Heraldic tradition | Gallo-British |
---|---|
Governing body | College of Arms |
Cornish heraldry is the form of coats of arms and other heraldic bearings and insignia used in Cornwall, United Kingdom. While similar to English, Scottish and Welsh heraldry, Cornish heraldry has its own distinctive features. Cornish heraldry typically makes use of the tinctures sable (black) and or (gold), and also uses certain creatures like Cornish choughs. It also uses the Cornish language extensively for mottoes and canting arms.
One of the earliest heraldic law cases brought in England was the 1389 case of Scrope v. Grosvenor. Scrope had found Grosvenor using the same arms as him, Azure a bend or, and set out to prove his sole right to use them. In heraldic law no two unrelated families in the same country are permitted to bear the same arms. Following a long court case it was decided that Scrope had the right to the arms and Grosvenor was forced to change his arms to Azure a garb or. It became known however that a Cornish knight by the name of Carminow was also using the disputed arms.
Carminow, seeing Scrope's use of his arms, challenged the right of Scrope to bear the arms. In this case, the constable of England declared that both claimants had established their right to the arms. Carminow had proven that his family had borne the arms "from the time of King Arthur", while the Scrope family had only used the arms "from the Norman Conquest of England". (Neither of these claims to such antiquity were in fact possible as the era of heraldry did not start until the late 12th century). The two families were, however, considered of different heraldic nations, Scrope of England, Carminow of Cornwall, and as such could both bear the same arms. As stated in the records of the case, Cornwall was in effect deemed a separate nation, "a large land formerly bearing the name of a kingdom." [1]
John Vivian and Henry Drake, in their preface to the Visitation of the County of Cornwall, commented as follows: "Cornwall may be considered pre-eminent in the antiquity of its family heraldry, since it was admitted in court during the memorable Scrope and Grosvenor controversy that the same arms, Azure a bend or, had remained in the family of Carminow from King Arthur."
There are few recorded instances of heraldic officials in the Cornish tradition, however, heralds may commonly have been employed in Cornwall primarily as minstrels and story tellers. The harpist John Hilton was appointed by King Richard II as Cornwall Herald in 1398 at about the time of the Carminow case. A Cornwall Herald attended the coronation of Henry V in 1413 and there was a Cornwall Herald at the battle of Agincourt who, with the Duke of Norfolk, was too ill to take part. During the reigns of Edward IV and Henry VII the March herald was King of Arms of the west parts of England, Wales and Cornwall. [2] Only one Cornish family is known to have had its own heraldic officer: Sir Richard Nanfan, Lord Deputy of Calais in 1503, retained a pursuivant or junior herald named Serreshal, but there may have been others.
Cornish heraldry generally conformed with the rules and customs of English heraldry, and therefore with the Gallo-British tradition. However, the use of arms was far more widespread amongst the Cornish than the English and there was far less control over the use of heraldry. The antiquary Richard Carew wrote in the early 17th century, "The Cornish appear to change and diversify their arms at pleasure...The most Cornish gentlemen can better vaunt of their pedigree than their livelihood for that they derive from great antiquity, and I make question whether any shire in England of but equal quantitie can muster a like number of faire coate-armours". [3] Jewers in his Heraldic church notes from Cornwall, c. 1860-80, mentions the large number of landowners using arms never registered with the College of Arms in London. Every large farm or barton in Cornwall housed its own "Gentleman of Coat Armour". [4]
Historically primogeniture, the inheritance by the eldest son of the family estate, was not commonly practised in Cornwall. Amongst the Cornish, lands commonly were divided equally amongst all sons which resulted in smaller broken up estates, and if no sons existed lands were divided between daughters or closest relatives, male or female. [5] [6] This practice may have influenced the working and development of the Cornish tradition of heraldry. [7] When primogeniture was practised, younger brothers were often married to an heiress. The heiress's arms were then adopted by the husband in place of his own family's. [3]
The Duchy of Cornwall was created in 1337 from the former earldom of Cornwall. The first Duke was Edward, the Black Prince (1330-1376) who first used the badge of Three ostrich feathers . Fox-Davies states that the badge associated with the Duchy is that of the Black Bull, often termed "of Clarence". [8] Nevertheless, the Duchy is closely associated with the badge of the plume of feathers. The Black Prince erected a sculpted plume of feathers at the apex of the Duchy Palace roof at Lostwithiel when he paid his first visit there and to Restormel Castle in 1353.
