ENCYCLOPEDIA OF NOVI: HERALDRY RECORDED ARMORIAL BEARINGS IN THE WORLD OF NOVI Lowell R. Matthews, Copyright (c) 1991-1997 January 29, 1997 Abbreviations A.U. Amelianan Union C. County of D. Duchy of F.S. Forest See of (Beretaur) R. Republic of K. Kingdom of NYA Not Yet Assigned in Novite Heraldry NDNP No Direct Novite Parallel NKNP No Known Novite Parallel R. Republic of W.E. Western Empire PART I: ALPHABETICAL LISTING BY BLAZON Note: Part I includes blazons of arms, mostly British, from the Kingmaker game and more official sources, including those which have no designated Novite parallel. In both Parts I and II, actual arms from the references are marked with an asterisk (*), examples from the references are marked with a double asterisk (**), arms designed with Jeannine and/or Stephen Matthews are marked with a pound sign (#), and arms designed by James Greuel are marked with a double pound sign (##). Part II includes only Novite arms. A beacon Or inflamed proper.* One of the badges of HENRY V, NDNP; he also used the Bohun Antelope. A boar passant argent.* The White Boar badge of RICHARD III, NKNP. A bull sable.* One of the badges of EDWARD IV, position uncertain, NDNP. A cross couped gules.* The badge of the ROUGE CROIX PURSUIVANT of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A dexter arm embowed in armor holding a shivered lance, all proper.* One of the badges of RICHARD I, tinctures uncertain, NDNP. A dragon passant gules.* The Dragon badge of HENRY VII, position uncertain, NDNP. A falcon close belled and jessed proper.* One of the badges of EDWARD III, tincture and position uncertain, NDNP. A falcon displayed argent within a closed fetterlock Or.* One of the badges of EDWARD IV, NDNP. A fleur-de-lis gules.* One of the badges of the royal House of STUART, tincture uncertain, NDNP. A garb Or, imperially crowned proper.* The badge of the CHESTER HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A genet passant between two erect branches of the broome plant, all proper.* A badge of HENRY II, a double pun on the Plantagenet family name, NDNP. The genet is a kind of civet cat. - 1 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 A genet passant proper.* One of the badges of HENRY IV, position and tincture uncertain, NDNP. A greyhound courant argent.* The Greyhound badge of HENRY VIII, position uncertain, NDNP. A hawthorn tree proper, crowned Or, between the letters "HR" also Or.* The Hawthorn badge of HENRY VII, adopted to commemorate his victory over Richard III at Bosworth (1485), because after the battle Richard's helmet coronet had been found under a hawthorn bush. NDNP. A hexagonal castle with a tower thereon Or.* The badge of EDWARD II of England, a reference to his descent from the House of Castile, NDNP. A mantle azure, lined argent, trimmed and tasseled Or.* The badge of the BLUEMANTLE PURSUIVANT of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A plume of three ostrich feathers proper, on an escroll argent the motto "Utrumque" in letters sable.* The "Utrumque" badge of King STEPHEN, tinctures uncertain, NDNP. A portcullis Or, imperially crowned proper.* The badge of BEAUFORT, also used by HENRY VII, now also the badge of the CITY OF WESTMINSTER and the SOMERSET HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A portcullis Or.* The badge of the PORTCULLIS PURSUIVANT of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A rose argent within the sun Or.* The Rose and Sun badge of RICHARD III, tinctures uncertain, NDNP. A rose argent, barbed and seeded proper, rayonnant Or, imperially crowned proper.* The badge of the YORK HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A rose argent, barbed and seeded proper.* The White Rose, one of the badges of the royal House of YORK, famous from the Wars of the Roses, NDNP. A rose gules charged with another argent, barbed and seeded proper.* The famous Tudor Rose badge first used by HENRY VIII, the Red Rose of Lancaster bearing the White Rose of York in pretence. A rose gules dimidiating a rose argent, both barbed and seeded proper.* The first Tudor Rose badge of HENRY VII, NDNP. A rose gules, barbed and seeded proper, dimidiating a rose argent, barbed and seeded proper, rayonnant Or, the whole imperially crowned proper.* The badge of the RICHMOND HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A rose gules, barbed and seeded proper, imperially crowned proper.* The badge of the LANCASTER HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A rose gules, barbed and seeded proper.* The Red Rose, one of the badges of the royal House of LANCASTER, famous from the Wars of the Roses, NDNP. A rose Or stalked proper.* The badge of EDWARD I, NDNP. A sagittary proper.* The Sagittary badge of King STEPHEN, tincture uncertain, NDNP. A saltire argent enfiled by a crown composed of four fleurs- de-lis and four pearls Or.* The badge of the Kingdom of SCOTLAND, NDNP. A star issuing from between the horns of a crescent Or.* One of the badges of RICHARD I of England, which may have - 2 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 represented the ascendency of Christianity over Islam, tinctures uncertain; NDNP. A sunburst, imperially crowned, all proper.* The badge of the WINDSOR HERALD of the English College of Arms, NDNP. A swan argent ducally gorged and chained Or.* The famous Swan Badge of the BOHUN Earls of Hereford, Essex, and Northampton, which alludes to their alleged descent from the legendary Swan Knight (Lohengrin). It was inherited by a number of famous families, including the Beauchamps, Staffords, Courtenays, Luttrells, and King Henry V. The tomb of Margaret (d. 1391), daughter of Humphrey de Bohun (II) and wife of Hugh Courtenay, Earl of Devon, includes at her feet two mourning swans with their necks entwined and their heads on the ground. A Tudor rose dimidiating a pomegranate, all proper.* One of the badges of MARY I, NDNP. A Tudor rose dimidiating a thistle, all proper.* One of the badges of the royal House of STUART, NDNP. A Tudor rose palewise, a shamrock bendwise sinister, and a thistle bendwise, the slips conjoined into a common stem, all proper.* The badge of ELIZABETH II, representing the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, NDNP. A Tudor rose with the motto "rosa sine spina."* The badge of ELIZABETH I, NDNP. A whirlpool argent and azure.* GORGES, NKNP. ALLON: Gules, a lion rampant argent.* Royal Arms of Dominion, adopted from the private arms of the House of MOWBRAY.1 An eagle displayed Or.* One of the badges of HENRY IV, NDNP. An heraldic antelope argent, armed, crined, unguled, ducally gorged, and chained Or.* The famous Antelope Badge of HUMPHREY DE BOHUN (II), Earl of Hereford, Essex, and Northampton, and Constable of England (d. 1373). It was inherited by a number of famous families, particularly King Henry V and the Staffords. An ostrich feather proper.* One of the badges of EDWARD III of England, tincture uncertain, NDNP. Argent crusilly (crosslets) Or, a cross potent also Or.* See JERUSALEM V. Argent fleury gules, a fleur-de-lis sable. NYA. Argent fleury gules, a mullet sable.** Partial example: mullet. NYA. Argent gutt‚e de sang, a fleur-de-lis and a bordure engrailed, both gules. QUILLAR, Yave (K. Astarra). [Uncertain.] Argent gutt‚e de sang, a fleur-de-lis gules. QUILLAR, Vandir (K. Astarra). [Uncertain.] ____________________ 1. Called Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, in Kingmaker. Also the arms attributed to MARCHWEITHIAN of Denbighshire, founder of the "Eleventh Noble Tribe" of Wales (Eleventh Century); but Denbigh is one of Mowbray's castles in Kingmaker, so the Mowbrays were probably descended from Marchweithian. In any case, the Mowbrays more frequently bore the arms of Thomas of Brotherton, England, a label argent. - 3 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent gutt‚e de sang, three unicorns' heads erased sable, armed and crined Or.* Private Arms of the 1989 NORROY AND ULSTER KING OF ARMS of England, NKNP. Argent sem‚e of Tudor roses, three lions passant gardant in pale azure.* Corporate Arms of the FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION, March 30, 1949. Crest (1978): On a cap of maintenance azure turned up argent a peregrine falcon rising, belled and jessed, holding in the beak an English wild rose slipped and leaved, all proper. The cap of maintenance was appropriate for a governing body, and the peregrine is the fastest falcon. Supporters: On each side a lion party per fess argent and azure, charged on the shoulder with a Tudor rose and with the interior hind foot resting on a football proper. The colors of the English international team were white shirts with blue shorts. Badge: A representation of the Football Association Cup encircled by a chaplet of olive leaves proper. The olive chaplet was the victor's reward in ancient Greece. Argent, a bend azure.** NYA. Argent, a bend between five martlets gules, two, two, and one, on a chief also gules, a lion passant gardant Or.* John DE BASSIGELINE (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Argent, a bend compony counter compony Or and vert between two trefoils of the last.# NYA. Argent, a bend doubly cottised sable; for augmentation, a chief of Astarra, fimbriated of the first. MARDOL, Ulmar (K. Astarra). Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a unicorn saliant argent, armed, crined, and unguled sable, langued gules. Supporters: Two unicorns saliant as in the crest. Argent, a bend gules between two mullets of eight points purpure. NYA. Argent, a bend gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Attributed to SIR LANCELOT DU LAC in The Once and Future King by T. H. White. Argent, a bend lozengy gules and the first.* AVYRISSONE (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, a bezant fimbriated sable. WHITE (LIGHT) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Argent, a boar's head erased vert, armed and langued gules.# NYA. Argent, a chapeau azure with an ostrich feather gules. Arms awarded by Richard II to JOHN DE KYNGESTON, a man-at-arms who had been challenged by a French knight, in order to make him eligible to accept the challenge. Argent, a chevron between three boars' heads couped sable.* Arms attributed to EDAYWAIN BENDEW of Flintshire, founder of the "Thirteenth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Eleventh Century). He supposedly killed three boars single-handedly. Argent, a chevron between three bulls passant gardant, all gules.* Private Arms of the 1989 GARTER KING OF ARMS of England, NKNP. Argent, a chevron between three crows statant close, each holding in the bill an ermine spot.* Actual or attributed arms of LLYWARCH AP BRAN of Anglesey, founder of the "Second Noble Tribe" of Wales (Twelfth Century), NKNP. In Welsh, bran = crow. - 4 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, a chevron engrailed sable.** NYA. Argent, a chevron gules between three bulls' heads couped sable.* Sir THOMAS BOLEYN (BULLEN), father of Queen Anne Boleyn (Bullen), second wife of Henry VIII. Argent, a chevron gules.** NYA. Argent, a chevron sable between three bears' heads couped also sable, muzzled Or.* BARRY, NKNP. Sixth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Argent, a chevron sable between three spearheads also sable embrued with blood proper.* Actual or attributed arms of NEFYDD HARDD of Nant Conway, founder of the "Sixth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Twelfth Century), NKNP. Argent, a chief azure.* Fourth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Argent, a chief gules.* MENZIES, NKNP. Argent, a crescent azure, a bordure sable.## NYA. Argent, a crescent gules, a label of three points azure charged upon each point with as many bezants.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Argent, a cross cottised azure. WHITE (KNIGHT) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. Argent, a cross cottised tenn‚, on a chief sable, two mullets Or.# NYA. Argent, a cross couped (and very slightly splayed) Or between four heurts, a bordure also Or; on the fly three tails, the center Or and the upper and lower vert.* Gonfanon awarded to WILLIAM THE CONQUERER by the Pope and borne by William at Hastings (1066), NDNP. Argent, a cross couped and voided sable, over all a cross patt‚e azure fimbriated of the field. WHITE (CRUXIANS) position in the Warlords II "Space" shield set. NYA. Argent, a cross engrailed gules between four water bougets sable.* BOURCHIER in Kingmaker; line and tincture uncertain; NKNP. Argent, a cross engrailed gules.* Thirteenth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Argent, a cross flory engrailed sable between four choughs proper.* Arms attributed to EDWIN OF TEGAINGL, founder of the "Twelfth Noble Tribe" of Wales (d. 1073), NKNP. Argent, a cross gules between four doves the dexter wing of each expanded and inverted azure.* The English COLLEGE OF ARMS; NKNP. Crest: On a gentleman's helm, out of a ducal coronet Or, a dove wings elevated azure. Supporters: Two lions gardant argent ducally gorged Or. Motto: "Diligent and secret." Argent, a cross gules.* The CROSS OF SAINT GEORGE used as the English national flag until 1707, then as part of the British Union Jack, NDNP. These arms were attributed to both Saint George and the ARCHANGEL MICHAEL, who is distinguished by being the only angel depicted in art as wearing boots. Argent, a cross patt‚e sable.2 BLACK (GERMANY) position in the Warlords II "Europa" shield set. NYA. ____________________ 2. In the Warlords II original, the shield is actually a medium gray. - 5 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, a cross potent between four crosslets gules. Variant arms of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem as seen in the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem and in the Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, presumably the arms of the DIOCESE OF JERUSALEM; NDNP. Argent, a cross potent between four crosslets Or.* See JERUSALEM VI. Argent, a cross sable between four torteaux, each charged with a fleur-de-lis Or.# NYA. Argent, a cross sable. WHITE (SIRIANS) position in the Warlords I shield set and WHITE (SILVER KNIGHTS) position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. NYA. Argent, a cross tenn‚ and a saltire sable, both voided in the center to form a mullet of eight points of the field. NYA. Argent, a cross tenn‚ between four cross crosslets sable. NYA. Argent, a crown composed of eight spikes connected by engrailed lines between three stars of David, all gules.# NYA. Argent, a dagger fesswise point to dexter between three Bowen's knots, all proper.# NYA. Argent, a fess azure.** NYA. Argent, a fess between three crescents gules.* Robert BOGYLL (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, a fess between two chevrons azure.* MOLNEYBONE (sp?) of Suffolk, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's). Also listed as TRUBENONE of Cornwall in the same book. NKNP. Argent, a fess between two chevrons gules.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244) as Henri PECCHE and as DE WALE (sp?). Listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280) (field possibly Or) as Roberd FITZ WITTER (Walter?). Variously listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as FITZWALTER of Essex, MOLMYTON or Molinyton of Suffolk, PERRYE of Suffolk, and PUISH (sp?). Called PECHE as the second quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. NKNP. Argent, a fess between two chevrons sable.* REERFIN (sp?) of Suffolk, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, a fess engrailed between three annulets sable.* WOGGIS (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, a fess gules between three fleurs-de-lis vert.# NYA. Argent, a fess gules, in chief a lion passant azure, armed and langued Or.# NYA. Argent, a fess gules, in chief two crescents also gules.* WATSHAM, NKNP. Eighth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Argent, a fess sable between four fountains. O'RIVER, Thomas (W.E. and K. Allon). Argent, a fess sable, in chief three crescents gules.* PATSILL (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, a fess, in chief three crescents, all gules.* John WALKER (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, a griffin sable, armed, langued, and membered gules. NYA. Argent, a lion rampant gules crowned Or, a bordure sable bezanty.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; crown possibly a ducal coronet. - 6 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, a lion rampant gules, armed and langued azure, on a chief of the second, three acorns slipped and leaved proper.* Thomas WOOD, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Torse: Argent and azure. Crest: A wolf statant sable, langued gules, gorged paly of four argent and azure, holding in the dexter front paw a flower slipped and leaved proper. Type of flower uncertain. Argent, a lion rampant gules.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Argent, a lion rampant proper.** NYA. Argent, a lion rampant sable, armed and langued gules, over all, on a fess erminois a serpent undulant vert.# NYA. Argent, a lion rampant sable, crowned gules.* ROCHFORT, NKNP. Also used by Queen Anne Boleyn (Bullen) as her fourth quarter, grand-quartered in II and III with Butler. Argent, a lion rampant sable, gorged with a crown and therefrom a chain passing between the forelegs and in front of the hindquarters Or.* Sir ARON AP REES and his descendants, the PHILIPPS family, NKNP. Argent, a lion rampant sable.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; lion possibly azure. Argent, a maple leaf vert.# NYA. Argent, a maunch gules.* Faue (sp?) DE GONTH (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Argent, a maunch sable.* HASTINGS in Kingmaker, NKNP. Argent, a mullet and a bordure, both gules. NYA. [Cadet of argent, a mullet gules.] Argent, a mullet gules, a bordure gyronny of the last and Or. NYA. [Cadet of argent, a mullet gules.] Argent, a mullet gules, a bordure vert. NYA. [Cadet of argent, a mullet gules.] Argent, a mullet gules. NYA. Argent, a mullet of eight points purpure. NYA. Argent, a mullet of six points sable. NYA. Argent, a mullet proper silver. WHITE (SIRIANS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set.3 NYA. Argent, a pale and a chevron sable between in chief two olive branches fructed proper.# NYA. Argent, a pale azure between six cross crosslets sable, two, two, and two.# NYA. Argent, a pale azure. NYA. Argent, a pale vert.** NYA. Argent, a pile sable and a chevron counterchanged.* ALWELL, NKNP. Argent, a planta genista proper.** Partial example: planta genista. NYA. Argent, a ragged cross pierced on the upper three arms by as many nails, between in base two flagellae palewise handles downwards, over all a sponge on the end of a long reed in bend sinster surmounted by a spear in bend, the point enfiled by a crown of thorns, all proper.* Arms attributed to CHRIST (Arms of Salvation), made of the Instruments of the Passion, as they appear on the seal of the Vice-Custos ____________________ 3. The shields in this set are depicted as having a flat surface with a large bas-relief mullet of actual gold or silver metal attached to the fess point. - 7 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 of the Grey Friars at Cambridge, ca. 1240; tinctures unknown. NDNP. Argent, a roundel inflamed proper. NARO, Colot (K. Astarra). Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a phoenix argent in flames proper. Argent, a saltire engrailed gules.* Twelfth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Argent, a saltire gules.* Argent, a saltire gules.* GERALD OF WINDSOR, Norman marcher baron and Constable of Pembroke Castle, who in 1095 married Nest, daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, Prince of Dehenbarth in southwestern Wales. They had three sons and two daughters; the two oldest sons, William and Maurice, went to Ireland and founded the famous FITZGERALD and FITZMAURICE families, while the third son, David, was Bishop of St. Davids. All bore the same arms, which were listed as Yoritz (sp?) Fitz Geroud in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280) and also listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70). These arms are also known as the CROSS OF SAINT PATRICK and as such are used as an Irish national emblem and as part of the British Union Jack. NDNP. Argent, a saltire ocher.# NYA. Argent, a saltire vert between four body hearts gules, each ducally crowned Or.#4 NYA. Argent, a saltire vert.** NYA. Argent, a saltire voided in the center vert. NYA. Argent, a sinister hand erect, open, and couped at the wrist gules.* See ULSTER. Argent, a star of David between two bars azure.* The flag of ISRAEL, NDNP. Argent, a sword erect sable between two lions combatant, the dexter gules, armed and langed azure, the sinister of the fourth, armed and langued of the third. NYA. Argent, a sword palewise point downwards sable, surmounted by two arrows crossed in saltire points downwards proper, flighted of the second, a bordure gyronny of the second and azure.