 96 

Lewis. 55 

Ley« 98 

LiMDOB, of Norwich, 55 

Llewelyn Aurdorchog, 54 

Llewelyn ap Dolphin, 54 

Llewelyn ap Mcuric, 54 

Lloyd, of Bronwydd, 57 

Lloyd> of Laques, CO. Carmar- 
then, 99 

Lloyd- Williams, of Gwbrnakt 
Park, co. Cardigan, 63 

Lloyd, 59, 104 

Loder, 95 

Lortie, 74 

Londham, 97 

LousADA, of London, 89 

LoTatt, 71 

LoYBDAY, of WiLLIAMSCOTB, CO. 

Oxford, 95 
LoTeine, 92 
LoTetot, 79 

Lowe, of Alderwasley, 101 
Lowe, of Denby, 101 
Lowe, 82 

L0WNDB8-ST0NB,0f BrIOHTWBLL 

PARK,co.Oxford,82, & Addenda 

Lowndes, 62 

Lucy, 98 

Lynbs, of Toolby Park, co. Lei- 
cester, 68 

Lyons, Bart., 103 

Lytton, see Bulwbr Lytton 

Lprtton, 81 

B£u;donald, of Inchkbnnbth, 
Ac. 58 

MacDONALD, of DaLCUOSNIB, CO. 

Perth, 66 
Macdonald, of Rammbrscalbs, 

CO. Dumfries, 98 
Mackenxie, 86, 96 
McKbbrbl, of Hill House, 91 
Macnamara, of Aylb, CO. Clare, 

78 
Macnamara, of Doolbn, co. 

Clare, 87 

MacQUBBN, of CORRYBROUOII, 83 

Madoc ap Meredith, 54 
MAQOR,ofPBNVBNTON House, 92 
Maubr, of Woodlands, co. So- 
merset, 86 

MaITLAND, of DUNDRINNAN, 

Kirkcudbright, 94 

Maitland, 106 

Malbank, 81 

Malmaynes, 94 

MalToeyne, bb 

Malwin, 64 

Marchudd ap Cynaii, b i 

MARSH,of Snavb M\.noh, &c. 90 

Marshall, 59 

Marston, 64 

Martin, of Ham Court, co. Wor- 
cester, 60 

Martin, of Worsbro*, co. York, 
65 

Martindale. 67 

Marwood, 87 

Mathbson, of Achany, N.B. 80 

MaTesyn, 78 

Mawhood, 69 

MaXWBLL, of EVBRINGHAM, 87 



MAXWBLL-GRAHAM,0f WiLLI AM 

Wood, 92 

Maxwell, 87, 92 

Meller, 70 

Mere, 89 

Mervin, 95 

Messiter, 95 

Meynell, of Lanolby, co. Der- 
by, G3 

Meynbll, of North Kilvino- 
TON, CO. York, 75 

Meynell (ancient), 63 

Middleton, 61 

Mionon, of Miononvillb, 103 

Maxwell, of Evbuinouam, 87 

Milbournc, 79 

Miller, of Coluer^wood, co. 
Surrey, 77 

Millerd, 65 

MiLWARD, of HbXQRBAVB PaRK, 

CO. Notts, 63 
Mobberley, 81 
Monby-Kyrlb, of Much Mar- 

CLR, CO. Hereford, 64 
MONBY, of Walthamstow, 58 
Money, 64 
Montague, 68 
Montgomerie, 77 
Montgomery, of Sudbury, 70 

MONYPBNNY, of HOLX lIoUSB, 

Rolvenden, CO. Kent, 62 
MooRi, see Bramlby-Moore 
MooRX, of Stockwbll, co.^Sur- 

rey, 96 
Morrill, 79 
Mortcin, 92 . 
Morton, 78 

MosBLEY, of Blilpwas Park, 89 
MosLBY, of Ancoats, CO. Lau- 

caster, Bart., 97 
Moselcy, 67 
Moss, 78 
Mountain, of tub Heath, Herts. 

68 
Mowbray, 63 

M0YSEY,0f CHARTEHHOUdE HlN- 

ton, CO. Somerset, 66 
Murray, of Danbmfield, co. 

Bucks, 85 
Murray, of Philiphauoh, 100 
Mutton, of Llanerch, 54 
Myler,61 
Mynors, 79 

NBBBnT,0f WOODHILL, CO.DoUC- 

gal,77 
Nethersolc, 90 

NiviLLB, Majur, 69th Regt. 101 
Neville, 74 
Newce, 85 
Newton, of Micklbovbr, co. 