The arms of the Duchy are blazoned sable, fifteen bezants . These arms were designed in the 15th century, based on the arms of Richard, Earl of Cornwall (1209-1272). A good explanation of the emblem of Cornwall is given by A. Fox-Davies in his “Book of Public Arms”: «In the days of the earlier Plantagenets, the pawnbrokers of Cornwall were the most enterprising and prosperous merchants in all England. When King John desired to hypothecate his crown jewels to raise money for a war in France, five of the principal "uncles" of Cornwall - Ben Levi of Truro, Ben Ezra of Penzance, Moses of Megavissey, (the other two names are illegible, see Manuscript CXLIX, British Museum) - formed an association, the Ancient and Honourable Association of Pawnbrokers, to take over his debts. The ‘trade-mark’ of the company was fifteen balls with the motto "One and All" to indicate that no business could be arranged without a quorum of all five members. When Edward I ascended the throne, this association was the most powerful in Cornwall. That Prince, following out his usual policy of exalting the merchant class, chose the trade-mark of the Ancient and Honourable Association of Pawnbrokers to be the coat-of-arms of the county of Cornwall.» Further information on the subject will be found in ‘An Ancyent and Ynterestyng Account of Ye Cornish Arms,’ of which there is a copy in the British Museum. [9]
The arms are today used as a badge by Prince William, Duke of Cornwall and they appear below the shield in his coat of arms. The supporters used with the badge are two Cornish choughs, each holding an ostrich feather, and the motto is Houmout (meaning "high-spirited") the personal motto of the Black Prince.
For further reading; Coat of arms of the Prince of Wales
Title | Escutcheon | Greater Version | Blazon | Date of Creation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Duke of Cornwall | Sables, Fifteen bezants or, five, four, three, two, one | 15th century (escutcheon) [10] 1968 (greater version) [11] | ||
Duke of Cornwall (as the Prince of Wales) | Quarterly, 1st and 4th Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or armed and langued Azure (for England), 2nd quarter Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland), 3rd quarter Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland), with over all a label of three points Argent, and on an inescutcheon ensigned by the coronet of the heir-apparent, quarterly, Or and Gules four lions passant guardant counterchanged (for the Principality of Wales) | 1911 | ||
Shield of Peace | Sables, three feathers argent, slipped through scrolls inscribed 'Ich Dien' | 14th century |
There are several charges and tinctures (colourings) used frequently in Cornish heraldry. These are derived mainly from Cornish royal and national symbolism.
Many Cornish families from ancient times bore mottoes in the Cornish language, many of which were recorded in the 17th century. The practice of using Cornish language mottoes continues to this day. Examples include:
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Arundell | Sable, six martlets argent | • Trerice |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Basset | Barry wavy of six or and gules | • Tehidy | |
Bond | Argent, a chevron sables with three bezants or | • Saltash | |
Bodrugan | Argent, three bendlets gules a bordure engrailed sable | ||
Boscawen | Ermine, a rose gules barbed and seeded proper | • Falmouth | |
Buller | Sable, on a cross argent quarter pierced of the field four eagles displayed of the first | • Trenant Park [17] |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Calmady | Azure, a chevron between three pears or | • Stoke Climsland | |
Carew | Or, three lions passant in pale sable | • Torpoint | |
Carwythan | Argent, a fleur-de-lys gules a bordure engrailed | ||
Coryton | Argent, a saltire sable | • Pentillie • Newton Ferrers House [18] | |
Curnow | Argent, lion rampant gules with a ducal crown or | ||
Cutts | Argent, a bend engrailed sables, three roundels argent. | • Calstock |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Edgcumbe | Gules, bend ermines cotised or three boar's heads couped argent | • Cotehele • Mount Edgcumbe, Maker | |
Elliot | Argent, a Fess Gules, between double-cotises wavy Azure | • Port Eliot |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Fortescue | Azure, a bend engrailed argent plain cotised or | • Boconnoc | |
Flamank | Argent, a cross between four mullets pierced gules | • Nanstallon • Bodmin | |
Fox | Ermine, chevron azure, three foxes or, canton azure, fleur de lis or | • Falmouth | |
Friend | Gules, chevron ermine, three deer argent | • Calstock |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Gilbert | Argent, a chevron gules with three roses argent. | ||
Godolphin | Gules, an eagle with two heads, displayed between three fleurs-de-lys, two and one, argent | • Godolphin House | |
Goss | Argent, mullet gules, two, two, one, two, two | • Goss's boatyard, Calstock | |
Gough | Sable, a chevron between three mermaids argent hair glass case and comb or | • Aldercombe • Kilkhampton | |