## NYA. Argent, a wyvern gules.* Sir BERNARD DRAKE of Ashe, Devonshire, who boxed the ears of the famous navigator Sir Francis Drake at court for unlawfully assuming his arms, NKNP. Argent, an apple tree fructed proper issuing from a mount in base vert.# NYA. Argent, an eagle displayed azure, beaked Or.* John DE BELLO, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; eagle possibly sable. Argent, an eagle displayed sable. AQUILAREN, Trajan (K. Rona). Line extinct? Argent, an oak tree issuing from a mount in base vert, fructed Or, a chief rayonny gules.# NYA. Argent, an upper skull adorned with spikes, a bordure, all sable. SELENE (K. Paragon). Argent, five escutcheons azure, each charged with as many plates, on a bordure gules ten castles Or.* See PORTUGAL. ____________________ 4. In Stephen's original coloring the hearts are Or. - 8 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, five maple leaves vert. CARANARDAN, Archel (W.E.), and cadets. Argent, on a bend sable three leopards' faces of the first.* Actual or attributed arms of GWEIRYDD AP RHYS GOCH of Anglesey, founder of the "Third Noble Tribe" of Wales (Twelfth Century), NKNP. Argent, on a bend vert between six inescutcheons gules, a tilting spear Or.# NYA. Argent, on a canton gules a rose Or.* Fifteenth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Argent, on a chevron azure, three covered cups Or.* Anthony BUTLER, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Torse: Or and azure. Crest: A horse's head erased quarterly argent and sable. Argent, on a chevron gules between three martlets sable, as many annulets Or. NYA. Argent, on a chevron gules, three fleurs-de-lis Or.* PEVOR, NKNP. Eleventh quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Argent, on a chevron sable three angels of the first each kneeling on the sinister knee, the wings elevated and addorsed.* Actual or attributed arms of MAELOC CRWM of Caernarvonshire, founder of the "Seventh Noble Tribe" of Wales (Twelfth Century), NKNP. Argent, on a chief gules three crowns Or.* CITY OF COLLEN, Corporate Arms, NDNP. According to Peacham, the arms represent the city's monuments to the three Magi. Argent, on a cross gules a lion passant between two lions' faces in pale Or.* Corporate Arms of the FOOTBALL LEAGUE, which governs English domestic competition, March 25, 1974. Crest: On a grassy mount a football surmounted by a swift (Apus apus) volant, all proper. Badge: In front of a chain of twelve links in the form of an annulet agent a lion tricorporate the tails of the upper two bodies in chief Or. The Football League banner flies over Wembley Stadium. Argent, on a cross gules five lions passant gardant Or.* CITY OF YORK, Corporate Arms, NDNP. Argent, on a fess between two chevrons gules, three escallops of the first.* MEUHALL, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; type of charge uncertain. Argent, on a fess between two chevrons gules, two roses of the first.* LYLLE of Ruthunds (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, on a fess between two chevrons sable, three cross crosslets tenn‚. ARYHRIR (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; tincture appears tenn‚ but is probably Or. Argent, on a fess gules between three garbs azure, two crosses patt‚e Or.** NYA. Argent, on a fess gules between two chevrons azure, each charged with three escallops of the first, as many garbs tenn‚.* EDONE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; type of charge uncertain, tincture appears tenn‚ but is probably Or. Argent, on a fess gules, three pine trees Or.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP; type of charge uncertain. - 9 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, on a fess indented sable, three bezants.* Sixteenth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Argent, on a fess sable between two chevrons gules, three escallops tenn‚.* TRUBENONE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; type of charge uncertain, tincture appears tenn‚ but is probably Or. Argent, on a fess sable, a mullet Or, in chief three crescents gules.* Robert DE PATSILL (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, on a fess sable, three fleurs-de-lis Or.* John PATENSON of London, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Torse: Argent and azure. Crest: A cat's head erased, ducally gorged Or. Type of head uncertain, possibly a weasel. Argent, on a pale engrailed purpure between two swords erect proper, three roses Or, barbed proper.# NYA. Argent, on a pale purpure between two daggers palewise points downwards proper, as many chalices Or.# NYA. Argent, on a pile sable, a unicorn rampant of the first, armed, langued, crined, and unguled Or. SIRENE'S ORDER OF THE SILVER UNICORN, Corporate Arms. Argent, on a saltire azure an escutcheon of the Royal Arms of Scotland.* Province of Nova Scotia, used as the badge of the Baronets of Nova Scotia; NDNP. Argent, on a saltire gules between four mullets of six points azure, as many crescents Or. NYA. Argent, on a saltire sable, five annulets Or.* UXTON, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, on a saltire vert between eight body hearts gules, as many mullets of the field, over all, on a cross of the third, nine crescents Or.# NYA. Argent, seven mullets of seven points azure, three, three, and one. NYA. Argent, six fleurs-de-lis azure, a chief indented Or.* PASTON, the paternal quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573; NKNP. Crest (over the complete achievement of 12 quarters): A griffin segreant wings elevated and addorsed Or, ducally gorged argent, a chain affixed thereto clutched in the beak of the first. Argent, six trefoils vert.# NYA. Argent, three bars gules, a label azure.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Argent, three bars gules, a label sable.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Argent, three bars gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Argent, three chevronels gules, a label of five points azure.* DE MUFICHER (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Argent, three chevronels gules, over all a fess also gules.* ANDELBYE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Argent, three chevronels interlaced sable, in chief a bald eagle soaring proper.# NYA. Argent, three crescents gules, a bordure engrailed sable.* Nicholas DE HALOWE (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). - 10 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Argent, three crescents gules, a label azure.* Listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, three crescents gules.* William DE SUTNIHAM (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Argent, three escutcheons gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. According to Peacham (1622), these are the original arms of the Haies or HAYES family of Scotland, and that during a battle in which invading Danes defeated the Scots, when one Hay and his two sons, who were plowing nearby, the Scots fleeing down a narrow lane between stone walls, they stopped the rout and brought about a new charge and eventual victory. Hay was ennobled by the king, given "in a field silver, three escutcheons gules, the rest [supporter] a Plow-man with his Plow-beam on his shoulder." Argent, three fleurs-de-lis gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Argent, three fleurs-de-lis in chevron sable between two chevrons azure.# NYA. Argent, three fusils conjoined in fess gules, a bordure sable.* MONTAGUE, Earls of Sandwich, NKNP. Argent, three fusils conjoined in fess gules.* Montacute, Montagu, or MONTAGUE, paternal quarter of Sir Thomas Montagu, Earl of Salisbury (d. 1428), and eighth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex. The three sharp red fusils in fess of the Montagues are a play on Montaigu, a pointed hill which lent its name to their estate in France. NKNP. On his seal of 1465, Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71), bore them quartered in reverse order (2 and 3) with Monthermer on the neck of his horse-trapper. Crest (Sir Thomas): Out of a ducal coronet Or, a griffin rising wings elevated and addorsed proper. Tincture uncertain. Argent, three mullets gules, on a chief embattled vert, as many crescents of the first. NYA. Argent, three mullets sable. FYLOR, Telcontarion (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a hippogriff argent, langued gules, armed and winged sable. Argent, three ox heads caboshed sable.* Arms granted by the historic herald Nicholas Upton to a squire of the Earl of Salisbury who had been castrated in the battle of Verneuil, 1424, because plow oxen were gelded; NKNP. Argent, three pallets gules, over all a chevron Or.* Sir Edward BARKHAM, Lord Mayor of London in 1622 (Peacham). Argent, three piles conjoined in base gules.* BUCHDUIT (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Argent, three roundels sanguine.#5 NYA. Argent, two bars azure, a double-headed eagle gules.* Captain John Hanning SPEKE, a descendant of the Spekes of White Cockington in Somerset. Crest: A porcupine statant proper. After he discovered the source of the Nile, he was awarded an augmentation and a second crest on October 28, 1867. Augmentation: A chief azure thereon a representation of flowing waters proper super-inscribed with the word "Nile" ____________________ 5. In Stephen's original coloring it is azure, in chief two roundels ocher and in base a torteau. - 11 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 in letters gold. Second crest: A crocodile proper. The next day he was also awarded supporters "for and during his life" in one of the few occasions on which supporters have been granted as an augmentation to someone who was not a peer, Knight of the Garter, or Knight Grand Cross of another order: On the dexter a crocodile and on the sinister a hippopotamus both proper. Argent, two bars gemelles vert.** NYA. Argent, two bars gules.* The Barons of KENDAL, NKNP. Argent, two bars, in chief three mullets, all gules.* Robert de WASHINGTON (ancestor of George Washington), adopted after 1278, recorded in 1619, NKNP. Crest: Out of a ducal coronet, a crow rising wings elevated and addorsed sable. Type of bird uncertain. Argent, two bends gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Argent, two bulls' faces in fess vert, armed Or.# NYA. Argent, upon a mount in base vert a lion erect gardant coward, resting both fore paws upon a broken pillar, all proper.** Partial example: a lion erect gardant coward, resting both fore paws on a (letter). NYA. Astarra, a bordure Or. MENELDUR, Durafin (K. Astarra). Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant argent, armed and winged sable. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin as in the crest, gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. Astarra, a label Or for difference. MENELDUR, Vanir (K. Astarra). Arms: Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw an estoile of the first, gorged with a label Or for difference. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with an astral crown of estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with an astral crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. ASTARRA: Sable, an estoile argent. Royal Arms of Dominion of Astarra, adopted from the private arms of the House of MENELDUR. Crest: The Celestial Crown of Astarra proper, thereupon a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw an estoile argent. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. Azure billety Or, a lion rampant also Or.* See NASSAU. Azure crux-crusilly Or, a cross also Or.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Azure fleury Or.* See FRANCE ANCIENT. Azure gutt‚e d'eau, on a pale Or, three body hearts gules. NYA. Azure sem‚e of bees Or, a phoenix crowned with the Royal Crown issuant from flames all of the second, in base on a ribbon also of the second the words "Je renais de mes cendres" of - 12 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 the first, the escutcheon surmounted by the Royal Crown (of Haiti).* The QUEEN OF HAITI, wife of Henry Christophe; ribbon tinctures uncertain; NDNP. Supporters: Two lions gardant ermine, each crowned with the Royal Crown. Motto: "Dieu protage le Roi." Azure sem‚e of estoiles Or, a phoenix crowned with the Royal Crown issuant from flames all of the second, in base on a ribbon also of the second the words "Je renais de mes cendres" of the first.* See HAITI. Azure sem‚e-de-lis Or, a lion also Or.* Paternal arms of JOHN DE BRIENNE, Count of Brienne (ca. 1150-1237), NKNP. He became tenth King of Jerusalem jure uxoris upon his marriage to Queen Maria (1208-1211), then Regent (1211-1225) for their daughter Isabella II (Yolanda), and later was elected Emperor of Constantinople. Azure, a bend argent between six lioncels Or.* Original arms of the Bohun Earls of Hereford (BOHUN ANCIENT), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. They were compounded from the lioncels of William de Longsp‚e, Earl of Salisbury, and the attributed arms of two bends of Milo, Earl of Hereford. Azure, a bend argent cottised Or between six lioncels also Or.* The arms adopted by Humphrey de Bohun (I, 12th Century), Earl of Hereford, upon becoming Constable of England (BOHUN OF HEREFORD). The Bohun male line ended with Humphrey de Bohun (II), Earl of Hereford and Essex, in 1373, but his daughters all married powerful nobles, one of them King Henry IV. The Bohun Antelope and Swan Badges are famous and are listed separately. NKNP. Azure, a bend between six martlets argent.* Sir GEOFFREY LUTTRELL, depicted in the Luttrell Psalter, NKNP. Azure, a bend between two caltrops argent.# NYA. Azure, a bend Or between two eagles displayed argent.# NYA. Azure, a bend Or.* Originally held by SCROPE of Lancashire,6 GROSVENOR of Cheshire, and CARMINOW of Cornwall. Carminow had no issue and lived far from the powerful Scrope, so kept the arms; Scrope won the Scrope-Grosvenor Controversy to keep the arms. Grosvenor adopted azure, a garb Or. Also the paternal arms of Sir Geoffrey Luttrell's daughter-in-law as depicted in the Luttrell Psalter. NKNP. Used as the BLUE (SELENTINES) position in the Warlords I shield set. Azure, a bend sinister bevilled on both sides aiguis‚e Or. BLUE (EMPIRE) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set; the upper end of the bend is sometimes entire, not aiguis‚e. NYA. Azure, a crane close argent. NYA. Azure, a crescent Or. NYA. Azure, a cross between four mullets of eight points Or. NYA. Azure, a cross Or.* Flag of SWEDEN, NDNP. Used as the BLUE (BLUE KNIGHTS) position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. Azure, a cross patonce between five martlets Or.* Arms attributed to Saint Edward the Confessor, King of England, NKNP. By personal preference, Richard II frequently bore them impaled with the arms of his father, Edward III. ____________________ 6. Also called Scrope in Kingmaker. - 13 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Azure, a cross patt‚e extended Or.* MAUTBY (sp?), NKNP. Twelfth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Azure, a cross recercely Or.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Azure, a cross voided in the center argent, and a pile counterchanged.# NYA. Azure, a cross voided in the center Or.* Hugh DE GRUOM (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Azure, a demi-lion rampant gardant and three estoiles in chief Or, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ also Or.* PRINCE EUGENE (K. Haiti), NDNP. Supporters: On the dexter a lion gardant proper, on the sinister a horse argent. Motto: "Devouement au roi et … la patrie." Azure, a fess between three rams' faces Or.* DE LA POLE, called Pole, Duke of Suffolk, in Kingmaker; charges uncertain; NKNP. Azure, a fess between two chevrons argent.* TENDEMYR (sp?) of Suffolk, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Azure, a fess between two chevrons engrailed ermine.* BYCKLYE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Azure, a fess between two chevrons ermine, in chief two ogresses.* PANGHALL, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. In the picture in Bedingfeld, the roundel is definitely sable, but it may have originally been argent. Azure, a fess compony counter compony argent and gules between three becs-de-corbin argent.* William SUSSEX, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: A lion's gamb erased Or, armed gules, holding a bec-de-corbin azure in bend sinister. Azure, a fess composed of lozenges conjoined Or.* Henry DE PERCY, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Azure, a fess engrailed ermine between three lions passant Or.* Thomas JONDE (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: A unicorn statant azure, armed, crined, and unguled Or, ducally gorged argent. Azure, a fess Or.* Second quarter of the Joscelyne family, 1650, NKNP. Azure, a fess wavy between two estoiles argent.* Oilver … NOORT of Utrecht, NKNP. According to Peacham, he sailed around the world, then "usurped" the arms of Sir Francis Drake, merely changing the field from sable to azure. Azure, a fleur-de-lis and a bordure, both sable fimbriated argent.##7 NYA. Azure, a fret argent, on a chief Or, three crescents sable.* HOOD, NKNP. Azure, a fret argent.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Azure, a garb Or.* Adopted by GROSVENOR of Cheshire after losing in the Scrope-Grosvenor Controversy. NKNP. Azure, a harp Or between eight estoiles in bordure argent. EILOMA, Chieera (K. Coryland). Lady's Crest: Out of a baron's coronet, a dragon wings elevated and addorsed azure playing a harp Or. ____________________ 7. James' original is azure, a fleur-de-lis and a bordure sable. - 14 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Azure, a harp Or, stringed argent, the frame figured with an angel.* See IRELAND. Azure, a harp Or.* Arms attributed to KING DAVID, one of the three Israelites counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; alternatively, the field is sometimes gules; NDNP. Azure, a lily Or, a bordure engrailed argent.# NYA. Azure, a lion rampant gardant Or, armed and langued gules.* HETHERSET, NKNP. Ninth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Azure, a lion rampant Or.* Arms attributed to EUNYDD OF GWERNGWY in Denbighshire, founder of the "Fourteenth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Eleventh Century), NKNP. Azure, a maunch gules.* DE TOUY (?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; field appears azure but is possibly argent or sable. Azure, a mullet argent. BLUE (LORD OF ISLES) position in the Warlords II "Conq" shield set. NYA. Azure, a mullet of seven points argent. NYA. Azure, a mullet proper silver. BLUE position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Azure, a pall inverted ermine between three Eastern crowns Or.# NYA. Azure, a pall, in chief a fleur-de-lis, both Or. SHULA, Sandale (K. Astarra). Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a dexter cubit arm with fist clenched in armor Or. Supporters: Two warhorses rampant argent, chain barded Or, with knights mounted, mailed azure, the dexter with a sword in the dexter hand and the sinister with a scroll in the sinister hand, both proper. Azure, a pot Or of lilies argent between three estoiles of the second.# NYA. Azure, a saltire argent.* The CROSS OF SAINT ANDREW used as the Scottish national flag and as part of the British Union Jack, NDNP. Azure, a saltire Or.* MONASTERY OF SAINT ALBANS, Corporate Arms, NDNP. According to Peacham (1622), these arms originally belonged to "the pious Offa, King of the Mercians, A.D. 743, who in the 33rd year of his reign built the Monastery of St. Albans in Hertfordshire." These obviously attributed arms were apparently adopted by the monastery, which grew very wealthy and powerful before the Dissolution under Henry VIII. Azure, a saltire per saltire argent and gules, fimbriated of the second, surmounted by a cross of the third, fimbriated of the second.* The "Union Jack" flag of the UNITED KINGDOM. Used for the BLACK (CANADA), WHITE (BRITAIN), and RED (BRITAIN) positions in the Warlords II "Am," "Conq," and "Europa" shield sets, respectively. NDNP. Azure, a seahorse (fish) argent.** Partial example: seahorse (fish). NYA. Azure, a torse in annulet sable and argent conjoined to four hawks' bells Or.* Paternal quarter of the JOSCELYNE family, 1650, NKNP. Azure, an eagle displayed argent.* COTTON, NKNP. According to Peacham (1622), these arms were borne with an inescutcheon of Ulster by his contemporary Sir Robert Cotton, Baronet, of Cunnington in Huntingdonshire, - 15 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 "descended anciently by a younger brother from the Bruces of Scotland." Azure, an escutcheon between eight martlets in orle, all argent.* WALCOT, NKNP. Fifth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Azure, between two fleurs-de-lis Or, a sword erect, the hilt of the second and the blade proper, the point enfiled by a coronet composed of four large and four small fleurs-de-lis also of the second.