Derby, 88 
NiuLBT, of Harbsfibld Court, 

CO. Gloucester, 78 

NlCUOLSON,ofBALLOW,CO. DOWU, 

72 

Norman, of Sussex, 71 

Norreya, 81 

North ky, of Woodcotb, co. Sur- 
rey, 97 

Northumberland (Dukb of), 
FrontujAece 

Notley, of Combb Sydenham 
Hall, &Cuilungton House, 
CO. Somerset, 87 

Odbll, of Carriulba, CO. Wa- 
terford, 72 



Offerton. 91 

Offley, 85 

Oglx, of KiRKLBY Hall, co. 
Northumberland, 81 

OKBovBR,of Okeover, CO. Staf- 
ford, 77 

OlDFIELD, ofOLDFIKLD, CO.ChcS- 

ter, 81 
Oliphant, of Ga8K, CO. Perth, 8-4 
O'Mallxy, of the Lodgx, co. 

Mayo, 95 
O'NxiL, of BuNowEN Castlb,co. 

Galwat, 78 
Onley, 59 

O'Reilly, of Knock Abbey, 90 
Orleton, 56 
Ormxrod, of Tyldbsley and 

Seddury, 89 

OrPXN, of IkBLAND, 65 

Orreby, 89 

Orton, 76 

Osborne, 64, 72 

Owen Brogyntyn, 54 

Oiren Gwynedd, 54 

Oxenden, 80 

Page, 78 

Palmxr, of Nazing Park, co. 

Essex, 82 
Papillon, of AcRisB, CO. Kent, 

and Crowhurst Placx, co. 

Sussex, VsO 
Parker. 88 
Parr, 68 
Parsons, 82 
Partridge, 104 
Puulet, 97 
Paveley, 79 [ 
Payne, 62 
Peacock, of South Raucbby, 

CO. Lincoln, 78 
Pearson, 89 

Peel, of Accrinoton, co. Lan- 
caster, and Knowlmkrb, W. 

R. York, 96 
PxiRsK, of Bkdalb, CO. York, 65 
Pclhani, 80 
Pelinor, 104 
Pemberton, 56 
Penington, 94 
Percy, Baronial Shixld op. 

First page 
Pettit, 101 
Pever, 74 

Pew, of Scotland, 85 
Pbesant, 81 
Philips, 70 
Philipps, 88 

PiLKINOTON, of HaTFIKLD, CO. 

York, 72 

PiTCAIRN, of PiTCAlRNS, CO. 

Perth, 83 
Plimbr- Ward, of Gii.ston 

Park, co. Herts, 82 
Plumer, 82 
Plunkett, 57 
Plura, 73 
Pocklington, OS 
Ponsonby, 9{h 
Poole, of Mayfield, co. Cork, 

80 
Popham, 74 

PoTT. of BSNTHAM HiLL, CO. 

Kent, 60 

Pottinger, 96, 108 

Powell, of Nantxos, co. Car- 
digan, 87 



INDEX. 




PowelU 79 

POWHALL, of PoWff^LL, CO. 

Chester, 75 
Pojer, 64 
Pojner, 56 
PoYKTZ, of Brock HAMPTOX 

Housi, 75 
Prick, of Olasgwilly, co. 

Cmniuulheii, 93 
Price, 86 
Prichaid, 75 

Pride, of SbrewsbuTj, 54 
Prideaoz, 71 
pRiDHAM, of Plymouth, co. 

Deron, 65 
PnoH, of Llanerchtdol, co. 

Montgomerj, 102 
Paletton, of Hafod-y-Wern, 54 
Palford, 81 
Purvis, of Plaws^torth and 

Earsoon, 90 
Pai7e,82 
Pycard, 79 
QuAifTocK, of Norton Housb, 

CO. Somenet, 60 
Qtullen, 75 
Babitt, of Brampiilo Hall, 

CO. Suffolk, 99 
RadcUffe, 72 

Ralston, of Ralston. 57 
Rajcsbotham. of Old Hall, 

GO. York, 90 
Rradb, of Ipso EN, co. Oxford, 

75 
Rbadr, of Wood Pares, 91 
Read, 74 

Rkdinoton, of Kilcornan, 108 
Redmond, 77 
Rees, 55, 79 

RbVVRS, of VOSTBRSBIRO, CO. 