Glencross | Per saltire ermine and azure, a lion rampant or, holding in the dexter forepaw a cross patonce of the last, in chief three chaplets of oak proper, fructed gold. |
| |
Grenville | Gules, three clarions or | ||
Gross/Grosse | Quarterly argent and azure, on a bend sable three martlets or |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Hender | Azure semée of escallops or, a lion rampant | ||
Hunkin | Argent, a mascle sable over all a fess |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Killigrew | Argent, bordure sables, 15 bezants or, eagle sables |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Michell | Sable, an escallop, between three falcons heads erased or | Truro | |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Molesworth-St Aubyn | Ermine, on a cross sable five bezants [19] | • Pencarrow |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Pascoe | Argent, lion rampant sable | ||
Pawley | Argent, a lion rampant sable, on a chief dancetty of the second three mullets | ||
Pengelly | |||
Pennarth | Argent, a chevron between three bears' heads erased sables muzzled or | ||
Prideaux | Argent, a chevron sable in chief a label of three points gules [20] | • Prideaux Place |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Rashleigh | [ Text missing ]Argent beaked and legged gules; in the second quarter: a text "T"; in the third and fourth quarters: a crescent all of the third | • Menabilly • Fowey | |
Robartes | Azure, three estoiles and a chief wavy or | • Lanhydrock |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Scoble | Argent, lapel azure and three Fleur-de-lis gules | • Calstock | |
Southcott | Argent, chevron engrailed gules, three coots sable | • Calstock • Callington | |
Speccot | Or, on a bend gules three millrinds argent | • Penheale | |
St Aubyns | Ermine on a Cross Gules five Bezants all within a Bordure wavy of the second | • St Michael's Mount |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas | Per pale nebuly argent and azure [21] | • St Just in Penwith | |
Treen | Per chevron embattled Or and Vert, in chief two oak trees and in base a garb counterchanged. [14] | ||
Treffry | Sable, a Chevron between three Trees Argent [23] | • Place, Fowey | |
Trefusis | Argent, a chevron between three spindles sable | ||
Trelawny | Argent, chevron sable [24] | • Harewood House, Calstock • Trelawny, Pelynt | |
Tremayne | Gules, three dexter arms conjoined at the shoulders and flexed in triangle or the fists clenched argent | ||
Trethurffe | Azure, a buck's head cabossed argent attired or | • Ladock | |
Trevelyan | Gules, a demi-horse argent hoofed and maned or issuing out of water in base proper [25] | • St Veep |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Vautort | Argent, three bends gules a bordure sable bezantee | • Trematon |
Name | Escutcheon | Blazon | Seat or Residence |
---|---|---|---|
Westlake | Azure, wavy argent | • Calstock • Gunnislake • Tavistock | |
Wilcox | Ermine, chief chequy or and sable | • Kelly House, Calstock | |
Williams | Vair, three crescents or | • Harewood House, Calstock • St Michael Caerhays • Scorrier House; Burncoose | |
Worth | Argent, eagle sable | • Calstock |
As in other heraldic traditions, canting, punning on the surname, is frequently used in Cornish heraldry. Often this uses the Cornish language, suggesting it was considered a high status language. These may not reflect the true origin of the name. Examples include:
Supporters are figures usually placed on either side of the escutcheon which hold it up-right. In British heraldry, the use of supporters is restricted to peers, royalty, Scottish barons and chiefs of clans. However a number of Cornish families, such as the Carminows and the Trevanions, do possess supporters, despite not being of noble rank as required in Scottish or English heraldry. The Carminows use: dexter, A pelican and sinister, A Cornish chough. The Trevanions: dexter, A stag, sinister A lion. [26] The Trevelyan family had Two dolphins proper as their supporters. Treffry had A man and a woman as supporters [27] The St Legers of Cornwall used A wingless griffin. [28] The office of Lord Warden of the Stannaries gave entitlement to the use of supporters. Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Warden of the Stannaries 1584-1603, used Two wolves as his supporters from 1584 onwards. [29]
There is another list of armorial blazons "from Late 16th/Early 17th C Cornwall" here
There is a compendium of West Country arms, including many Cornish arms, collated from numerous primary and secondary sources, here
Heraldry is a discipline relating to the design, display and study of armorial bearings, as well as related disciplines, such as vexillology, together with the study of ceremony, rank and pedigree. Armory, the best-known branch of heraldry, concerns the design and transmission of the heraldic achievement. The achievement, or armorial bearings usually includes a coat of arms on a shield, helmet and crest, together with any accompanying devices, such as supporters, badges, heraldic banners and mottoes.