* Arms granted by Charles VII to JOAN OF ARC, NDNP. Azure, on a bend argent cottised Or between six lioncels also Or, three mullets of six points sable.* Arms of the Bohun Earls of Northampton, cadets of the Bohun Earls of Hereford and Essex (BOHUN OF NORTHAMPTON); mullet tincture uncertain. Azure, on a cross argent, a body heart gules.# NYA. Azure, on a fess between three lions' faces Or, an annulet sable.* Fourteenth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Azure, on a fess between two chevrons argent, three crescents gules.* TENDEMYR (sp?) of Essex, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Azure, on a fess between two chevrons Or, three eagles displayed gules.* BULPRIDEN (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Azure, on a pale Or beween two lances erect argent, four crescents of the field. NYA. Azure, on a saltire Or, a torteau. NYA. Azure, on a sea in base proper a ship with three square-rigged masts Or, the sails, banner, and pennants argent, each charged with a cross gules, sailing between two rocky cliffs Or, in base an heraldic seahorse proper, a chief invected argent.* Corporate Arms of the Company of Merchant Adventurers trading to the Levant (LEVANT COMPANY, Turkey Merchants), in 1579 (an early example of bad heraldry), NDNP. Azure, six lioncels argent.* Willem DE LEYBURNE, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Azure, six lioncels Or.* GEOFFREY PLANTAGENET, Count of Anjou and Maine (d. 1150), the first recorded bearer of coat armor in England. Henry I knighted him and awarded him the arms in 1127 at Rouen a week prior to his marriage to Henry's daughter, the Empress Matilda. Geoffrey's son eventually became King Henry II of England. The arms were later used by Geoffrey's grandson WILLIAM LONGSPEE, Earl of Salisbury, the illegitimate son of Henry II and the "Fair Rosamond," in the Crusades. NKNP. Badge: A branch of the broome plant (planta genista) fructed proper. This badge was made famous by both Geoffrey and Henry II; the plant flourishes in Anjou. Azure, six lozenges Or.* See FLORENCE. Azure, three bars argent, on an equilateral triangle firm‚e point upwards parted per fess embattled of the second and of bricks proper, masoned sable, a sword erect proper, in base a lion statant of the second fimbriated of the third. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. - 16 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Azure, three cinquefoils argent.* Willem BARDULF, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; cinquefoils possibly Or. Azure, three cinquefoils Or.* Fifth quarter of the Joscelyne family, 1650, NKNP. Azure, three crescents argent, a label gules.* LE FROR (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Azure, three crescents argent.* Listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Azure, three fleurs-de-lis in pale Or between two flaunches ermine, each charged with a rose gules, barbed and seeded proper.* One of the quarters of augmentation given to KATHERINE HOWARD prior to her marriage to Henry VIII, NKNP. Azure, three fleurs-de-lis Or.* See FRANCE MODERN. Azure, three fusils Or.# NYA. Azure, three garbs Or.* CHESHIRE, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Azure, three mackerel fish in pale naiant argent, on a chief also argent, a cross sable.# NYA. Azure, three martlets argent.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Azure, three pairs of bulls' horns in pale Or, on a chief ermine, a demi-lion rampant gules.* Gunther (sp?) DE GENEVILE (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Azure, three ships Or, under all their sails garnished with crosses gules, and upon a chief Or between two roses proper an additament out of the Arms of England, quarterly azure and gules in the first and last one flower de luce Or, and in the second and third a lion passant gardant of the same.* First Corporate Arms awarded to the Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading into the East Indies (EAST INDIA COMPANY) on December 31, 1600. Crest: A sphere or globe celestial between two standards of Saint George. Supporters: Two heraldic sea lions Or and azure. Azure, two bars couped annodated argent. BLUE (WATER) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Azure, two bars gemelles, in chief a lion passant, all Or.* Henry AUGOI or AU GOI (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; lion possibly regardant. Azure, two lions passant gardant between four demi-fleurs-de- lis Or.* One of the quarters of augmentation given to KATHERINE HOWARD prior to her marriage to Henry VIII, NKNP. Barry bendy argent and azure.** NYA. Barry nebuly of six argent and azure, on a chief gules a lion passant gardant Or.* Corporate Arms awarded to the Merchants of the Staple of Calais (CALAIS MERCHANTS) by Edward III, NKNP. Barry of eight Or and gules, a mullet sable for difference.* Second quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Barry of six argent and azure, a bordure gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Barry of six argent and azure.* Richard DE ENER (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Barry of six ermine and vert.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. - 17 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Barry of six gules and argent, three crescents sable.* John DE BARYTON (sp?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Barry of six Or and gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Barry of twenty-four argent and gules, nine martlets in orle sable.* Listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; type of bird uncertain. Barry piley argent and gules.** NYA. Barry wavy of eight argent and azure, three sharks' jaws gules.* GREYSTOKE in Kingmaker; number of bars uncertain and charges not conclusively identified; currently NKNP, but one will be assigned as there is already a known cadet (General Edith Greystoke of Alvaron). Barry wavy of eight azure and argent, a mermaid proper bearing a comb and mirror Or. XYLOS, Quentin (A.U.). Barry wavy of six argent and azure, a trident in bend sinister sable, surmounted by a halberd gules in bend. AFTON, Samuel (K. Coryland). Barry wavy of six azure and argent, three stags' faces Or, on a chief erminois a lion passant sable between two pheons gules.* Arms of VISCOUNTESS NELSON, borne in pretense by Horatio Nelson, NKNP. Barry wavy of six Or and gules.* BAISETH (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. BAVARIA: Paly bendy argent and azure.* Arms of Dominion, NDNP. According to Peacham the Dukes of Bavaria adopted these arms to resemble the particolored cassocks of the ancient Boii, the Gauls who attempted the Suprise of the Capitol. Bendy of eight argent and azure. NYA. Bendy of ten azure and Or, a label of five points gules.* Roberd DE MUNFORT, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Bendy Or and azure, a bordure gules.* ROBERT, DUKE OF BURGOGNE, brother of Henry I of France, NKNP. According to Peacham (1622), Robert adopted "the ancient arms of the Dukes of Burgogne," which were supposedly "given by Charlemagne to Sanson Duke of Burgogne." Bendy sinister of eight azure and gules, a lion statant argent.* An IDF unit badge, NKNP; number uncertain. BERETAUR: Vert, three fleurs-de-lis argent. Arms of Dominion of the Forest See of Beretaur. Bleu de ceil, a cross argent. CYAN position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. NYA. Bleu de ceil, a mermaid affront‚e proper, crined gules, vested with her dexter strand of hair, holding in the dexter hand a mirror and in the sinister hand a comb, both Or, combing her sinster strand of hair.# NYA. Bleu de ceil, a mullet proper silver. CYAN position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Bleu de ceil, a sinister gauntlet clenched upright proper. CYAN (VEGANS) position in the Warlords II "Space" shield set. NYA. Bleu de ceil, a unicorn counter-passant argent. CYAN (NOMAD) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. - 18 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Bleu de ceil, an eagle displayed sable, double-headed, winged azure, fimbriated argent.8 CYAN (AUSTRIA) position in the Warlords II "Europa" shield set. NYA. Bleu de ceil, on a pile argent between four stars of David Or, a lion rampant sable, armed and langued gules. NYA. Bleu de ceil, the flag of the Confederate States of America proper. CYAN (CONFEDERACY) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set. NDNP. Bleu de ceil, the sun Or charged with a falcon preying sable. LINDARRE (House), Lindarre (W.E.). Bleu de ceil, two bars enhanced argent. CYAN (AIR) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Bleu de ceil, two swords crossed in saltire argent. CYAN (LOWLAND SCOTS) position in the Warlords II "Conq" shield set. NYA. Bricks proper masoned sable, a sword erect argent entwined by an olive branch fructed proper, a chief embattled vert. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Checky argent and azure, a bend ermine.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244) as azure and argent, NKNP; tincture possibly sable. Checky argent and azure, a mermaid facing to sinister proper, crined sable, holding in the dexter hand a mirror and in the outstretched sinister hand a comb, both Or, combing her hair to sinister.** Partial example: "C" mermaid. NYA. Checky argent and azure.* Rauf DE BROTBY (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and gules, a bend azure.* John DE NOOB (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and gules, a bend sable.* S. DE OEKRING (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and gules.* John DE NOOB (sp?), emblazoned gules and argent in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and sable, a bend gules.* John DE CAMBRIGE (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and sable, a chief Or.* DE COLFINE (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky argent and sable.* HUGH CAMBRIGE-BROKE (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, a bend gules.* Robert DE ST. CLYNTON (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, a bordure gules.* YANDIT (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. According to Peacham (1622), these arms were borne by ROBERT, COUNT OF DREUX, even though he was a brother of King Louis "le jeune" of France (and therefore entitled to difference the French royal arms). Checky Or and azure, a chevron ermine.* WALERAN DE BEAUMONT, fourth Earl of Warwick (d. 1204), grandson of William and Isabel de Warrenne, NKNP. Also called NEWBURGH, second (?) quarter of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. Richard's daughter Anne was the first wife of Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71). On his seal of 1465, Nevile bore them grand-quartered in I and IV, 2 and 3, on ____________________ 8. In the Warlords II original, the eagle is not fimbriated. - 19 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 his horse-trapper behind the saddle, marshalled in order of importance with Beauchamp, Clare, and Despencer. Checky Or and azure, a chief argent.* Gilliam DE GARRONY (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, a fess gules.* CLYFFORD, listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Called CLIFFORD in Kingmaker. Checky Or and azure, an escutcheon argent charged with a bend gules.* John BREHORD (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, on a chief argent, on the dexter a crescent gules.* Thomas DE GARRONY (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, on a chief of the second, three fleurs- de-lis of the first.* According to Peacham (1622), when HUGUES, brother of King Philip (?) of France, married the daughter and heir of Herbert, Count of Vermandois, he forsook his proper arms and bore his wife's, checky Or and azure, with only three fleurs-de-lis added in chief to show he was of the French royal blood (Peacham does not give the complete blazon); NKNP. Checky Or and azure, on a fess gules, a cinquefoil argent.* CLYFFORD (cadet), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and azure, on a fess gules, a cross crosslet argent.* CLYFFORD (cadet), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP; tincture uncertain. Checky Or and azure, on a fess gules, three lions rampant argent.* F. PENYEFORD, listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP; tincture uncertain. Checky Or and azure.* Hugh the Great, Count of Vermandois (HUGH OF VERMANDOIS), son of Henri I of France, whose daughter Isabel married secondly William de Warenne (WARRENNE), second Earl of Surrey (d. 1138). Their granddaughter Isabel married Hamelin, fifth Earl of Surrey (d. 1202), illegitimate son of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou and Maine (d. 1150); their descendants bore the Warrenne name and arms. Also used by Queen Anne Boleyn (Bullen) as her sixth quarter. Fifth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex. Currently the third quarter of Miles F. S. Howard, Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England. NKNP. Checky Or and gules, a bend ermine.* DE CLYFTON, listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and gules, a chief ermine.* Listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and gules, a fess ermine.* Gilbert COURBRIND (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Checky Or and gules.* WALERAN DE BEAUMONT, Count of Meulan and Earl of Worcester (d. 1166), son of Robert de Beaumont, Count of Meulan and first Earl of Leicester (d. 1118) and Isabel, daughter of Hugh of Vermandois; NKNP. Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70); also listed as DE GILLELAND (sp?) in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520). Checky Or and sable, a fess ermine.* Roger Curson DE MONTHFFOLK (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. - 20 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Edward the Confessor impaling quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; impaling France Ancient.* The unusual triple impalement of QUEEN ISABEL, daughter of Charles VI of France and second wife of Richard II of England, NDNP. Edward the Confessor impaling quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England.* The English royal arms as used by RICHARD II, NDNP. Edward the Confessor impaling Thomas of Brotherton.* Arms borne by THOMAS MOWBRAY, Earl of Norfolk and Nottingham and Earl Marshal, after being created Duke of Norfolk on 01/25/1397, NDNP. Edward the Confessor, a bordure argent, impaling Edmund of Woodstock.* Arms borne by THOMAS HOLAND, Earl of Kent, half-brother of Richard II, after being created Duke of Surrey on 01/25/1397, NDNP. Edward the Confessor, a label argent, impaling Holland.* Arms borne by JOHN HOLAND, Earl of Huntingdon, half-brother of Richard II, after being created Duke of Exeter on 01/25/1397, NDNP. Edward the Confessor, a label argent, impaling quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of five points argent; impaling Bohun of Hereford.* The triple impalement borne by HENRY OF BOLINGBROKE, Earl of Derby, after being created Duke of Hereford on 01/25/1397, then succeeding his father, John of Gaunt, as Duke of Lancaster in 1399; label tinctures uncertain. He eventually succeeded Richard II as Henry IV, then abandoned the impalement of the Confessor and discouraged the other recipients of the honor from using it. Edward the Confessor, a label of three points argent, impaling quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of five points argent charged upon each point with three torteaux.* Arms borne by EDWARD OF NORWICH, called Plantagenet, Earl of Rutland, after being appointed Lord High Admiral in 1392; first label tincture uncertain. He was created Duke of Aumale on 01/25/1397 and later succeeded as Duke of York. NDNP. England dimidiating azure, three ships Or.* Arms of Office of the WARDEN OF THE CINQUE PORTS, NDNP. One recent holder of the office was Sir Winston Spencer-Churchill. England, a bordure argent.* EDMUND OF WOODSTOCK (a royal manor near Oxford), Earl of Kent, the youngest son of Edward I; NDNP. Also used by his grandson Thomas Holand (II), Earl of Kent, half-brother of Richard II. Tenth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex. England, a bordure of France.* Prince John of Eltham, probably the same person as John Holand, Earl of Huntingdon, half-brother of Richard II; called HOLLAND in Kingmaker. NDNP. England, a label argent.* THOMAS OF BROTHERTON, second son of Edward I, NDNP. Also used by Queen Anne Boleyn (Bullen) as her fifth quarter. Currently the second quarter of Miles F. S. Howard, Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England. England, a label of three points azure, charged on each point with as many fleurs-de-lis Or.* JOHN OF GAUNT, Duke of LANCASTER, NDNP. Also the first quarter of augmentation - 21 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 given to Anne Boleyn (Bullen) prior to her marriage to Henry VIII. Peacham (1622) blazons the label as ermine. England, a label of three points ermine.* JOHN OF GAUNT, Duke of LANCASTER, NDNP, as blazoned by Peacham (1622); other sources blazon the label as azure, charged on each point with as many fleurs-de-lis Or. England, over all a baton azure.* The arms of JOHN, EARL OF LANCASTER, afterwards King John, according to Peacham (1622). Other sources blazon his arms prior to succession to the throne as Gules, two lions passant gardant Or. ENGLAND: Gules, three lions passant gardant in pale Or (armed and langued azure).* Royal Arms of Dominion adopted by Richard I after the Third Crusade, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244). Edward III first quartered them (in 2 and 3) with the arms of France, and they have ever since been borne marshalled in various ways with the arms of France, Scotland, Ireland, and Hannover. The current British royal arms as used in England are quarterly 1 and 4, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland. NDNP. Note: "Armed and langued azure" is usually omitted from the blazon. Ermine, a body heart and a chief, both gules.** NYA. Ermine, a chief indented gules.* HENGRAVE, NKNP. Seventh quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Ermine, a cross gules. NYA. Ermine, a cross sable.# NYA. Ermine, a falcon preying proper. TALON, Randol (W.E., K. Allon). Ermine, a lily purpure.** Partial example: lily. NYA. Ermine, an eagle the dexter wing expanded and inverted sable, armed and ducally gorged Or.** Partial example: an eagle the dexter wing expanded and inverted, ducally gorged. NYA. Ermine, on a bend gules, two fleurs-de-lis Or. TIRLOVAL, Anganir (F.S. Beretaur). Ermine, on a chief indented gules, three ducal coronets Or.* LEECH, NKNP. Third quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Ermine, on a cross gules, the sun in his splendor.# NYA. Ermine, on a fess engrailed azure, two eagles displayed Or.# NYA. Ermine, on a fess gules, two fleurs-de-lis Or. TIRLOVAL, Calahir (F.S. Beretaur), and cadets. Ermine, six laurel crowns vert. NICHOLS, Thomas (K. Allon). Ermine, three crescents gules, each charged with a bezant upon the base.* Hugh COBBIN, listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Ermine, two fleurs-de-lis in fess gules. See LOVAL. Erminois, an annulet vert.** Partial example: annulet. NYA. Florence, the center chief lozenge charged with three fleurs- de-lis of the field.* PIETRO DE MEDICI, NKNP. According to Peacham (who does not blazon the tincture of the fleurs-de- lis), in May 1465 Louis XI of France, as a sign of alliance, allowed Pietro de Medici to bear three fleurs-de-lis in his shield, "which I have seen borne in chief, upon one of his six Lozenges." FLORENCE: Azure, six lozenges Or.* Arms of Dominion, NDNP. According to Peacham (who does not blazon the tincture of the lozenges), the Dukes of Florence bore these arms because - 22 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 they were descended from the family of Di Medici, or physicians. France Ancient, a baton compony argent and gules.* LOUIS, EARL OF EVREUX (in Normandy), brother of Philip le Bell, NDNP (Peacham). France Ancient, a label of three points gules.* ANGOULEME, NDNP. Also the second quarter of augmentation given to Anne Boleyn (Bullen) prior to her marriage to Henry VIII. FRANCE ANCIENT: Azure fleury Or.* First Arms of Dominion of the Kingdom of France, NDNP. The first example occurs on the Great Seal of Louis VIII, 1211. Changed to azure, three fleurs-de-lis Or (France Modern) by Charles VI. France Modern, over all a baton gules.* According to Peacham (1622), these are the arms actually borne by the House of BOURBON, but their proper arms are Or, a lion gules, within an orle of escallops azure; NDNP. FRANCE MODERN: Azure, three fleurs-de-lis Or.* Most recent Arms of Dominion of the Kingdom of France, NDNP. Charles VI changed the French royal arms from azure fleury Or (France Ancient), possibly to distinguish them from the arms quartered in pretension by the English kings. Gules billety Or, a bend also Or.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Gules lozengy argent. CANCIER (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules sem‚e of crosses patt‚e argent.