Cork, 88 
ReTel, 101 
Rejnoourt, 79 
Rhjs ap Marchen, 54 
Richard, son of Cadwaliader ap 

Griffith, 54 
Richmond. 64 
Rickards, 79 
Ririd Flaidd, 61 
Roberts, 61 

Robertson, of Ludv, N. B., 62 
Robinson, of Sudlkt, Liverpool, 

59 
Robinson, of Lbicbstbrbhirb, 

69 
Robinson, of Tottenham, 104 
Robinson, 61 
Robson, 61, 68 

Rochport, of Clogrbnane, 102 
Roe, 98 

ROGBRS, of DoWDKSWBLL, CO. 

Gloucester, 67 
Rogers, 67 
Roscrowe, 85 
Rosb, of Holmb, CO. Inverness, 

76 

ROSKILL, of LANCA8HIRB, 99 

Ross, of Craioir and Innkr- 

nbthib, 91 
Roimdell, 55, 71 

Rous, of COURTTRALA, 101 

Boiis»74 

EtnraLL, of MooRB Grbbn, 
Kift&*8 Norton, co. Woroes- 



Russell, 97 

RCTBRRPURD, of EOGCRSTON, 
106 

Rjves, 85 

St. John, 92 

StLeger, 94 

St. Martin, 74 

St. Omer, 94 

Salomons, of Burrs wood and 

Broomhill, 99 
Salwaj, 101 
Sandporo, of the Islb op Up 

RoesALL, 00. Salop, 61 
Sapie, 79 
Saunders, of Laroat, eo. Ca- 

van, 82 
Saunders, 90 
Savage, 97 

SaVILL-OnLBT, of StIKTBDH ALL, 

CO. Essex, 59 
Sawle, see GaAvsa-SAWLB 
Sairle, 86 

SCHRBXBBR, of HbNHURST, CO. 

Kent, 86 

ScoBBLL, of Nancbalvbrnb, ca 
Cornwall, 85 

Scobel, 101 

Scott, 66, 68, 85 

Scrope, 74 

Scudamore, 64 

Ditto iandeni), 64 

Scudamore, 69 

Sbavbr, of Hbath Hall, co. 
Armagh, 100 

Selbj, 61 

Sbnhousb, of Nbthbrh&ll and 
Barrow Housb, co. Cumber- 
land, 98 

Senhouse, 98 

Sbvbrnb, of Wallop Hall, co. 
Salop, and of Thbnpord, co. 
Northampton, 60 

Sharpe, T6 

Shee,61 

Sherwood, 87 

Shirlej, 70 

Shuldham, of Marlbspord 
Hall, co. Suffolk, 84 

Smuth, of Hill Hall and 
Horbham Hall, oo. Essex, 
and Attlbbro*, co. Norfolk, 
end Cambbrwbll, co. Surrey, 
Bart.. 74 

Smith, of Bittbswbll Hall, 
92 

Smith, of Annsbrook and Bra- 
beg, 99 

Sm7TH, of Gatbrook, CO. West- 
meath, 66 

Snbyd, of AsHOOMB and Bbl- 
MONT, 101 

Soilers, 79 

South BY,seeH A V ward-So UTH BY 

Southbj, 70 

Spaioht, of COS. Clarx and Li- 
merick, 57 

Spaight, 88 

Speke, 94 

Spbnb, of Invbrbsk, 106 

SpOTTISW<X)DB, of SPOTTISirOODB, 

CO. Berwick, 72 
Springseaux, 61 
Standish, 74 
Steavens, 61 
Stedman, 59 I 



Stephens, of Trbgenna Cas- 
tle, 93 

StEUART, of GlENORMISTON, CO. 

Peebles N. B., 76 

Steward, of Norpolk, 94 

Steward, 89 

Stewart, of St. Fort, co. Fife, 
N. B., 72 

Stewart, of Binny, oo. Linlith- 
gow, 93 

Stilling PLBBT, of How Caplb, 
58 

Stone, 82 

Stone, see Lownbes-Stonb 

StONBSTRBBT, of HaLTO.N, CO. 

Sussex, and Stondon Hall, 

CO. Essex, 81 
Stonjlowe, 101 
Stoughton, 64 
Stratford, 97 
Strej, 76 
Stbutt, of Bblper, CO. Derbj, 

61 

Studdert, of Bunrattt Cas- 
tle, CO. Clare, 85 
StutTille, 79 
Sutton, of Rosbwat, co. Herts. 

101 
Swinnerton, 70 
SwiRB, of Cononley, CO. York, 

68 

Sjdenham, 74, 91 
Synnot, of Ballymoyer Housx, 

00. Armagh, 98 
Talbot, of Talbot Hall, co. 

Wexford, 77 
Talbot, 86 
Tatsall, 59 
Taylor, of Mosblby Hall, co. 