The lines in heraldry used to divide and vary fields and charges are by default straight, but may have many different shapes. Care must be taken to distinguish these types of lines from the use of lines as charges, and to distinguish these shapes from actual charges, such as "a mount [or triple mount] in base," or, particularly in German heraldry, different kinds of embattled from castle walls.
In heraldry, variations of the field are any of a number of ways that a field may be covered with a pattern, rather than a flat tincture or a simple division of the field.
Ordinaries in heraldry are sometimes embellished with stripes of colour alongside them, have lumps added to them, shown with their edges arciform instead of straight, have their peaks and tops chopped off, pushed up and down out of the usual positions, or even broken apart.
In heraldry, an ordinary is one of the two main types of charges, beside the mobile charges. An ordinary is a simple geometrical figure, bounded by straight lines and running from side to side or top to bottom of the shield. There are also some geometric charges known as subordinaries, which have been given lesser status by some heraldic writers, though most have been in use as long as the traditional ordinaries. Diminutives of ordinaries and some subordinaries are charges of the same shape, though thinner. Most of the ordinaries are theoretically said to occupy one-third of the shield; but this is rarely observed in practice, except when the ordinary is the only charge.
The coat of arms of Toronto is a heraldic symbol used to represent the city Toronto. Designed by Robert Watt, the Chief Herald of Canada at the time, for the City of Toronto after its amalgamation in 1998. The arms were granted by the Canadian Heraldic Authority on 11 January 1999.
The lozenge in heraldry is a diamond-shaped rhombus charge, usually somewhat narrower than it is tall. It is to be distinguished in modern heraldry from the fusil, which is like the lozenge but narrower, though the distinction has not always been as fine and is not always observed even today. A mascle is a voided lozenge—that is, a lozenge with a lozenge-shaped hole in the middle—and the rarer rustre is a lozenge containing a circular hole in the centre. A lozenge throughout has "four corners touching the border of the escutcheon". A field covered in a pattern of lozenges is described as lozengy; similar fields of mascles are masculy, and fusils, fusily. In civic heraldry, a lozenge sable is often used in coal-mining communities to represent a lump of coal.
In heraldry, an ordinary is described as quadrate, when it has a square central boss.
Scrope v Grosvenor (1389) was an early lawsuit relating to the law of arms. One of the earliest heraldic cases brought in England, the case resulted from two different knights in King Richard II's service, Richard Scrope, 1st Baron Scrope of Bolton, and Sir Robert Grosvenor, discovering they were using the same undifferenced coat of arms, blazoned Azure, a bend Or. This had previously gone unnoticed because the armigers' families were from different parts of England. As the law of arms by the 14th century prohibited armigers within the same system of arms from holding the same undifferenced arms, Scrope brought suit against Grosvenor in 1386 to determine who would be allowed to continue using the arms in question; the Court of Chivalry found in Scrope's favour in 1389, and King Richard affirmed the decision the following year.
In heraldry and heraldic vexillology, a blazon is a formal description of a coat of arms, flag or similar emblem, from which the reader can reconstruct the appropriate image. The verb to blazon means to create such a description. The visual depiction of a coat of arms or flag has traditionally had considerable latitude in design, but a verbal blazon specifies the essentially distinctive elements. A coat of arms or flag is therefore primarily defined not by a picture but rather by the wording of its blazon. Blazon is also the specialized language in which a blazon is written, and, as a verb, the act of writing such a description. Blazonry is the art, craft or practice of creating a blazon. The language employed in blazonry has its own vocabulary, grammar and syntax, which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms.