* Listed in the "Westminster Psalter" (1250), NKNP. Gules, a bend between eight cross crosslets argent.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Gules, a bend between six cross crosslets fitch‚e argent.* The original arms of Miles F. S. HOWARD,9 current Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England, NKNP. Howard Augmentation, awarded to Thomas Howard after defeating the Scots at the Battle of Flodden in 1513: On the bend, on an escutcheon Or, fimbriated of the first, a demi-lion rampant, pierced thorugh the mouth by an arrow, within a double tressure fleury-counter-flory of the first (after Scotland). Gules, a bend fusilly Or.* Possible first arms of WILLIAM THE MARSHAL (William Fitz John, d. 1219), "the best knight who ever lived." He later made famous the arms per pale Or and vert, a lion rampant gules, queue forch‚. Gules, a bend Or between three crescents argent.** NYA. Gules, a bend sinister azure between two lions passant-gardant Or.* Arms attributed by Peacham to (possibly the actual arms of) REGINALD, illegitimate son of William the Conqueror, NDNP. Gules, a chevron argent between three Englishmen's heads couped proper.* EDYNFED FYCHAN (d. 1246), Steward of Llywelyn the Great and an ancestor of the Tudors. The arms refer to an old border skirmish. Owen Tudor altered them to gules, a chevron between three helms argent, probably upon moving to England. Gules, a chevron argent, surmounted by another azure, between three bustards close proper, in the center chief point a bezant.* Original arms of Lord KITCHENER of Khartoum, NKNP. ____________________ 9. Also called Howard in Kingmaker. - 23 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Gules, a chevron argent.* Yuvitz (sp?) DE BIELE (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Gules, a chevron azure, fimbriated Or.# NYA. Gules, a chevron between nine crosses patt‚e argent, three, two, one, two, and one.* Thomas DE BERKELEY (1243);10 charges uncertain, possibly plates; NKNP. Gules, a chevron between three crescents argent.* John DE COTOM, listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Gules, a chevron between three helms argent.* The arms adopted by OWEN TUDOR upon moving to England, adapted from the arms of his ancestor Edynfed Fychan, gules, a chevron argent between three Englishmen's heads couped proper. Two of Owen's three sons by Catherine of Valois (widow of Henry V), Jasper and Edmund, were given completely new arms based on the royal arms. Gules, a chevron between three lions rampant Or.* Actual or attributed arms of HWFA AP CYNDDELW of Anglesey, founder of the "First Noble Tribe" of Wales (ca. 1100-1170), NKNP. His descendants were hereditary Stewards of the Princes of Gwynedd. Gules, a chief argent.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Gules, a chief checky argent and azure.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Gules, a chief checky Or and azure.* Gilliam YANSTRID (sp?), listed in "Flower's Ordinary" (ca. 1520), NKNP. Gules, a chief irregularly rayonny tenn‚, surmounted by another Or, surmounted by another argent. RED (FIRE) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Gules, a cinquefoil ermine.* LEICESTER, 1480; possibly a standard badge. Gules, a cinquefoil Or.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules, a Colt 45 revolver pistol bendwise sinister sable. RED (WILD WEST) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set. NDNP. Gules, a comet the tail to the dexter Or, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ also Or.* PRINCE DE SAINT-MARC (K. Haiti). Supporters: The base of the shield rests on the backs of two elephants argent. Motto: "Je seme la terreur." Gules, a cross argent. RED (WALES) and RED positions in the Warlords II "Conq" and "Knight" shield sets, respectively. NYA. Gules, a cross flory Or. TRALOVIL, Cirgil (K. Astarra). Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a stag courant Or, gorged with an oak-leaf wreath vert and charged with a cross flory gules. Supporters: On the dexter, a stag saliant gardant proper; on the sinister, a grizzly bear rampant proper. Gules, a cross patonce patt‚e voided argent.* CHOLAFIEL (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; the cross has curved splays like a cross patt‚e but three end points like a cross patonce. ____________________ 10. Called Berkeley in Kingmaker. - 24 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Gules, a cross patt‚e argent.* Willi DE VESA, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules, a cross patt‚e vair.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules, a decrescent argent. RED (ORCS OF KOR) position in the Warlords I shield set and RED (ORC) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. Gules, a dexter arm embowed in armor holding in the hand a sword erect, all proper, thereto affixed a banner argent charged with a cross between sixteen escutcheons of the field, on the cross a lion of England.* Quarter of augmentation awarded to EDWARD LAKE by Charles II, NDNP. Gules, a fess argent, in chief a bar indented also argent.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Gules, a fess argent.* The flag of AUSTRIA, NDNP. Gules, a fess between six cross crosslets Or.* Paternal arms of Richard BEAUCHAMP, Earl of Warwick, NKNP. Richard's daughter Anne was the first wife of Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71). On his seal of 1465, Nevile bore them grand-quartered in I and IV, 1 and 4, on his horse-trapper behind the saddle, marshalled in order of importance with Newburgh, Clare, and Despencer. Gules, a fess between three crescents Or.* Listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Gules, a fess between three crescents sable.* Thomas GALOSKS (?), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Gules, a fess between two chevrons argent.* NOEFFIN (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Gules, a fess between two chevrons ermine.* CHARVELLIS, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Gules, a fess between two chevrons Or, a canton ermine.* HENGULL (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Gules, a fess Or between three frogs proper.* Arms attributed to SATAN, inspired by the Book of Revelation. NDNP. Gules, a fess sable, fimbriated Or, between two suns in their splendor.# NYA. Gules, a fret Or.* AUDLEY in Kingmaker, NKNP. Gules, a griffin segreant and a bordure engrailed Or.* Third quarter of the Joscelyne family, 1650, NKNP. Gules, a horse courant argent.* See SAXONY. Gules, a lion … la queue fourcheŠ Or, passeŠ per … lentour, argent.* AMAULRY, EARL OF MONTFORT, illegitimate son of King Robert (?), as blazoned by Peacham (1622). Gules, a lion ducally crowned Or, holding a battleaxe azure and seated upon a throne argent.* Arms attributed to ALEXANDER THE GREAT, one of the three pagans counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; type of crown uncertain; NDNP. Gules, a lion passant gardant Or.* GUIENNE, NKNP. Also the third quarter of augmentation given to Anne Boleyn (Bullen) prior to her marriage to Henry VIII. Gules, a lion rampant argent.* See ALLON. Gules, a lion rampant ermine.* Listed in the "Military Roll of Arms" (ca. 1480), NKNP. Gules, a lion rampant Or.* FITZ-ALAN, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244); called Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel, in Kingmaker. - 25 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Third quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex. Currently the fourth quarter of Miles F. S. Howard, Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England, who is also Earl of Arundel. A Novite parallel will be assigned as there is already a known cadet (Sir George Fitzalan, Baron of Alandale, in Coryland). Gules, a lion rampant, a bordure engrailed, both argent.* GREY in Kingmaker, NKNP. Gules, a lion rampant, a bordure engrailed, both Or.* TALBOT, Earl of Shrewsbury, in Kingmaker, NKNP. Gules, a man's head erased proper, the brows bound round with a torse argent and azure.* Arms attributed to MARCHUDD AP CYNAN of Caernarvonshire and Denbighshire, founder of the "Eighth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Tenth Century) and ancestor of the Tudors, NKNP. Gules, a mullet proper gold. RED (MINTAKANS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Gules, a pale argent.* CITY OF DORDRECHT, The Netherlands, Corporate Arms, NDNP. According to Peacham, the arms recall a civil war which stained its two long main streets paralleling the river between with blood. Gules, a quill-pen bendwise sinister argent between two roses in bend also argent, barbed and seeded proper.# NYA. Gules, a saltire argent, a label compony argent and azure.* NEVILLE, the arms borne by Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71), known as "Warwick the Kingmaker," upon his seal of 1465. The compony label is an allusion to the arms of his grandmother Joan, daughter of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster (see Beaufort). Gules, a saltire argent, a label vair.* Seventh quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP; label pattern uncertain. Gules, a saltire argent.* Original arms of Nevile or NEVILLE,11 NKNP, borne in differenced form by Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71), known as "Warwick the Kingmaker." Badge: A bear erect supporting a ragged staff, all proper.* This famous badge is a combination of two earlier badges; tinctures uncertain. Gules, a saltire vair.* Rauf DE WILHAM (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Gules, a sword erect Or entwined by an olive branch fructed vert, a bordure argent. An IDF unit badge displayed on a roundel, NKNP. Gules, a sword in pale point downwards Or between two flaunches ermine.# NYA. Gules, a trident between two estoiles of twelve points Or. Arms of Office of the LORD ADMIRAL, K. Paragon. Gules, a trident surmounted by balances Or. Arms of Office of the LORD JUSTICIAR, K. Paragon. Gules, a wolf passant Or. NYA. Gules, an amphiptŠre embowed rising wings elevated and addorsed vert, armed and winged argent. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Gules, five fusils conjoined in fess argent, each charged with a fleur-de-lis sable, in chief three martlets Or.* Glynn ____________________ 11. Called Neville, Earl of Warwick, in Kingmaker. - 26 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 (sp?) EAUSKENEY (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: A demi-elephant vert, armed and eared Or. Gules, on a bend between six cross crosslets fitch‚e argent a mullet of the first.* William HOWARD, third son of Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel and Surrey, Earl Marshal of England; Peacham's protege; NKNP. Peacham does not blazon the tincture of the mullet. Gules, on a bend sinister between three water bougets Or as many ogresses, a canton argent.** NYA. Gules, on a bezant fimbriated vert a lion rampant sable. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Gules, on a chevron between three crescents argent, a mullet sable.* DE COTOM (cadet), listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Gules, on a cross argent, the sun in his splendor of the field between four fleurs-de-lis sable. NYA. Gules, on a cross ermine between four lions passant gardant Or, a Bible lying fessways of the field clasped and garnished of the third the clasps in base.* UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, Corporate Arms, granted 1573, NDNP. Gules, on a fess argent between two chevrons ermine, three portcullises sable.* BEHRANT (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; type of charge uncertain. Gules, on a fess between three crescents Or, a sexfoil sable.* Listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380); the charge could also be a mullet or estoile of six points. Gules, on a fess Or between in chief an eagle's head erased sable and in base a target composed of a pomme surmounted by a torteau surmounted by an ogress, each fimbriated argent, three roses, the dexter sable, the center tenn‚, and the sinister vert, all barbed and seeded proper.#12 NYA. Gules, on a fess Or between two lions passant argent, another counter-passant proper.# NYA. Gules, on a lozenge argent, a leopard's face proper jessant- de-lis of the first.** Partial example: leopard's face jessant-de-lis. NYA. Gules, on a pale Or, three ravens close sable, a bordure also sable. RAVENSCROFT, Ian (R. Alvaron). Gules, on a pale Or, three ravens close sable. RAVENSCROFT, Talamin (R. Alvaron), and cadets. Gules, on a pall argent, couped and fringed at the base Or, four crosses form‚e fitch‚e sable, in chief a mound of the third.* Arms of the see held by Cardinal GODFREY, NKNP. Gules, on a saltire azure, fimbriated argent, thirteen mullets inverted also argent.* The most famous battle flag of the CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA, NDNP. Gules, on a saltire engrailed Or, five torteaux, a chief ermine.* Fourth quarter of the Joscelyne family, 1650, NKNP. Gules, seven mascles Or.* DE WINCOME (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules, six bars argent, on a canton azure, sixteen mullets of the second, four, four, four, and four.* The flag of the ____________________ 12. In Stephen's original coloring the "fess" is also gules and the target of three roundels is not fimbriated. - 27 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, circa 1800. Used for the BLUE (UNION) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set and for the WHITE (AMERICA) position in the "Europa" shield set. NDNP. Gules, six bezants, on a chief Or, a lion passant proper.# NYA. Gules, six bezants. NYA. Gules, three covered cups azure.* Ric. DE ARGENTO; listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; type of charge uncertain, the tincture appears azure but from the surname is probably argent. Gules, three crescents Or.* Listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Gules, three crowns composed of four fleurs-de-lis alternating with four small strawberry leaves Or.* Arms attributed to SAINT EDMUND KING AND MARTYR on a banner borne at Agincourt; tinctures uncertain; NDNP. Gules, three crowns in pale Or.* The secondary arms of the two commonly attributed to "King" ARTHUR, one of the three Christians counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the first is Vert, a cross argent, in the first quarter the Virgin standing and holding the Child all Or, and these two coats were sometimes borne quartered; NDNP. Gules, three escutcheons Or, each charged with a cross patonce of the field.# NYA. Gules, three fish hauriant argent.* DE MATOUS (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; type of fish unknown. Gules, three fleurs-de-lis argent.* William DE CANTELUPO (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Gules, three lions passant gardant in pale Or (armed and langued azure).* See ENGLAND. Gules, three plates, on a chief Or, a scaly lizard statant vert. NYA. Gules, three serpents interlaced argent.* Actual or attributed arms of EDNYWAIN AP BRADWEN of Merionethshire, founder of the "Fifteenth Noble Tribe" of Wales (late Twelfth Century), NKNP. Gules, two bars argent.* Roberd DE MORTIMER, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Gules, two battle axes crossed in saltire, points upwards, blades outwards argent, surmounted by a spear erect Or.# NYA. Gules, two bends, the upper Or and the lower argent.* MILES OF GLOUCESTER, Constable of England, grandson of Roger de Pitres, the Domesday tenant-in-chief and hereditary Sheriff of Gloucester under Henry I. Miles was already an important marcher baron and lord of Abergavenny when he acquired the lordship of Brecknock (the former Welsh kingdom of Brycheiniog, with all its regalities) through his wife Sybil, daughter of Bernard de Neufmarch‚. He was created Earl of Hereford in 1141 but died in 1143, and all four of his sons died without issue. His daughter Margaret carried the Constableship to her husband, Humphrey de Bohun (I), and it eventually passed to the Staffords. The arms of Miles of Gloucester became those of the office of CONSTABLE OF ENGLAND, which was abolished by the Tudors, except that it exists on the coronation day. - 28 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Gules, two lions combatant Or.* Possible arms of HENRY I; probable arms of HENRY II, his younger brother WILLIAM FITZ EMPRESS, and his son RICHARD I before the Third Crusade; NDNP. Gules, two lions passant argent.* JON LE UINGRE (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Gules, two lions passant gardant Or (armed and langued azure).* Possible arms of REGINALD DE DUNSTANVILLE, third illegitimate son of Henry I, created Earl of Cornwall in 1141. Borne by JOHN, son of Henry II, in 1185, but upon his succession to the throne in 1199 he adopted the three lions of his brother, Richard I. According to Peacham (1622), however, John as Earl of Lancaster bore England, over all a baton azure. Borne in Glover's Roll by King John's illegitimate son RICHARD DE DOUVRES (aka Fitz Roy or de Warenne), lord of Chilham Castle in Kent. Also the Arms of Dominion of the German province of BRUNSWICK, brought into the British royal arms by George I as part of the arms of Hannover. NDNP. Note: "Armed and langued azure" is usually omitted from the blazon. Gules.** NYA. Gyronny argent and gules.** NYA. Gyronny argent and Or, a saltire patt‚e purpure.# NYA. Gyronny argent and sable. NYA. Gyronny azure, a mural crown Or, and argent, a cross flory fitch‚e gules. NYA. Gyronny gules and Or. TULIRNOREL, Shylor (K. Astarra). Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a taloned dexter hand apaum‚ Or, armed gules. Supporters: Two wolves rampant gardant, the dexter gules, armed and langued Or, the sinister counterchanged. Gyronny Or and azure, a crescent gules. NYA. Gyronny Or and sable, a mullet of seven points azure.## NYA. Gyronny Or and sable.** NYA. Gyronny tenn‚ and sable. DHUUL, Quitur (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a dexter arm embowed in armor tenn‚ holding a javelin in bend sinister point downwards sable. Gyronny vert and Or.# NYA. had borne a reference to an old border skirmish, but Owen prudently altered them to probably upon moving to England. Haiti, a label of three points argent.* The PRINCE ROYAL OF HAITI, son of Henry Christophe; NDNP. Motto: "Les jeux de l'enfance annoncent les grands hommes." HAITI: Azure sem‚e of estoiles Or, a phoenix crowned with the Royal Crown issuant from flames all of the second, in base on a ribbon also of the second the words "Je renais de mes cendres" of the first, the escutcheon surmounted by the Royal Crown (eight jeweled arches, topped by a mound, alternating with eight small pearls on small triangular points) and encircled by the Collar of the Order of Saint Henry.* Arms of Dominion of the Kingdom of Haiti, 1811- 1820, adopted by Henry Christophe upon his creation of the Kingdom of Haiti and coronation as King Henry I; ribbon tinctures uncertain; NDNP. Supporters: Two lions gardant ermine, each crowned with the Royal Crown. Motto: "Dieu, ma cause et mon ep‚e." - 29 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 HANNOVER: Tierced per pairlie 1, Brunswick; 2, Luneburg; 3, Saxony; over all, on an escutcheon of pretence gules, the crown of Charlemagne Or.* Electoral, later Royal, Arms of Dominion. Borne in the fourth quarter of the British royal arms during the reigns of George I, George II, and George III, who moved them onto an escutcheon of pretence, then borne in this fashion by George IV and William IV. HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE: Or, a double-headed eagle displayed sable, armed gules.* The Imperial Arms of Dominion, NDNP; also attributed by extrapolation to JULIUS CAESAR, one of the three pagans counted among the Nine Worthies of the World, from whose authority the Holy Roman Emperors claimed descent. Impaled on the dexter, gules, on a pall argent, couped and fringed at the base Or, four crosses form‚e fitch‚e sable, in chief a mound of the third; on the sinister, per fess Or and argent, two crosses patt‚ gules between in chief a rose also gules, barbed and seeded proper, and in base an olive branch of seven leaves proper.* Arms of Office of Cardinal GODFREY (Puttock, 16A); the rest of the achievement is for a Roman Catholic Cardinal, with the motto "Pax a Deo." NDNP. IRELAND: Azure, a harp Or, stringed argent, the frame figured with an angel.* Provincial Arms of Dominion, borne as the third quarter in the British royal arms, which now refers only to Ulster or Northern Ireland; NDNP. Jerusalem dimidiating gules, an escarbuncle Or.* Arms attributed to GODFREY DE BOUILLON, leader of the First Crusade and one of the three Christians counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; NDNP. JERUSALEM I: Or, a cross argent.