Worcester, 67 
Taylor, of Strbnsham Court, 

CO. Worcester, 69 
Tempest, 75 

Thomas, of Carmarthen, 59 
Thomas, of Wslpibld House, 

CO. Radnor, 86 
Thomlinson, of Blbncogo, 6c c, 

93 
Thompson, of Kirby Hall, co. 

York, 69 
Thornton, of Brockhall, 102 
Thorold, 64 
Thorp, of R>'ton, (m>. Durham, 

61 

Tiptoft, 74 

Tipping, of Preston, Manches- 
ter, and Littlk Bolton, co, 

Lancaster, 78 
Toft, 81 
ToKB, of Godinton, CO. Kent 7 1 

TOPHAM, of MlDDLBHAM HaLL, 

CO. York, 98 
Tregothin, 74 
Tregoi, 64 
TreYcrs, 79 
Tubenrille, 59 
Tudor Trevor, 54, 87 
Turton, 69 
Twisden, 102 
Twyford, 73 
Ufflete, 94 
Umfraville, 75 

(Jrquhart, of Meldrum, 58 
Urswicke, 74 
Usticke, 85 



INDEX. 



Vali, of London, G7 
Vaughan (Sir Hamo), 54 

VaUGHAN, of COURTFJKLD, 102 

Vaughan, 59, 99, 104 

Vawdrky, of Chishirb, 104 

Venablefl, 101 

Verdon, 72, 79 

Vernon, of Hilton, co. Staf- 
ford, 70 

Vbrnon -Wbntwortii, of 
Wbntworth Castle, 70* 

Vernon, 76, 81 

Vincent, 85 

Vinbr, Bee Ellis Vinbr 

Viner, 102 

ViVLLN, of Singleton, co. Gla- 
morgan, 91 

Vy81, of Stoke, 104 

Wadham, 74 

Waldive, 56 

WaLDRON, of ASHFORD HoUSB, 

CO. Roscommon. 83 

WaLOY, of EOGLKSCLIFPB, CO. 

Durham, 66 
Wale, 68 

Walker Joshua, Esq., 91 
Walkkr, of Dalry, Midlo> 

THIAN, 96 
Walker, 61, 101 
Wallace, of Kelly, 104 
Walrond, of Caluer Park, co. 

Lanark, 94 
Walrond. 74 
Walters-Philipps, of Abkr- 

ulasnby, CO. Carmarthen, 88 



Walters, 88 

Warburton, 81 

Ward, see Plumer Ward 

Ward, 63, 82 

Wareing, 89 

Warn com be, 97 

Warren, of Warrenshall, 54 

Warren, 63, 88 

Washboume, 64 

Waters, of Sarnau, co. Car- 
marthen, 84 

Waterton, 94 

Watkins, of Silkstonk, 108 

Watkins, of Pbnnoyre, 104 

Watlinoton, of Berkshire, 77 

Wkbb, of Maidstown, CO. Lime- 
rick, 98 

Webster, of Pbnms, co. War* 
wick, G2 

Weld, of Lulworth, 106 

Welles, 76, 94 

Wellesley, 66 

Wellington, Dukb op, 66 

Wentworth, of Wentworth 
Castle, co. York, 76 

Wentworth, 85 

West, of Alscot Park, co. 
Gloucester, 61 

Wettenhall, 101 

Weye, 101 

Wuieldon, of Springfield 
House, co. Warwick, 92 

Whitcomb, 78 

White, of Yeovil, co. Somer^ 
set, 95 



Whittinoham, of Potton, 106 
Wilkinson, of Harperley 

Park, 89 
Williams, of Gwernant Park, 

CO. Cardigan, 63 
Williams - Lloyd, of Gwkh- 

nant Park, 63 
Williamson, 56 

WiLLlNGTON, of KiLLOSKEUANE 

Castle, a^c, 5G 
Wills, 94 
Windsor, 64 
Wing field, of Onslow, co. 

Salop, 95 

WiNHTANLEY, of BrAUNSTON, CO. 

Leicester, 71 
Winter, 73 
Wintle, 86 
Wise, of Clayton Hall, co. 

Stafford, 71 
WoLLEY, of Allen Hill, 101 
Wood, 78 

Wright, of Bilham House, 103 
Wright, 76 
Wroughton, 64 
Wjmdham, 74 

Wynne, of Haslbwood, 103 
Wynne, 68 
Wynnesbury, 61 
Wynell, 94 
Yarkbr, of Lbyburn, and Yar- 

KER, of Ulyerston, 84 
York, of Erddig, 70 
Young 
Zouch, 74 






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