Attributed arms are Western European coats of arms given retrospectively to persons real or fictitious who died before the start of the age of heraldry in the latter half of the 12th century. Once coats of arms were the established fashion of the ruling class, society expected a king to be armigerous. Arms were assigned to the knights of the Round Table, and then to biblical figures, to Roman and Greek heroes, and to kings and popes who had not historically borne arms. Individual authors often attributed different arms for the same person, although the arms for major figures eventually became fixed.
In heraldry, a pile is a charge usually counted as one of the ordinaries. It consists of a wedge emerging from the upper edge of the shield and converging to a point near the base. If it touches the base, it is blazoned throughout.
Many different symbols are associated with Cornwall, a region which has disputed constitutional status within the United Kingdom . Saint Piran's Flag, a white cross on a black background is often seen in Cornwall. The Duchy of Cornwall shield of 15 gold bezants on a black field is also used. Because of these two symbols black, white and gold are considered colours symbolic of Cornwall.
Warbelton v. Gorges was one of the earliest heraldic law cases brought concerning English armory, in 1347. It concerned the coat of arms blazoned Lozengy Or and azure, that is a field of yellow and blue lozenges. The arms were borne by the unrelated families of Warbelton, from Hampshire, and Gorges, from Somerset, apparently without knowledge of each other or their common usage, until John de Warbelton and Theobald de Gorges served together in the English army at the Siege of Calais in 1346/7. A gentleman's armorial bearings represented his very identity and were of enormous importance to him, both as a matter of family pride and for practical purposes of personal recognition in battle and in legal seals. Warbelton made a formal complaint to the officer appointed by the king to resolve such matters, namely Henry of Grosmont, Earl of Lancaster, seneschal of England, who was commanding the English forces. A 6-man court of honour was convened and the pair were cross-examined, with evidence being sought from knights of their own localities also serving at the siege.
Coats of arms and seals of the County and Duchy of Cornwall, the Diocese of Truro, and of Cornish boroughs and towns.
Robert Carey, lord of the manor of Clovelly in North Devon, was Member of Parliament for Barnstaple, Devon, in October 1553 and served as Sheriff of Devon in 1555–56. He served as Recorder of Barnstaple after 1560. Along with several other members of the Devonshire gentry then serving as magistrates he died of gaol fever at the Black Assize of Exeter 1587. His large monument survives in Clovelly Church.
The coat of arms of the London Borough of Camden were granted on 10 September 1965. The borough was formed by the merger of three former boroughs, namely the Metropolitan Borough of Hampstead, the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn and the Metropolitan Borough of St. Pancras, from whose arms elements were utilised in the arms of the new borough.
The coat of arms of the London Borough of Ealing is the official heraldic arms of the London Borough of Ealing, England, granted on 1 September 1965.
The coat of arms of the London Borough of Hillingdon is the official symbol of the London Borough of Hillingdon. They use elements from the coats of arms of the four previous districts. It is described as:
Arms: Per pale Gules and Vert an Eagle displayed per pale Or and Argent in the dexter claw a Fleur-de-lis Or and in the sinister claw a Cog-Wheel Argent on a Chief Or four Civic Crowns Vert.
Crest: On a Wreath of the Colours issuant from a Circlet of Brushwood Sable a demi-Lion Gules with wings Argent the underside of each wing charged with a Cross Gules and holding between the paws a Bezant thereon a Mullet Azure.
Supporters: On the dexter side an Heraldic Tiger Or gorged with an Astral Crown Azure and charged on the shoulder with a Rose Gules charged with another Argent barbed and seeded proper and on the sinister side a Stag proper attired and gorged with a Circlet of Brushwood and charged on the shoulder with two Ears of Rye slipped in saltire Or.
Motto: Forward.
The coat of arms of the Prince of Wales is the official personal heraldic insignia of the Princes of Wales, a title traditionally granted to the heir apparent of the reigning monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, formerly the Kingdom of Great Britain and before that the Kingdom of England.