* First Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, NDNP. Matthew Paris (ca. 1250) attributes these arms to both Godfrey de Bouillon, Advocatus Sancti Sepulchri (1099-1100), and his brother, Baldwin I, the first king, but there is no contemporary evidence. According to Matthew Paris, John de Brienne, the tenth king, apparently used these same arms during the first part of his reign (1208-1211) and regency (1211-1225). JERUSALEM II: Or, a cross couped argent between four heurts.* Second Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom, NDNP, as depicted on the seal of Guy of Lusignan, the eighth king; tinctures uncertain. JERUSALEM III: Or, a cross potent between four crosslets argent.* Third Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom, NDNP, as depicted on a coin of Aimery de Lusignan, the ninth king; tinctures uncertain. JERUSALEM IV: Or crusilly (crosslets) argent, a cross also argent.* Fourth Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom, NDNP, used during the later part of the regency of John de Brienne, the tenth king, as described by Matthew Paris. JERUSALEM V: Argent crusilly (crosslets) Or, a cross potent also Or.* Fifth Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom, NDNP, as listed in Walford's Roll, 1273: "Le roy d'Acre d'argent pudre a croysille d'or une croyz d'or bylette." The tinctures are reversed from the four preceding arms, but the exact time of the tincture change is not clear. A new dynasty likely effected the change to emphasize the new succession. - 30 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 JERUSALEM VI: Argent, a cross potent between four crosslets Or.* Most recent Arms of Dominion of the Crusader Kingdom, NDNP. At some unknown point in time the tinctures were reversed from silver crosses on a gold field. LOVAL: Ermine, two fleurs-de-lis in fess gules. Arms of Dominion of Loval Prefecture, F.S. Beretaur. Lozengy argent and gules, a dragon sable.* Arms attributed to "Duke" JOSHUA, one of the three Israelites counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the tinctures vary considerably and the dragon is actually a wyvern in modern blazon; NDNP. Lozengy argent and gules, a fess sable.* REKELAY, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as gules and argent, NKNP. Lozengy argent and gules.* SOMER (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as gules and argent, NKNP. Also listed as TEDDENBURNE in the same book. Lozengy argent and sable.* LYLBUKUR (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as sable and argent, NKNP. Lozengy ermine and gules.* RORKELEY (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as gules and ermine, NKNP. Lozengy ermine and sable.* PATTEN, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's) as sable and ermine, NKNP. Lozengy Or and azure, a chevron gules.* LYDENVOR (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Lozengy Or and azure.* LONGBELT, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Also listed as WENEBLITON (sp?) in the same book as azure and Or. Lozengy Or and gules, a chief of the first.* PINESSEY (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Lozengy Or and gules, on a bordure also gules, eight bezants.* TROLLOPE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Lozengy Or and gules.* MAURICE DE CRAON, husband of Isabel, daughter of Waleran de Beaumont, NKNP. Lozengy Or and sable.* BLUND, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Lozengy vair and gules.* TREVEGH (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Lozengy vert and tenn‚.* SANFORD, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's); tinctures appear vert and tenn‚ but could be argent and tenn‚ or argent and gules, NKNP. Masculy gules and argent.* ROWGES (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. NASSAU: Azure billety Or, a lion rampant also Or.* Provincial Arms of Dominion as borne by William of Orange, later King William III of England and Scotland, NDNP. Ocher, three mullets Or. FYLOR, Fean (K. Astarra). Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a hippogriff proper, charged upon the breast with a mullet Or. On a chapeau gules turned up ermine, on a coronet composed of eight fleurs-de-lis Or, a lion statant-gardant also Or.* A crest of EDWARD IV, NDNP. On a mount vert, a dragon passant wings elevated and addorsed gules, gorged with a label argent.* The Red Dragon of Cadwalader badge of the PRINCE OF WALES, NDNP. On a mount vert, a dragon passant wings elevated and addorsed gules.* The badge of the ROUGE DRAGON PURSUIVANT of the English College of Arms, NDNP. - 31 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 On a mount vert, under a tree proper, a hart lodged argent, attired and gorged with a crown, a chain attached thereto and reflexed, all Or.* The White Hart badge of RICHARD II, NKNP. Or billety gules, on a pale sable, three fleurs-de-lis argent.** Partial example: (sable), three fleurs-de-lis in pale (argent). NYA. Or billety vert, a balance sable, the stand enfiled by a mural crown gules, masoned of the first.** Partial example: balances. NYA. Or crusilly (crosslets) argent, a cross also argent.* See JERUSALEM IV. Or crux-crusilly gules, three mullets also gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Or fleury sable, a fusil vert.** GURINGAL, Miron (F.S. Beretaur). (Partial example: fusil.) Or fleury sanguine. NYA. Or fretty gules, a canton ermine.* NOEL, Earls of Gainsborough, NKNP. Or gutt‚e de sang, a double-edged battle axe proper.# NYA. Or gutt‚e de sang, a fret engrailed sable.* Peter GWYNN- JONES, Lancaster Herald, NKNP. Or sem‚e of hearts gules, a lion rampant azure (armed and langued gules).* Arms of Dominion of the German province of LUNEBURG, brought into the British royal arms by George I as part of the arms of Hannover, NDNP. Or, a bend cottised gules. NYA. Or, a bend gules between two heurts. NYA. Or, a bend sinister sable surmounted by a bend vert, both couped and barbed at the upper ends and narrowed and bent into a circle and conjoined at the base. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Or, a bend vert.# NYA. Or, a candlestick with seven branches each inflamed gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Or, a cedar tree eradicated vert. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Or, a chevron gules.* STAFFORD, paternal arms of Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Stafford and Buckingham and Constable of England, created Duke of Buckingham in 1444, also called Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, in Kingmaker; NKNP. His Garter stallplate of 1429 shows Stafford alone, but after being appointed Captain of Calais in 1442 he used quarterly Thomas of Woodstock, Bohun of Hereford, Bohun of Northampton, and Stafford (his mother Anne was the daughter of Thomas of Woodstock and granddaughter of Humphrey de Bohun (II)). Crest: A swan wings elevated argent issuing out of a coronet composed of four large strawberry leaves alternating with four smaller strawberry leaves. Supporters: Two heraldic antelopes argent, armed, crined, and unguled Or. Or, a chief indented azure.* BUTLER, NKNP. Also used by Queen Anne Boleyn (Bullen) as her fourth quarter, grand- quartered in I and IV with Rochfort. Or, a crescent azure, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ of the first.* Lt.-Gen. PAUL ROMAIN, Prince du Limb‚, Grand Marshal of Haiti, Minister of War and Marine (K. Haiti), NDNP. Supporters: The base of the shield rests - 32 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 upon two field guns sable. Motto: "Les perils sont ses jeux." Or, a cross argent.* See JERUSALEM I. Or, a cross couped argent between four heurts.* See JERUSALEM II. Or, a cross flory sable surmounted by a bend gules.* Original arms of Admiral Sir Horatio NELSON, according to Pine, NKNP. Or, a cross flory sable, a bend gules surmounted by another engrailed of the field, charged with three bombs fired proper.* Arms and first augmentation awarded to Rear Admiral Sir Horatio NELSON, K.B., on October 28, 1797. Crest: The stern of a Spanish man-of-war proper thereon innscribed "San Josef." Supporters (granted November 9): A sailor of the period, fully armed and holding a Commodore's flag and a palm branch, and a lion holding a broken flagstaff in its mouth with a Spanish flag. He was created Baron Nelson of the Nile in 1798 and given a second augmentation and a second crest. Second augmentation: A chief undulated argent thereon waves of the sea from which a palm tree issuant between a disabled ship on the dexter and a ruinous battery on the sinister all proper. Second crest: On a naval crown Or the chelengk or plume of triumph presented to Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson by the Grand Signior. The supporters were also given palm branches to hold and the lion was also given a French tricolor flag to chew. Sir Horatio died at the Battle of Trafalgar, October 11, 1805. His brother William was created Earl Nelson of Trafalgar and granted a third augmentation: Over all a fess wavy azure thereon inscribed the word "Trafalgar" Or. NDNP. Or, a cross flory sable.* Original arms of Admiral Sir Horatio NELSON, according to Puttock, NKNP. Or, a cross form‚e fitch‚e sable.# NYA. Or, a cross gules between four eagles displayed azure.* DE MONTMORENCY, NKNP. Or, a cross gules between four mullets of six points azure. NYA. Or, a cross gules.* HUGH BIGOD, Earl of Norfolk (early 1200's), who succeeded William Fitz John as Marshal; listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244); NKNP. Used for the YELLOW position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. Or, a cross potent between four crosslets argent.* See JERUSALEM III. Or, a cross potent gules between four crosslets argent. Variant arms of Jerusalem as seen in the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem, NDNP. Or, a cross vert between four fleurs-de-lis gules.# NYA. Or, a double-headed eagle displayed sable, armed gules.* See HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE. Or, a double-headed eagle displayed wings inverted sable, langued gules, on a pile inverted [curved l.o.d.] azure, a forested mountain proper, on a chief of the fourth, three mullets of six points of the field. Emblazoned on the charter of MOSES, RITTER VON WALDBERG, in the Israel Museum, NKNP. Dexter Crest: On a gentleman's helm contourn‚, out of a ducal coronet Or, a pair of wings conjoined and elevated per fess of the last and sable. Sinister Crest: On a gentleman's helm, out of a ducal coronet Or, a plume of - 33 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 three ostrich feathers, one in pale of the last and one each in bend and bend sinister azure. Or, a double-headed eagle sable, in chief a crescent gules enclosing a small torteau.* CONRAD (1226-1254), King of Jerusalem and Sicily, son of Emperor Frederick II and Queen Isabella II (Yolanda) of Jerusalem, as described by Matthew Paris; he did not use the traditional arms of Jerusalem. NKNP. Or, a dragon segreant wings elevated and addorsed azure, armed and langued gules. RON, Aldar (W.E., K. Allon). Or, a fess between six annulets gules.* Listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, a fess between three crescents gules, a label argent.* Thomas DE BOYNTON, listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380); label possibly azure. Or, a fess between three crescents gules.* Waud (sp?) DE BOYNTON, listed in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380). Or, a fess between two chevrons and three martlets gules. Listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, a fess between two chevrons gules.* Sir Walter Teys, FITZWALTER, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, a fess between two chevrons sable.* LYLLE of Suffolk, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, a fess between two chevrons vair.* GODYVE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, a fireball issuing from base proper, a chief gules. YELLOW (STORM GIANTS) position in the Warlords I shield set. NYA. Or, a human eye proper between two sprigs of laurel crossed in base also proper, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ of the first.* Lt.-Gen. ANDRE VERNET, Prince des Gonaives, Grand Marshal of Haiti, Minister of Finance and of the Interior (K. Haiti), NDNP. Supporters: Two wild men each holding a club in the exterior hand also proper. Motto: "De la tˆte et du bras." Or, a lightning-bolt issuant from the dexter chief corner bendwise gules. YELLOW (LIGHTNING) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Or, a lion gules, within an orle of escallops azure.* According to Peacham (1622), these are the proper arms of the House of BOURBON, but they actually bear France Modern, over all a baton gules; NKNP. Or, a lion passant gardant azure, armed and langued gules, above a trident of the second fesswise, points to dexter. See PARAGON. Or, a lion rampant azure.* RICHARD DE REVIERS, Earl of Devon (1100's). Also listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244) as DENEME (sp?). Also called PERCY, Earl of Northumberland, in Kingmaker. NKNP. Or, a lion rampant double-queued gules.* The historic herald BARTHOLUS or BARTOLO DI SASSOFERRATO; lion tincture unknown; NKNP. Or, a lion rampant gules.* Eleventh quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Or, a lion rampant vert.* SUTTON, the paternal arms of Sir Geoffrey Luttrell's wife as depicted in the Luttrell Psalter, NKNP. - 34 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Or, a lion rampant within a double tressure fleury-counter- flory gules (armed and langued azure).* See SCOTLAND. Or, a mountain peak couped at the base and capped with snow all proper, fimbriated sable. YELLOW (GIANT) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. Or, a mullet proper gold. YELLOW (IZARIANS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Or, a pale between on the dexter an increscent and on the sinister a decrescent, all gules.# NYA. Or, a pall sable between in chief a key points to sinister head upwards also sable, and on the flanks two roses gules, barbed and seeded proper.# NYA. Or, a pheon azure.* SIDNEY, NKNP. According to Peacham (1622), these arms were borne on a lozenge shield by Lady Mary Sidney, late wife of Sir Robert Wroth and daughter of Robert, Earl of Leicester, Viscount Lisle, Lord Sidney of Penshurst, and Companion of the Garter; she was the author of Urania. Or, a pile issuing from base between two lilies in chief purpure.# NYA. Or, a plate, fimbriated sable. YELLOW (SOLARIANS) position in the Warlords II "Space" shield set. NYA. Or, a saltire and a chief gules.* BRUCE, NKNP. Or, a saltire gules between four cross crosslets sable. NYA. Or, a saltire sable, in chief the sun in his splendor azure.# NYA. Or, a saltire voided in the center purpure. UIDAN, Viron (K. Astarra). Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a griffin segreant Or, gorged purpure. Or, a serpent doubly embowed sable, langued gules.* VON HASSENDORF, granted 1483, NKNP. Crest: A dragon's head erased at the shoulders Or, langued gules, crined sable. Or, a tomahawk and a spear crossed in saltire proper. YELLOW (INDIAN NATIONS) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set. NYA. Or, an eagle displayed vert (beaked and membered gules).* MONTHERMER, NKNP. Second quarter of Sir Thomas Montagu, Earl of Salisbury (d. 1428), and ninth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex. In the earlier version the eagle's wingtips are inverted, and the beak and legs are not always red. On his seal of 1465, Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71), bore them quartered in reverse order (1 and 4) with Montagu on the neck of his horse-trapper. Or, an oak tree proper issuing from a mount in base vert, over all on a fess gules three imperial crowns also proper.* Arms awarded to Col. CARELESS (CARLOS) by Charles II, NKNP. Or, five martlets sable, two, two, and one. NYA. Or, four dexter hands in saltire erect, open, and couped at the wrist sable, in chief a double-headed eagle displayed also sable, armed gules.* CITY OF ANTWERP, Brabant, Belgium, NDNP. According to Peacham (who does not blazon tinctures or certain details of the hands, the given tinctures are those of the Imperial arms), the arms recall a tyrant prince who punished offenders by cutting off their hands, "hence its name Antwerpe, Handtwerpen, Dutch for - 35 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 casting away the hand," and the eagle signifies that it is an Imperial City. Or, in pale a fleur-de-lis tenn‚ between two crosses patt‚e ocher, between two flaunches gules.# NYA. Or, on a bend sable, three ostrich feathers argent.* Sir ROGER DE CLARENDON, illegitimate son of Edward the Black Prince, NKNP. Or, on a chevron gules between three lions' heads erased also gules, langued azure, as many bezants.* SOMERTON, NKNP. Fourth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Or, on a cross azure, five martlets of the field. NYA. Or, on a fess between two chevrons gules, three mullets argent.* Sir Walter TEYS, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Or, on a fess between two chevrons sable, three cross crosslets tenn‚. Walepole or WALPOLE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; tincture appears tenn‚ but is probably Or. Or, on a fess gules, three ogresses.* Roger DE HUNTIGER (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; roundels possibly azure or argent. Or, on a pale azure, three scrolls fesswise of the first. LINDUIN, Lithare (K. Allon), and cadets. Or, on a pale gules between five torteaux, a caduceus argent.# NYA. Or, on a saltire gules between four body hearts azure, as many argent.# NYA. Or, on a saltire sable, a fleur-de-lis of the field.## NYA. Or, six acorns vert. TURANCAL, Arvandur (F.S. Beretaur). Or, six chevronels gules.* First arms of CLARE, reduced to three chevronels before 1200. Or, six fleurs-de-lis sable, two, two, and two, a pile gules, thereon three lions passant gardant in pale Or.* The quarter of augmentation given to Jane Seymour prior to her marriage to Henry VIII, NKNP. Or, the Haitian flag upon a pikestaff, in chief three bees proper, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ of the first.* PRINCE NOEL (K. Haiti), Colonel of the Haitian Guards and Grand Butler; NDNP. Supporters: Two ostriches argent each crowned with an "antique coronet" gules. Or, the trunk of a tree erased and broken off at the top with branches on either side vert, around the base of the tree the words "Ma souche fait ma gloire," the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ of the first.* PRINCE JEAN (K. Haiti), Grand Baker; NDNP. Supporters: Two buffaloes gardant gules each collared argent, the buckles azure. Or, three bars gules fretty of the first.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP; fret possibly argent. Or, three bars gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Or, three bars sable.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365- 70), NKNP. Or, three chevronels gules.* Second arms of CLARE, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. The Clares bore a simple shield of chevrons, shown on the seals of Gilbert Fitz - 36 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Pembroke (1138-48), ca. 1141, and his nephew Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Hertford, ca. 1146. The shield originally had six chevronels, reduced to three before 1200, and it spawned a whole series of arms by changing the central chevron to a fess. These arms are common in East Anglia among the Fitzwalter, Pecche, Baynard, and Walpole families. The Clare arms were also the second quarter of Thomas Despencer, Earl of Gloucester. His daughter Isabella was the second wife of Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71). On his seal of 1465, Nevile bore them grand-quartered in II and III, 1 and 4, on his horse-trapper behind the saddle, marshalled in order of importance with Beauchamp, Newburgh, and Despencer. Or, three crescents gules.* DE CRESSI (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244); listed as BARON DE WOODHILL (sp?) in "Jenyn's Ordinary" (1380); NKNP. Or, three crescents in pale sanguine. NYA. Or, three holly leaves in fess palewise vert between three suns in their splendor gules. NYA. Or, three lions passant gardant in pale sable. NYA. Or, three lozenges in fess sable. NYA. Or, three piles conjoined in base gules, a canton ermine.* RALPH, LORD BASSET OF DRAYTON (d. 1390), from his Garter stall plate, the oldest surviving such plate; NKNP. Crest: Out of a ducal coronet, a boar's head azure, armed argent. Tincture possibly sable. Badge (?): On a roundel per pale gules and azure, an escarbuncle composed of a body heart also azure and rays argent. Or, three ravens wings elevated and addorsed proper.* Arms attributed to JUDAS MACCABAEUS, one of the three Israelites counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the arms have a number of variations, including two or three birds, called ravens or choughs, whose wings are sometimes closed; NDNP. Or, three torteaux.* COURTENAY, called Earl of Devonshire in Kingmaker, NKNP. Or, two bars gemelles, in chief a lion passant gules.* Jon AUGOI or AU GOI (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; the lion is possibly regardant. Or, two chevrons and a bordure gules. ULBER (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Or, two corbies sable.* Roberd CORBET, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Or, two mullets of six points sable. NYA. OSTENGAEL: Quarterly Or and sable, four chessrooks counterchanged. Royal Arms of Dominion. Paly bendy argent and azure.* See BAVARIA. Paly of six Or and gules, a canton ermine.* Rauf BALLET, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. PARAGON: Or, a lion passant gardant azure, armed and langued gules, above a trident of the second fesswise, points to dexter. Royal Arms of Dominion. Pean, a fountain.** Partial example: fountain. NYA. Pean, on a fess argent three torteaux. NYA. Pean.## NYA. Per bend argent and gules.* CITY OF UTRECHT, The Netherlands, NDNP (Peacham). - 37 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Per bend gules and azure, a bend Or between two estoiles argent.# NYA. Per bend gules and vert, on a bend Or a serpent undulant of the second.# NYA. Per bend sinister argent and sable, in dexter chief a cross flory gules.# NYA. Per bend sinister azure and argent, two octafoils counterchanged.# NYA. Per bend sinister gules and argent, two mullets of seven points counterchanged. NYA. Per bend sinister Or and azure, in dexter chief a cross patt‚e sable. FALACAR, Durmegil (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a lion saliant azure, armed and langued Or, holding in the fore paws a sword erect sable, bladed Or sem‚e of crosses patt‚e of the third. Per bend sinister Or and azure, in dexter chief a mullet of six points sable.#13 NYA. Per bend sinister Or and azure, in dexter chief an eagle rising proper. NYA. Per bend sinister purpure and argent, a cross voided in the center counterchanged.# NYA. Per bend sinister sable and argent, in dexter chief a griffin's head erased Or. NYA. Per chevron argent and azure, in chief two hearts gules and in base on a mount vert a representation of the second Royal Exchange Building proper (white).* The GUARDIAN ROYAL EXCHANGE ASSURANCE LTD., granted 1970, NKNP. Crest: A representation of Atlas proper. (Atlas is depicted wearing a red robe, kneeling on his left knee, and bearing the globe.) Badge: In front of a representation of Minerva Bellatrix in the dexter hand a spear holding in the sinister hand a sprig of mistletoe fructed proper and by the feet the Gorgonion Or a representation of the second Royal Exchange Building proper. Supporters: On the dexter side a representation of Minerva Bellatrix supporting with the exterior hand a spear holding in the interior hand a sprig of mistletoe fructed proper and by the feet the Gorgonion Or and on the sinister side a representation of Neptune proper supporting with the exterior hand a trident Or. (Minerva is depicted wearing a white gown, a gold breastplate and helm which has a white quadruple plume, and a red cape or cloak with a blue lining. The Gorgonion is her shield with the Gorgon's face. Neptune is depicted as wearing a gold Eastern crown and a purple robe or wrap around his neck and loins.) Motto: "Service and Protection." Per chevron azure and argent, three ravens statant wings expanded the dexter wingtip inverted counterchanged.** Partial example: a raven (?) statant wings expanded the dexter wingtip inverted. NYA. Per chevron fleury-counter-flory argent and gules, three donkey's heads erased counterchanged.* JANE COLLYNS, wife of Edward West, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NDNP; tinctures uncertain. ____________________ 13. Or has been substituted for ocher in Stephen's original coloring. - 38 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Per chevron Or and azure, in chief two martlets gules and in base a cross botonny of the first.# NYA. Per chevron Or and sable, in chief two towers and in base a lymphad counterchanged, the latter masted and sailed argent.* Rychard HANSLESS (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: A hawk close gardant proper, ducally gorged Or, clutching in the dexter talon a rose gules slipped, barbed, and seeded proper. Type of bird uncertain. Per chevron sable and gules, fimbriated argent, in chief two hummingbirds volant respectant wings elevated and addorsed Or, in base three ships, one and two, also Or, triple- masted, the fore and main masts square-rigged and the aft mast lateen-rigged, in full sail of the third, charged upon the mainsail with a cross patt‚e of the second.* Arms of Dominion of the Kingdom of TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, NDNP. Crest: On the royal helm, on a wreath argent and gules, a palm tree fructed proper surmounted by a ship's wheel of six spokes Or. Supporters: On the dexter a flamingo, on the sinister a crane, both with wings elevated and addorsed and proper. (Sinister bird unknown.) Compartment: Two rocky isles rising from the sea, all proper. Motto: "Together We Aspire, Together We Achieve." Per chevron tenn‚ and gules, fimbriated argent.14 ORANGE (EARTH) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Per fess argent and bleu de ceil, three roundels counterchanged. CYAN (HORSE LORDS) position in the Warlords I shield set. NYA. Per fess argent and gules.* The flag of POLAND, NDNP. Per fess azure and argent, three annulets counterchanged.* Whistelforde, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; tincture possibly sable. Per fess dancetty erminois and purpure. NYA. Per fess dancetty sable and vert, two mullets of six points argent. NYA. Per fess embattled bleu de ceil and sable, in chief the sun in his splendor. ANORDIL, Firshel (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an eagle displayed sable, armed Or, charged on the breast with the sun in his splendor. Per fess gules and azure, three lioncels argent.* HERBERT in Kingmaker, NKNP. Per fess nowy argent and sable, three mullets of six points counterchanged.# NYA. Per fess Or and argent, two crosses patt‚e gules between in chief a rose also gules, barbed and seeded proper, and in base an olive branch of seven leaves proper.* Cardinal GODFREY, Private Arms, NKNP. Per fess Or and gules, two martlets counterchanged. NYA. Per fess Or and purpure, in chief a boar passant of the second, langued gules, armed, crined, and unguled argent, in base a portcullis also argent.# NYA. Per fess rayonny Or and gules, a fess counterchanged, in chief a salamander inflamed of the second. NYA. ____________________ 14. In the Warlords II original, the fimbriation is sable. - 39 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Per fess urdy Or and azure, in chief an estoile of eight points and in base a bee, both counterchanged.** Partial example: an estoile of eight points and a bee. NYA. Per fess vert and Or, a pale counterchanged.# NYA. Per fess vert and sable, on a lozenge firm‚e Or, a tank affront‚ of the second between two lightning bolts palewise, couped at the top, aiguis‚e at the base gules. An IDF unit badge, NDNP. Per fess wavy argent and azure, in chief a lymphad gules, sails furled, oars in action, in base an heraldic sea-lion rampant Or, tail knowed, armed and langued of the third.# NYA. Per fess wavy bleu de ceil and azure, fimbriated argent, in chief the sun in his splendor, in base another diffusely reflected.# NYA. Per pale and per chevron Or and sable, three talbots' heads erased, gorged, and belled, all counterchanged. John OLYFF (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Torse: Or and azure. Crest: A cockatrice's head erased quarterly argent and sable, beaked and jelloped Or, langued gules. Per pale and per fess indented Or and gules, in the first quarter a mullet azure.* BRETTON of Flemingham, Norfolk, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; tincture possibly sable. Per pale argent and azure, a bend of Lancaster.* Arms borne by John BEAUFORT, illegitimate son of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, and Katherine Swinford, prior to legitimation. Peacham adds with a label of France. Per pale argent and azure, a lion rampant gules.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; tincture possibly sable. Per pale argent and gules.* WALDGRAVE, NKNP (Peacham). Per pale argent and vert, a dragon passant gules.* The old national flag of WALES, NKNP. Per pale argent and vert, on a chief azure three estoiles argent.* LOUIS CAERLYON (b. ca. 1450, M.D. 1481), physician to Margaret, Countess of Richmond, wife of Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond, and their son Henry, later Henry VII; astronomer and mathematician. He was imprisoned in 1485 by Richard III for his Lancastrian sympathies, but was spared by Richard's death at Bosworth. He was knighted in October 1492 and granted arms on July 25, 1493. The Tudor livery colors were white and green, referring to his lengthy loyal service, and the stars refer to his astronomic skills. Crest: "Ung orynall dedem son cage en leurs propres couleurs," a vase-shaped urinal in a basket, referring to his skills as a physician. This is the only appearance of this object in armory. Per pale azure and gules, on a pale Or between two lances erect argent, four crescents sable. NYA. [Possible cadet of azure, on a pale Or beween two lances erect argent, four crescents of the field.] Per pale indented gules and argent.* Banner of the DE MONTFORT family, including Simon, Earl of Leicester, who bore a lion rampant queue forch‚ (tinctures unknown) for arms. NKNP. - 40 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Per pale Or and argent, three lions rampant gules, on a chief sable a cross of eight points of the second.* Arms granted to EMMA HAMILTON on the recommendation in the will of Sir Horatio Nelson; the Maltese Cross refers to her being a Dame Petite Cross of the Order of Malta. NKNP. Per pale Or and azure, a cross recercely gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Per pale Or and sable, three mullets counterchanged. NYA. Per pale Or and vert, a lion rampant gules, queue forch‚.* The arms made famous by WILLIAM THE MARSHAL (William Fitz John, d. 1219), "the best knight who ever lived"; subsequently the Arms of Office of the EARL MARSHAL OF ENGLAND, NKNP. Per pale Or and vert, a mullet gules. NYA. Per pale sable and gules, a swan wings expanded proper, ducally gorged and chained Or.* The BOHUN Swan, 1480; possibly a standard badge; swan possibly argent. Per pale sable and gules, on the dexter a cluster of three ammunition cartridges proper, one and two, on the sinister two sparks proper. An IDF unit badge, NDNP. Per saltire gules and argent. NYA. Per saltire gules and vert, four cross crosslets argent, one, two, and one.# NYA. Per saltire Or and gules, a pale endorsed counterchanged.# NYA. Per saltire Or and sable.## NYA. Per saltire Or and vert, a cross gules. NYA. Per saltire purpure and Or, on a saltire ermine between in chief and in base two ducal coronets of the second and on the flanks as many sheaves of arrows of the first, as many lances crossed in saltire also of the first.# NYA. Per saltire sable and Or, on a saltire ermine between in chief and in base two crosses patt‚e of the second and on the flanks as many fleurs-de-lis vert, a lily gules.# NYA. Per saltire tenn‚ and azure, on a saltire argent, a fleur-de- lis of the first.# NYA. Per saltire vert and azure, on a saltire argent five oranges slipped proper.# NYA. Piley of eight Or and azure.# NYA. PORTUGAL: Argent, five escutcheons azure, each charged with as many plates, on a bordure gules ten castles Or.* Royal Arms of Dominion, NDNP. According to Peacham (who does not blazon the tincture of the castles) they were adopted in remembrance of five kings whom Alponsus I defeated near Scallabis or Trugillo, with the five plates representing the five wounds of Christ and the castles representing holds in Barbary won from the Moors. Purpure, a dove displayed argent billed Or, the head towards the base, holding in the bill a phial azure, between in chief a mitre argent and in base a crozier Or, the escutcheon surmounted an archbishop's hat vert.* Apostolic Prefect CORNEILLE BRELLE, Duc de l'Anse, Archbishop of Haiti, Grand Almoner (K. Haiti), NDNP. Supporters: Two angels proper. Purpure, a pall cottised argent.# NYA. Purpure, a pall Or. NYA. Purpure, a saltire engrailed Or.# NYA. - 41 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Purpure, a unicorn rampant Or, armed, crined, and unguled argent, between two flaunches ermine.# NYA. Purpure, in base a warship with sails set upon the sea entering the port all proper, the escutcheon surmounted by the Royal Crown (of Haiti).* The CAPITAL of the Kingdom of HAITI, 1811-1820 (Port-au-Prince?); NDNP. Supporters: Two figures of "Hercules" sable clothed with lion-skins proper, and each holding in the exterior hand a club Or. Motto: "Malgr‚ les vents et les flots." Purpure, on a chevron between three water bougets Or as many crescents of the field.# NYA. Purpure, on a cross Or, a lion's head erased sable, langued gules.# NYA. Purpure, on a fess argent between two lilies Or, a lion passant gardant gules, armed sable.# NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, Allon (Mowbray); 2 and 3, Cromwell. CROMWELL, Harold (K. Allon), Arms of Pretence to the Kingdom of Allon. Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a crescent vert; 2 and 3, sable, a crescent Or. NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a double-headed eagle displayed sable; 2 and 3, argent, three brands enflamed gules; upon an escutcheon argent a human leg sable.* Arms attributed to CILMIN TROED-DDU of Caernarvonshire, founder of the "Fourth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Ninth Century), NKNP. In Welsh, troed-ddu = black foot. Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a falcon preying proper; 2 and 3, vert. TIRAN, Vanmegil (F.S. Beretaur). Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a fess indented sable; 2 and 3, azure, three lions' faces inverted jessant-de-lis Or, over all a fleur-de-lis ermine.* WEST (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: Out of a ducal coronet Or, a cockatrice's head vert, armed Or, charged with a fleur-de-lis ermine. Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a reremouse displayed sable, on a chief argent, three pallets gules; 2 and 3, argent, a chevron sable between three thistle leaves vert.* GRENYNG (sp?), granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP; leaves possibly holly. Torse: Or and sable. Crest: A bull statant gules, armed Or. Quarterly 1 and 4, azure crusilly fitchy Or, a lion rampant and a chief also Or (Jordan); 2 and 3, per pale argent and sable, a boar counterchanged.* WILLIAM JORDAN of Chilterne and Whitley, Wiltshire (1604). Crest: "A football Or with percussa resurgo" on a ribbon encircling it. The Tudor football was sewn like a royal orb, around the equator, then from the equator over the north pole; this charge was unique until the 20th Century. Quarterly 1 and 4, azure crux-crusilly Or, a cross moline voided also Or; 2 and 3, gules, on a chevron argent three roses of the field, barbed and seeded proper; the escutcheon surrounded by the Garter.* William, Lord KNOWLES, Baron of Graves and Viscount Wallingford, K.G., 1616. Crest: An elephant statant argent. Supporters: Two heraldic antelopes argent, armed, crined, and unguled Or. Motto: "In Utrumque Paratus." - 42 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Quarterly 1 and 4, azure, a fleur-de-lis argent; 2 and 3, argent, a rose proper pink, barbed and seeded proper.# NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, azure, five fleurs-de-lis Or, two, one, and two; 2 and 3, England.* The English royal arms as used by HENRY IV, NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, England impaling Scotland; 2, France Modern; 3, Ireland.* The British royal arms as used by ANNE following the Act of Union of 1706. Quarterly 1 and 4, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland. Current Arms of Dominion of the UNITED KINGDOM of Great Britain and Northern Ireland as used outside of Scotland, established by Queen Victoria in 1837; NDNP. Supporters: on the dexter, a lion gardant Or, regally crowned proper; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, unguled, crined, and gorged with a coronet composed of crosses patt‚e, and a chain affixed thereto passing between the forelegs and reflexed over the back, all Or. Quarterly 1 and 4, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland; over all, an escutcheon of pretence of Hannover ensigned by the Electoral Bonnet.* The British royal arms as adopted by GEORGE III in 1801 and used in this form until 1816, when the Electorate of Hannover became a Kingdom. Quarterly 1 and 4, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland; over all, an escutcheon of pretence of Hannover ensigned by the Hannoverian Royal Crown.* The British royal arms as adopted by GEORGE III in 1816 upon the elevation of the Electorate of Hannover into a Kingdom, continued in this form by George IV and William IV. Quarterly 1 and 4, ermine, an eagle displayed gules; 2 and 3, argent, six fleurs-de-lis azure, a chief indented Or; over all a label azure for difference.* Henry BEDINGFELD, Rouge Croix Pursuivant, NKNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England.* The English royal arms as used by EDWARD III to illustrate his claim to the French throne; at first he quartered England in 1 and 4 and France in 2 and 3, but he later reversed them after a protest from the French king that France was the older and more prestigious kingdom. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure argent.* THOMAS OF WOODSTOCK (a royal manor near Oxford), Duke of Gloucester and Earl of Buckingham, youngest son of Edward III, who became Earl of Essex and Constable of England upon his marriage to Eleanor, oldest daughter and co-heiress of Humphrey de Bohun (II). The French quarters were later changed to France Modern by their descendants, primarily the Staffords. Thomas was murdered in 1397 on the orders of Richard II, without male issue. His elder daughter Anne married Edmund Stafford, Earl of Stafford, and their son Humphrey succeded as Earl of Stafford and Buckingham and Constable of England, and was created Duke of Buckingham in 1444. Humphrey's grandson Henry succeeded him and was allowed to bear Woodstock alone, with as crest a lion passant gardant crowned Or, gorged argent. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of three points gules charged upon each point with as many castles Or.* Paternal arms of EDWARD OF NORWICH, - 43 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 called Plantagenet, Earl of Rutland, who was created Duke of Aumale on 01/25/1397 and later succeeded as Duke of York. NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of five points azure charged upon each point with three fleurs-de-lis Or.* Arms borne by HENRY OF BOLINGBROKE, eldest surviving son of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, as Earl of Derby. He was created Duke of Hereford on 01/25/1397, succeeded as Duke of Lancaster in 1399, and eventually succeeded Richard II as Henry IV. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label argent.* "Shield for War" of the BLACK PRINCE, Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Edward III of England, NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Ancient; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of three points argent, charged upon each point with as many torteaux..* EDMOND of Langley, DUKE OF YORK, NDNP, as described by Peacham (1622).15 Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England.* The English royal arms as used by HENRY V, probably following the alteration of the French royal arms by his father-in- law, Charles VI. These arms remained constant through the reigns of Henry VI,16 Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III, Henry VII, Henry VIII, and Edward VI, and were restored to this form by Elizabeth I. Since the time of Henry VIII the escutcheon of the royal arms has been surrounded by the Garter, a blue buckled band with a gold border and the motto "Honi Soit Mal Y Pense." Supporters: Henry VI was the first English monarch known with certainty to have used supporters, either (1) two heraldic antelopes argent or (2) a lion and an heraldic antelope. Edward IV used either (1) a lion and a hart, both argent; (2) a lion Or and a bull sable; or (3) two lions argent. Edward V is said to have used a lion and a hart, both argent, the latter gorged and chained Or. Richard III used either (1) a lion Or and a boar argent or (2) two boars argent. Henry VII used either (1) a dragon gules and a greyhound argent; (2) two greyhounds argent; or (3) a lion Or and a dragon gules. Henry VIII used either (1) a lion Or and a dragon gules; (2) a dragon gules and a bull sable; or (3) a lion Or and a greyhound argent. Edward VI used a lion Or and a dragon gules. Elizabeth I used either (1) a lion and a dragon, both Or, or (2) a lion Or and a greyhound argent. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure compony argent and azure.* John BEAUFORT, son of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, and Katherine Swinford, after legitimation; the arms are still borne by his heirs, the modern Dukes of Beaufort.17 Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure azure sem‚e of fleurs-de-lis alternating with martlets Or.* EDMUND TUDOR (Edmund of Hadham, d. 1456), ____________________ 15. Peacham blazons only the label, not the underlying royal arms; possible alternatives are (1) England, (2) France Modern quartering England, or (3) France Modern grand- quartering England quartering Scotland and Ireland. 16. Called Plantagenet, Duke of Lancaster, in Kingmaker. 17. Called Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, in Kingmaker. - 44 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 second son of Owen Tudor and Catherine of Valois (widow of Henry V), created first Earl of Richmond in 1453. He married Margaret, daughter of John Beaufort, Duke of Somerset and Earl of Kendal, grandson of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. The same arms were borne by Edmund's second son Henry as the second Earl of Richmond before he won the throne and became Henry VII. NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure azure sem‚e of martlets Or.* JASPER TUDOR, first son of Owen Tudor and Catherine of Valois (widow of Henry V), created Earl of Pembroke in 1453. NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure argent charged with "lionceaux" (lioncels) purpure.* The arms of RICHARD Plantagenet, DUKE OF YORK (son and heir of Richard, Earl of Cambridge, and father of King Edward IV), as described by Peacham (1622), NDNP. They are emblazoned in Kingmaker as quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; over all a cross argent. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; over all a cross argent.* The arms of RICHARD Plantagenet, DUKE OF YORK (son and heir of Richard, Earl of Cambridge, and father of King Edward IV), as emblazoned in Kingmaker, NDNP. Peacham (1622) describes them as quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; all within a bordure argent charged with "lionceaux" (lioncels) purpure. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2 and 3, England; over all a label of five points argent, charged upon the first, third, and fifth points with three torteaux each, and upon the second and fourth points with a "lionceaux" (lioncel) gules.* The arms of EDMOND or EDMUND Plantagenet, EARL OF RUTLAND (oldest son of Richard, Duke of York), as described by Peacham (1622), NDNP. Edmund died at age 12, killed by Lord Clifford at the Battle of Wakefield, in which his father was also killed. Quarterly 1 and 4, France Modern; 2, England; 3, Katherine of Aragon.* The English royal arms as borne upon a lozenge shield by MARY I to honor her mother, Katherine of Aragon. Supporters: Before her marriage to Philip of Spain, Mary used either (1) a lion Or and a dragon gules or (2) a lion Or and a greyhound argent, but after her marriage she used an eagle and a lion. Quarterly 1 and 4, gules, a bend between four cross crosslets argent; 2 and 3, argent, three eagles displayed gules.* Listed in the "Mowbray Roll" (1365-70), NKNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, gules, a chevron Or between three escallops argent, a bordure of the second; 2 and 3, argent, on a chief gules three eagles displayed Or.* PHILIPPE DE COMMYNES, the French chronicler (1445-1509). His standard is borne by a "locomotive mermaid" wearing a noblewoman's pointed hat (and nothing else). Quarterly 1 and 4, gules, a triple-towered castle Or; 2 and 3, argent, a lion rampant purpure.* Arms of Dominion of the Kingdom of CASTILE AND LEON, as united by Ferdinand III, King of Castile (1217) and Leon (1230-52), NDNP. According to Peacham, after Ferdinand and Isabel of Castile won Grenada from the Moors, the pomegranate from the arms of Grenada was placed in the base of the royal arms, and since - 45 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 the victory was largely achieved through archery, a bow and quiver of arrows was stamped on the Spanish sixpence. Quarterly 1 and 4, I and IV, France Modern, II and III, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland.* The English royal arms as used by James VI of Scotland upon succeeding to the English throne as JAMES I. These arms remained constant until the joint reign of William III and Mary II, in which Mary bore the arms of James I and William bore the arms of James I surmounted by an escutcheon of pretence bearing the arms of Nassau, and were restored to this form by Anne until the Act of Union in 1706. NDNP. Supporters: James I used a lion rampant gardant Or, regally crowned proper (for England), and a unicorn argent, armed, unguled, and crined Or, gorged with a coronet composed of crosses patt‚e, and a chain affixed thereto passing between the forelegs and reflexed over the back Or (for Scotland). Later monarchs have used these same supporters, transposed in Scotland. Quarterly 1 and 4, I and IV, France Modern, II and III, England; 2, Scotland; 3, Ireland; over all, an escutcheon of pretense of Nassau.* The English royal arms as used by William III (WILLIAM OF ORANGE) during his joint reign with Mary II. NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, Or, a roundel figured in happiness gules; 2 and 3, azure, a roundel figured in sadness Or.# NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, paly of six, Or and sable, a bend counterchanged; 2 and 3, quarterly argent and gules, a cross botonny counterchanged.* State of MARYLAND, U.S.A., NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, Paragon; 2 and 3, the Lord Admiral of Paragon. ORDER OF THE TRIDENT, K. Paragon, Corporate Arms. Quarterly 1 and 4, Paragon; 2 and 3, the Lord Justiciar of Paragon. ORDER OF JUSTICE, K. Paragon, Corporate Arms. Quarterly 1 and 4, purpure, a lion's head erased Or; 2 and 3, argent.# NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, sable, a lion rampant argent, armed and langued gules, a canton of Saint George (Churchill); 2 and 3, quarterly argent and gules fretty Or, over all on a bend sable three escallops of the first (Spencer); for augmentation, on the honor point an escutcheon of Saint George surmounted by another of France Modern; on the fess point a crescent azure for difference.* Sir Winston SPENCER-CHURCHILL, whose father was the second son of the seventh Duke of Marlborough, NDNP. Quarterly 1 and 4, sable, an eagle displayed argent; 2 and 3, Or, a mullet azure.# NYA. Quarterly 1 and 4, Scotland; 2, England; 3, Ireland. Current Arms of Dominion of the UNITED KINGDOM of Great Britain and Northern Ireland as used in Scotland, established by Queen Victoria in 1837; NDNP. Supporters: on the dexter, a unicorn argent, armed, unguled, crined, and gorged with a coronet composed of crosses patt‚e, and a chain affixed thereto passing between the forelegs and reflexed over the back, all Or; on the sinister, a lion gardant Or, regally crowned proper. Quarterly 1 and 4, Tirloval; 2, Loval Prefecture (F.S. Beretaur); 3, Sirene's Order of the Silver Unicorn. TIRLOVAL, Calahir (F.S. Beretaur), Arms of Office. - 46 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Quarterly 1 and 6, azure, a torse in annulet sable and argent conjoined to four hawks' bells Or; 2, azure, a fess Or; 3, gules, a griffin segreant and a bordure engrailed Or; 4, gules, on a saltire engrailed Or, five torteaux, a chief ermine; 5, azure, three cinquefoils Or.* Complete arms of the JOSCELYNE family, 1650, NDNP. Quarterly 1, England impaling Scotland; 2, France Modern; 3, Ireland; 4, Hannover.* The British royal arms as used by GEORGE I, continued by George II and George III until 1801. Quarterly 1, gules, a bend between six cross crosslets fitch‚e argent (Howard); for augmentation, on the bend, on an escutcheon Or, fimbriated of the first, a demi-lion rampant, pierced thorugh the mouth by an arrow, within a double tressure fleury-counter-flory of the first (after Scotland); 2, England, a label argent (Thomas of Brotherton); 3, Checky Or and azure (Warrenne); 4, gules, a lion rampant Or, armed and langued azure (Fitz-Alan).* Miles F. S. HOWARD, 17th and current Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Arundel, and Earl Marshal of England, NDNP. Quarterly 1, sable, a cross patt‚e gules, fimbriated argent; 2, argent, a fleur-de-lis gules; 3, argent, a crescent azure; 4, sable, a mullet of eight points Or.## NYA. Quarterly 1, Thomas of Woodstock; 2, Bohun of Hereford; 3, Bohun of Northampton; 4, Stafford.* Arms used by HUMPHREY STAFFORD, Earl of Stafford and Buckingham and Constable of England, after being appointed Captain of Calais in 1442; he was created Duke of Buckingham in 1444. His mother Anne was the daughter of Thomas of Woodstock and granddaughter of Humphrey de Bohun (II); the quarters are therefore marshalled in order of importance. Crest: A swan wings elevated argent issuing out of a coronet composed of four large strawberry leaves alternating with four small strawberry leaves. Supporters: Two heraldic antelopes argent, armed, crined, and unguled Or. Quarterly argent and azure, two estoiles counterchanged (Elena); on a chief Or, a rose proper pink garbed and seeded proper. FITZALAN, Chayna Elena (K. Astarra). Lady's Crest: Out of a baron's coronet, a dragon segreant Or supporting a rose as in the arms. Quarterly argent and azure, two estoiles counterchanged. ELENA, Finras (K. Astarra). Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a dexter cubit arm in armor azure clutching an estoile argent. Quarterly argent and gules fretty Or, over all a bend sable.* DESPENCER, NKNP, the paternal arms of Thomas Despencer, Earl of Gloucester. His daughter Isabella was the second wife of Richard Nevile, Earl of Warwick and Salisbury (1428-71). On his seal of 1465, Nevile bore them grand-quartered in II and III, 2 and 3, on his horse-trapper behind the saddle, marshalled in order of importance with Beauchamp, Newburgh, and Clare. Quarterly argent and gules fretty Or, over all on a bend sable three escallops of the first.* SPENCER, NKNP. Second quarter of Sir Winston Spencer-Churchill, NKNP. Quarterly argent and gules.* EOULNEY, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Also listed as MASCY of Tatton and Rixton in the same book. - 47 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Quarterly argent and Or, a cross gules, on a chief per pale azure and the third, a fleur-de-lis, a lion passant gardant, and a harp, all of the second; impaling argent gutt‚e de sang, three unicorns' heads erased sable, armed and crined Or.* Combined arms of the 1989 NORROY AND ULSTER KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Quarterly argent and Or, a cross gules, on a chief per pale azure and the third, a fleur-de-lis, a lion passant gardant, and a harp, all of the second.* Arms of Office of the NORROY AND ULSTER KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Quarterly argent and sable, a dragon's head erased counterchanged, charged upon the neck with an escallop Or.** Partial example: dragon's head erased counterchanged charged with an escallop. NYA. Quarterly argent and vert, a cross between in chief two oak leaves, all counterchanged. NYA. Quarterly azure and argent, five bezants counterchanged, two, one, and two. EOL, Nazel (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an heraldic tyger rampant sable, armed and langued gules, supporting an escutcheon of the arms. Quarterly azure and ermine, a rose Or.# NYA. Quarterly azure and Or, a fleur-de-lis gules. NYA. Quarterly gules and azure, over all a cross patonce between in the first and fourth quarters a cinquefoil and in the second and third quarters a lion rampant Or. PICKERING KENYON Solicitors, granted 1988-9, NKNP. Crest: Out of a coronet the finials composed of crosses patonce and cinquefoils Or a demi-Pegasus ermine winged and unguled Or. Mantling: Gules doubled Or. Badge: On a pentagon azure fimbriated Or ensigned by a coronet the finials composed of crosses patonce and cinquefoils a lion rampant, both also Or. Quarterly gules and Or, in the first quarter a fleur-de-lis argent.* ASHMOLE, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Quarterly gules and Or, in the first quarter a mullet argent. OXBINE (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Quarterly gules and Or.* DE VERE Earls of Oxford, first arms, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; related to Mandeville. John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford (d. March 1513), used a blue boar badge (Old French ver = boar), a mullet (a charge in the first quarter of the later de Vere arms), and the calygreyhound, a fantastic beast found nowhere else in heraldry. These were also used as supporters. Other badges were an eagle with wings displayed and an angel's face (not a harpy), a cranket (the instrument used to load a crossbow), an ox crossing a ford (a play on the title), and the Chair of Estate, the badge of office of the Lord Great Chamberlain. Badges of the 15th Century often became supporters in the 16th. Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1530-1604), used the blue boar for his dexter supporter and the eagle with an angel's face on the sinister. Quarterly gules, vert, azure, and tenn‚, a cross argent. YESTARE, Hyarmendil (K. Astarra). Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a warhorse forcen‚ sable, caparisoned of the arms. - 48 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Quarterly indented gules and azure, a bend Or.* Augustus DE NEUILL (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP; tincture appears azure but may be sable or argent. Quarterly Or and azure, on a bend gules three cross crosslets of the first.* Listed in the "Military Roll of Arms" (ca. 1480), NKNP. Quarterly Or and gules, a bend of the second fimbriated of the first.* William DE BELLO, listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Quarterly Or and gules, a bend sable, a label of five points argent.* Listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244) as the Count of LINCOLN, NDNP. Quarterly Or and gules, a bend sable.* CLAVERING, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's); related to Mandeville. Quarterly Or and gules, a bordure potent.* JON LE FITZ JON, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; bordure tincture pattern uncertain, possibly compony counter compony argent and azure. Quarterly Or and gules, a label sable.* ROCHFORD, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Quarterly Or and gules, a wyvern wings elevated and addorsed vert. Arms of Dominion of the Barony of WYVERNHALL, D. Nordelon, K. Allon. Quarterly Or and gules, four lions passant gardant counterchanged.* DAFYDD AP LLYWELYN, son of Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales (d. 1240), and Joan, illegitimate daughter of King John; NDNP. Quarterly Or and gules, four lions rampant counterchanged.* OWAIN GLYNDWR, Prince of Wales (d. 1416); NDNP. Quarterly Or and gules, over all a bend vair.* SACKVILLE, NKNP. Richard Sackville, a contemporary of Peacham (1622), was Earl of Dorset and Baron of Buckhurst; his ancestor Herbrann was the lord of Sackville in Normandy and crossed with the Conqueror. (See HER-NOTES for the family's history as reported by Peacham.) Quarterly Or and gules.* Geoffrey DE MANDEVILLE, Earl of Essex (d. 1144), NKNP. Listed as Wilt DE MANDUILLA by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244). Variants were borne by the Say, Beauchamp of Bedford, Clavering, Vere, Lacy, and other families, all related to Geoffrey and his wife. Quarterly Or and purpure, a chief ermine.# NYA. Quarterly Or and purpure, a cross counterchanged. NYA. Quarterly Or and sable, four chessrooks counterchanged. See OSTENGAEL. Quarterly purpure and argent, four mullets counterchanged. NYA. Quarterly purpure and argent, in dexter chief a fasces Or.# NYA. Quarterly sable and argent, a cross quarterly Or and azure, over all a crescent gules.## NYA. Quarterly sable and argent, a cross quarterly Or and sable.## NYA. Quarterly sable and argent, four fleurs-de-lis counterchanged. NYA. Quarterly sable and Or. NYA. - 49 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Quarterly vert and argent.* GOBION, Earl of Northampton, listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP; tinctures uncertain. Quarterly vert and sable, a cross argent between four angles Or.# NYA. Sable gutt‚e d'eau, a portcullis Or.** Partial example: portcullis. NYA. Sable gutt‚e de sang.## NYA. Sable sem‚e-de-lis Or, on a fess vert, an open book argent, bound and tasseled of the second. LOMAREL, Nolarin (F.S. Beretaur). Sable, a base concave gules. BLACK (LORD BANE) position in the Warlords I shield set. NYA. Sable, a Bengal tigress rampant argent. ADELA the Tigress (K. Murgenheim). Sable, a bull's face Or. NYA. Sable, a chevron between three cinquefoils ermine, a canton of Ulster.* WOODHOUSE, NKNP. Borne in Peacham (1622) by Sir Philip Woodhouse, Baronet, of Kimberley, Co. Norfolk. The family was prominent in the reign of King John; Robert de Woodhouse was Chaplain and Treasurer to Edward III. Sable, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis argent.* Arms attributed to COLLWYN AP TANGNO of Harlech, founder of the "Fifth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Ninth Century), NKNP. Sable, a cross and a saltire argent.# NYA. Sable, a cross cottised argent. NYA. Sable, a cross engrailed Or.* Roberd DE UTTLAND (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP; cross possibly argent. Sable, a cross flory argent.* Richard ly (sp?) WARD, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Sable, a cross gules. BLACK (BLACK KNIGHTS) position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. NYA. Sable, a cross Or, over all on a plate fimbriated azure a cross patt‚e of the field.## NYA. Sable, a decrescent Or.** Partial example: decrescent. NYA. Sable, a fess between three crosses patt‚e argent. NYA. Sable, a fess between two chevrons argent.* SENSHALL (sp?), listed in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's), NKNP. Sable, a fess between two chevrons Or.* GARBRIDGE, NKNP. Tenth quarter of William Paston of Paston, Norfolk, 1573. Listed as GERBERTE in the "Holles Ordinary" (1650's). Sable, a fess wavy between two estoiles argent.* Sir FRANCIS DRAKE, the favorite of Queen Elizabeth I who circumnavigated the world in 1577, NKNP. He had previously used the arms of the Drakes of Ashe in Devon (argent, a wyvern gules), but Sir Bernard Drake of Ashe boxed his ears at court, justifiably claiming that Sir Francis had no right to the arms. Elizabeth promised him new arms which would be "far more famous." Sable, a fret Or.* Sixth quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Sable, a lion passant gardant argent, armed and langued gules, between three fleurs-de-lis Or. NYA. Sable, a lion rampant argent, armed and langued gules, a canton of Saint George.* CHURCHILL, paternal quarter of Sir Winston Spencer-Churchill, NDNP. - 50 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Sable, a lion rampant argent.* CROMWELL, Harold (K. Allon), Private Arms.18 Sable, a lion rampant Or, armed and langued gules, clutching the dexter half of a wagon wheel argent.* Private Arms of the 1989 CLARENCEAUX KING OF ARMS of England, NKNP. Sable, a lion rampant, tail knowed, Eastern crowned Or, armed and langued gules.# NYA. Sable, a lion statant and a bordure, both argent. An IDF unit badge displayed on a roundel, NKNP. Sable, a lion's face Or jessant de lis argent, a bordure also argent sem‚e of torteaux.* Robert MORLEY, granted by William Hervey, Clarenceaux, in 1559, NKNP. Crest: A talbot ermines statant regardant, langued gules, gorged and belled Or. Sable, a Maltese cross argent.** NYA. Sable, a mermaid affront‚e, double-tailed, holding one tail in each hand, proper, crined argent, crowned with a coronet composed of four fleurs-de-lis alternating with four small points Or.** Partial example: mermaid affront‚e, double- tailed, holding one tail in each hand, crowned with a crown of four fleurs-de-lis and four small points. NYA. Sable, a mullet pierced argent. NYA. Sable, a mullet proper gold. BLACK (POLARIANS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Sable, a pale ermine. NYA. Sable, a saltire argent. NYA. Sable, a skull affront‚ argent. BLACK (EVIL) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. Sable, a stag trippant argent armed Or.* Actual or attributed arms of HEDD MOLWYNOG of Denbighshire, founder of the "Ninth Noble Tribe" of Wales (late Twelfth Century), NKNP. Sable, a sword erect argent.* Quarter of Office of the CHAMPION OF ENGLAND, held by the Dymoke family, NDNP. Sable, a sword erect proper (white blade, gold crossbar and pommel, red wrap).* Phillip MARMYUN (Marmion), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Sable, a tower between five estoiles Or. VALEL, Valanna (K. Paragon). Sable, a warship in full sail argent. See WESTERN EMPIRE. Sable, a watering can and a garden rake argent.* BARON DE BELIARD, Director and Steward of the Gardens, Waters and Forests of the Royal Palaces (K. Haiti), NDNP: Crest: Upon a barred helm, a hat sable trimmed Or, with a cockade gules and two ostrich feathers argent. Supporters: Two chameleons vert. Motto: "Utile en plus d'un genre." Sable, an estoile argent between three unicorn's horns erased point upwards bendwise Or. MENELDUR, Yavanion (K. Astarra). Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw a unicorn's horn erased in bend sinister Or. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and charged with three unicorn's horns in fess bendwise point upwards Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, ____________________ 18. Also called Cromwell in Kingmaker. Listed as DE FLANDERS (sp?) by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244). - 51 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. Sable, an estoile argent. See ASTARRA. Sable, four billets Or, three and one.# NYA. Sable, in chief two lap harps and in base a trumpet palewise, mouthpiece upwards, all Or.# NYA. Sable, on a bend argent between three herring naiant proper, as many bezants fimbriated of the field.##19 NYA. Sable, on a bend cottised also sable fimbriated argent three lions passant Or, a crescent Or for difference.* MARIA, paternal quarter of Anthony Maria, second Viscount Montagu, of Cowdray, Sussex; NKNP. Crest (over the complete achievement of 16 quarters): An eagle displayed vert, beaked and membered gules. Supporters: Two wild cats argent, gorged and a chain reflexed therefrom Or. Type of cat uncertain. Motto: "Veritate Duce." Sable, on a bend cottised Or, three mullets of six points azure. NYA. Sable, on a bend Or between two horses' heads erased argent, three fleurs-de-lis of the field.* SAMUEL PEPYS, the famous diarist, NKNP. Sable, on a chevron Or between three carding tools argent, three mullets pierced of the field.* THE BOWYERS COMPANY, NKNP; type of tool uncertain. Torse: Or and azure. Crest: Three bows gules in bend, pale, and bend-sinister. Mantling: Sable doubled ermine. Motto: "Crecy, Poitiers, Agincourt." Sable, on a fess Or between three plates as many fleurs-de-lis of the first, on a chief argent a lion passant azure, armed and langued gules.** NYA. Sable, on a fess Or, a scaly lizard statant vert. NYA. Sable, on a pale argent, three lions' faces proper.# NYA. Sable, on a saltire Or five martlets of the first. NYA. Sable, on the honor point a pair of glowing eye sockets composed of drops placed fesswise, points upwards gules. BLACK (DARKNESS) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Sable, six faceted diamonds proper. GONDELMIR, Targond (K. Allon). Sable, three bezants, one and two, the one in chief aligned in pale with the dexter of the two in base. BLACK (EBONITES) position in the Warlords II "Space" shield set. NYA. Sable, three ducal coronets in pale between two arrows erect all Or.** Partial example: three ducal (?) coronets in pale. NYA. Sable, three garbs argent.* HIDWLEDE (sp?), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Sable, three harts' heads caboshed argent, attired Or.* CAVENDISH, NKNP. William, Earl of Devonshire and Baron Cavendish of Hardwick (Derbyshire), and his nephew William Cavendish, K.B., Viscount Mansfield and Baron Ogle, were the contemporaries of Peacham (1622). William, Earl of Devonshire, was the son of Sir William Cavendish of Chattesworth in Derbyshire, Treasurer of the Chamber to ____________________ 19. In James' original, the fish were colored cyan and looked somewhat like goldfish. - 52 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Henry VIII, Edward VI, and Mary I, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of John Hardwick, esquire of Hardwick. The family's original surname was Gernon; Cavendish is a town and manor in Suffolk. Thomas Cavendish was the third to circumnavigate the globe. Sable, three ostrich-feather quill-pens palewise argent, each surmounted on the nib by an escroll also argent bearing the motto "Ich Diene" in Gothic letters of the field.* "Shield for Peace" (i.e. tournaments) of the BLACK PRINCE, Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Edward III of England, NKNP. Sable, three roses argent.* Arms attributed to Cunedag or CUNEDDA, the most famous founding father of Wales, who became King of Gwynedd (Anglesey and north Wales) in about A.D. 400, NKNP. A large number of Welsh and English families claim descent from him. Sable, three swords in fess erect Or. TARANGEL, Arthur (A.U.). Sable, two estoiles in fess argent between in chief a chevron inverted and in base a chevron, both Or.# NYA. Sable, two lions combatant Or.* Arms attributed to HECTOR OF TROY, one of the three pagans counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the arms undoubtedly refer to Hector's fatal duel with Achilles. NDNP. Sable, two swords crossed in saltire proper. BLACK (HIGHLAND SCOTS) position in the Warlords II "Conq" shield set. NYA. Saint George impaling the British Royal Arms.* Arms of the British monarch as SOVEREIGN OF THE GARTER, NDNP. Saint George, in the first quarter an oval escutcheon charged with France Modern and England quarterly within a compartment of scrollwork, the whole imperially crowned proper.* Second Corporate Arms awarded to the Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading into the East Indies (EAST INDIA COMPANY) on October 7, 1698, after being merged with their chief competitor by an act of Parliament, NDNP. Crest (unchanged): A sphere or globe celestial between two standards of Saint George. Supporters: Two lions gardant gold, each holding a banner of Saint George. Saint George, on a chief azure, the Crown and Garter and a fleur-de-lis, all Or; impaling argent, a chevron between three bulls passant gardant, all gules.* Combined arms of the 1989 GARTER KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Saint George, on a chief azure, the Crown and Garter and a fleur-de-lis, all Or.* Arms of Office of the GARTER KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Saint George, on a chief gules, a lion passant gardant Or.* Arms of Office of the CLARENCEAUX KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Saint George, on a chief gules, a lion passant gardant Or; impaling sable, a lion rampant Or, armed and langued gules, clutching the dexter half of a wagon wheel argent.* Conbined arms of the 1989 CLARENCEAUX KING OF ARMS of England, NDNP. Sangine, two arrows crossed in saltire points downwards Or. NYA. SAXONY: Gules, a horse courant argent.* Arms of Dominion of the German province, brought into the British royal arms by George I as part of the arms of Hannover, NDNP. - 53 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 SCOTLAND: Or, a lion rampant within a double tressure fleury- counter-flory gules (armed and langued azure).* Royal Arms of Dominion, NDNP. Since James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne, they have been borne quartered in various ways with the arms of England, France, Ireland, and Hannover. The current British royal arms as used in Scotland are quarterly 1 and 4, Scotland; 2, England; 3, Ireland. NDNP. Note: "Armed and langued azure" is usually omitted from the blazon. Tenn‚, a cross sable. ORANGE (GOLD KNIGHTS) position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. NYA. Tenn‚, a mascle argent.# NYA. Tenn‚, a mullet proper gold. ORANGE (DUBHAINS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Tenn‚, a pall Or and two chevrons counterchanged.# NYA. Tenn‚, a rose argent, barbed and seeded vert, in base an open book of the second. An IDF unit badge, NKNP. Tenn‚, a sinister hand erect, open, and couped at at the wrist gules, fimbriated argent. ORANGE (ULSTER) position in the Warlords II "Conq" shield set. NKNP. Tenn‚, a sledge hammer erect sable. ORANGE (GRAY DWARVES) position in the Warlords I shield set. NYA. Tenn‚, an eagle displayed sable, double-headed, winged gules, fimbriated argent.20 ORANGE (RUSSIA) position in the Warlords II "Europa" shield set. NYA. Tenn‚, on a pale and a saltire argent between two bezants, three pommes in pale.# NYA. Tenn‚, the flag of Mexico proper. ORANGE (MEXICAN RAIDERS) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set. NDNP. Tenn‚, three annulets Or. ORANGE (DWARF) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. The dexter half of a Tudor rose proper impaled with a semicircle azure therein a sheaf of arrows Or, the whole rayonnant and ensigned with the royal crown proper.* One of the badges of MARY I, one tincture uncertain, NDNP. The Holy Roman Empire dimidiating France Ancient.* Arms attributed to Charlemagne, one of the three Christians counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the dimidiation is sometimes reversed; NDNP. The sun in his splendor Or.* One of the badges of RICHARD II of England, NDNP. The sun's rays descending from clouds proper.* One of the badges of EDWARD III of England, NDNP. Three ostrich feathers argent enfiled by a coronet composed of four crosses patt‚e alternating with four fleurs-de-lis, on an escroll the motto "Ich Dien."* The badge of the HEIR TO THE ENGLISH CROWN, used since the time of Edward the Black Prince and distinct from his badge as Prince of Wales, NDNP. Tierced per fess argent, gules, and azure.* The flag of the RUSSIAN REPUBLIC, NDNP. Tierced per fess azure, Or, and gules.# NYA. Tierced per fess gules, argent, and vert.* The flag of HUNGARY, NDNP. Tierced per fess Or, vert, and gules.* The flag of LITHUANIA, NDNP. ____________________ 20. In the Warlords II original, the eagle is not fimbriated. - 54 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Tierced per pairlie 1, Brunswick; 2, Luneburg; 3, Saxony; over all, on an escutcheon of pretence gules, the crown of Charlemagne Or.* See HANNOVER. Tierced per pairlie azure, gules, and sable, three lioncels argent.# NYA. Tierced per pale azure, argent, and gules.* The flag of the FRENCH REPUBLIC, NDNP. Used for the WHITE (QUEBEC), YELLOW (FRANCE), and BLUE (FRANCE) positions in the Warlords II "Am," "Conq," and "Europa" shield sets, respectively. Tierced per pale azure, Or, and gules.# NYA. Tierced per pale gules, argent, and azure. [Flag?] NYA. Tierced per pale gules, Or, and azure. [Romanian flag?] NYA. Tierced per pale vert, argent, and gules, an eagle preying standing upon a saguaro cactus couped, clutching a rattlesnake in its beak, all proper.* The flag of MEXICO, NDNP. Tierced per pale vert, argent, and gules, on the fess point a mound Or.* The flag of ITALY, circa 1914. Used for the YELLOW (ITALY) position in the Warlords II "Europa" shield set. NDNP. Tierced per pale vert, argent, and gules, on the fess point a fasces Or.* The flag of ITALY during the Fascist period, 1922-1945; NDNP. Tierced per pale vert, argent, and gules.* The flag of ITALY since 1945, NDNP. Tierced per pale vert, argent, and tenn‚.* The flag of the Republic of IRELAND, NDNP. Used for the GREEN (IRELAND) position in the Warlords II "Conq" shield set. Tierced per pall sable, azure, and gules, a pall vert, fimbriated in chief Or and on both flanks argent. The new flag of SOUTH AFRICA, transposed from dexter to chief, NDNP. Two feathers crossed in saltire, the sinister argent surmounted of the dexter Or.* The badge of HENRY VI, NDNP. ULSTER: Argent, a sinister hand erect, open, and couped at the wrist gules.* Provincial Arms of Dominion, also used as the badge of the Baronets of Ulster; NDNP. Vair, a bezant. NYA. Vair, a cross Or, over all two spears crossed in saltire points upwards gules.# NYA. Vair, a fess gules.* Willem MARMYUN (Marmion), listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Vair, on a fess gules, two crosses patt‚e Or. NYA. Vair.* Jon de Beuchamp or BEAUCHAMP, listed in the "Heralds' Roll" (ca. 1280), NKNP. Vairy Or and gules. DE FERRND (sp?), listed by Matthew Paris (ca. 1244), NKNP. Vert fleury argent, a mullet of eight points Or. NYA. Vert, a crescent horns pointing to sinister chief Or. GREEN (OTTOMANS) position in the Warlords II "Europa" shield set. NYA. Vert, a cross argent, in the first quarter the Virgin standing and holding the Child all Or.* The primary arms of the two commonly attributed to "King" ARTHUR, one of the three Christians counted among the Nine Worthies of the World; the second is gules, three crowns in pale Or, and these two coats were sometimes borne quartered; NDNP. - 55 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Vert, a cross engrailed argent between four fleurs-de-lis Or. NYA. Vert, a cross flory Or.* Arms attributed to BRAINT HIR of Denbighshire, founder of the "Tenth Noble Tribe" of Wales (Seventh Century), NKNP. Vert, a cross Or. GREEN position in the Warlords II "Knight" shield set. NYA. Vert, a diamond faceted point downwards argent. MIR, Valfin (K. Astarra). Crest: On a viscount's helm, out of a viscount's coronet, an eagle rising Or, charged upon the breast with an escutcheon of the arms. Vert, a fess and a saltire argent, over all a sword erect Or.# NYA. Vert, a fleur-de-lis argent. GREEN (ELF) position in the Warlords II "Default" shield set. NYA. Vert, a mullet proper silver. GREEN (CASTORIANS) position in the Warlords II "Star" shield set. NYA. Vert, a pale between two escallops argent.# NYA. Vert, a pall Or surmounted by another invected ermine between three crosses moline of the second.# NYA. Vert, a pegasus saliant wings elevated and addorsed Or. ANGANEL, Feangil (F.S. Beretaur). Vert, a roundel figured in happiness Or.# NYA. Vert, a saltire argent. GREEN (Caribbean FREE STATE) position in the Warlords II "Am" shield set. NYA. Vert, a sheaf of arrows Or, on a chief ermine, two fleurs-de- lis gules. GOLDEN ARROW BATTALION of Loval Prefecture, F.S. Beretaur, Corporate Arms. Vert, a sword argent in bend, the point upwards, hanging from the guard a key Or, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ also Or.* Mar‚chal de Camp PIERRE TOUSSAINT, Duc de la Marmelade (K. Haiti), NDNP; Marmelade was a township in Haiti. Supporters: Two hyenas proper, collared gules with coronets vert. Motto: "Je na la remets qua mon Roi." Vert, a sword argent, the point upwards, and a quill pen Or, the nib downwards, in saltire, the escutcheon surmounted by a barred helm affront‚ also Or.* Mar‚chal de Camp JULIEN PREVOST, Comte de Limonade, Secretary of the King (K. Haiti), NDNP. Supporters: Two greyhounds argent, collared Or the buckles gules. Motto: "Amour et fidelit‚." Vert, a sword erect between two suns in their splendor Or. NYA. Vert, a tank affront‚ sable, fimbriated argent, leaving a trail of track marks which curves toward the sinister horizon compony of the second and third. An IDF unit badge, NDNP. Vert, a tree issuant from the base proper, fimbriated Or.21 GREEN (WOOD) position in the Warlords II "Element" shield set. NYA. Vert, a trident Or. GOLDTYNE, James (K. Allon). Vert, a wyvern close contourn‚ argent.** NYA. Vert, an avellane cross of acorns Or.# NYA. Vert, an oak tree couped at the base sable. GREEN (ELVALLIE) position in the Warlords I shield set. NYA. ____________________ 21. In the Warlords II original, the tree is not fimbriated. - 56 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Vert, on a bend argent three roundels figured in happiness gules.# NYA. Vert, on a cross between four mullets of six points argent, a fleur-de-lis sable. NYA. Vert, the sun in his splendor between three garbs, all Or.# NYA. Vert, three escutcheons ermine.# NYA. Vert, three fleurs-de-lis argent. See BERETAUR. Vert, three telperion trees uprooted proper (argent). MAC EOCHAID, Conan (W.E.). Vert, two diamonds faceted point downwards argent. MIR, Thuvir (K. Astarra). Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an eagle close argent, supporting in its dexter talon an escutcheon of the arms. Vert, two fleurs-de-lis in chief and in base a lily of the field slipped argent.* LILLYWHITES LTD., granted 1992, NDNP. Crest: A mount vert thereon a lily of the field argent seeded slipped and leaved proper between two fleurs- de-lis also argent. Mantling: Gules doubled Or. Supporters: Upon a grassy compartment growing therefrom lilies of the valley on the dexter side a male figure being a representation of William Lillywhite as a bowler and on the sinister side a male figure being a representation of James Lillywhite as a batsman both habited as cricketers of the mid-19th Century each in his own fashion and both proper. Badge: Within an annulet fleury a figure representing Eros all argent. WESTERN EMPIRE: Sable, a warship in full sail argent. Imperial Arms of Dominion. - 57 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 PART II: ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOVITE ARMIGERS BY NAME ADELA the Tigress (K. Murgenheim). Arms: Sable, a Bengal tigress rampant argent. AFTON, Samuel (K. Coryland). Arms: Barry wavy of six argent and azure, a trident in bend sinister sable, surmounted by a halberd gules in bend. ALLON, Kingdom of. Arms of Dominion: Gules, a lion rampant argent. Adopted from the private arms of Richard MOWBRAY (Elaine, q.v.). ANGANEL, Feangil (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Vert, a pegasus saliant wings elevated and addorsed Or. ANORDIL, Firshel (K. Astarra). Arms: Per fess embattled bleu de ceil and sable, in chief the sun in his splendor. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an eagle displayed sable, armed Or, charged on the breast with the sun in his splendor. AQUILAREN, Trajan (K. Rona). Argent, an eagle displayed sable. Line extinct? ASTARRA, Kingdom of. Arms of Dominion: Sable, an estoile argent. Adopted from the private arms of the House of MENELDUR (Valacarion II, q.v.). BERETAUR, Forest See of. Arms of Dominion: Vert, three fleurs-de-lis argent. LOVAL PREFECTURE. Arms of Dominion: Ermine, two fleurs-de- lis in fess gules. GOLDEN ARROW BATTALION. Corporate Arms: Vert, a sheaf of arrows Or, on a chief ermine, two fleurs-de-lis gules. CARANARDAN, Archel (W.E.). Arms: Argent, five maple leaves vert. Lochel. Arms: Caranardan, a label vert for difference. Moranel: Arms: Caranardan, a label vert charged with as many crescents argent for difference. Turanel. Arms: Caranardan, a label of five points vert for difference. CROMWELL, Harold (K. Allon). Private Arms: Sable, a lion rampant argent.* Arms of Pretence: Quarterly 1 and 4, Allon (Mowbray); 2 and 3, Cromwell. DHUUL, Quitur (K. Astarra). Arms: Gyronny tenn‚ and sable. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a dexter arm embowed in armor tenn‚ holding a javelin in bend sinister point downwards sable. EILOMA, Chieera (K. Coryland). Arms: Azure, a harp Or between eight estoiles in bordure argent. Lady's Crest: Out of a baron's coronet, a dragon wings elevated and addorsed azure playing a harp Or. ELENA, Finras (K. Astarra). Arms: Quarterly argent and azure, two estoiles counterchanged. Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a dexter cubit arm in armor azure clutching an estoile argent. (See also Chayna Elena FITZALAN.) EOL, Nazel (K. Astarra). Arms: Quarterly azure and argent, five bezants counterchanged, two, one, and two. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an heraldic tyger rampant sable, armed and langued gules, supporting an escutcheon of the arms. - 58 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 FALACAR, Durmegil (K. Astarra). Arms: Per bend sinister Or and azure, in dexter chief a cross patt‚e sable. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a lion saliant azure, armed and langued Or, holding in the fore paws a sword erect sable, bladed Or sem‚e of crosses patt‚e of the third. FITZALAN, Chayna Elena (K. Astarra). Arms: Quarterly argent and azure, two estoiles counterchanged (Elena); on a chief Or, a rose proper pink garbed and seeded proper. Lady's Crest: Out of a baron's coronet, a dragon segreant Or supporting a rose as in the arms. (See also Finras ELENA.) FYLOR, Fean (K. Astarra). Arms: Ocher, three mullets Or. Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a hippogriff proper, charged upon the breast with a mullet Or. (See also Telcontarion FYLOR.) FYLOR, Telcontarion (K. Astarra). Arms: Argent, three mullets sable. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, a hippogriff argent, langued gules, armed and winged sable. (See also Fean FYLOR.) GOLDTYNE, James (K. Allon). Arms: Vert, a trident Or. GONDELMIR, Targond (K. Allon). Arms: Sable, six faceted diamonds proper. GURINGAL, Miron (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Or fleury sable, a fusil vert.** LINDARRE (House), Lindarre (W.E.). Arms: Bleu de ceil, the sun Or charged with a falcon preying sable. LINDUIN, Lithare (K. Allon). Arms: Or, on a pale azure, three scrolls fesswise of the first. Lalaithal. Arms: Linduin, a mullet argent for difference. Rochandil. Arms: Linduin, a crescent argent for difference. Vallaure. Arms: Linduin, a label argent for difference. LOMAREL, Nolarin (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Sable sem‚e-de-lis Or, on a fess vert, an open book argent, bound and tasseled of the second. MAC EOCHAID, Conan (W.E.). Arms: Vert, three telperion trees uprooted proper (argent). MARDOL, Ulmar (K. Astarra). Arms: Argent, a bend doubly cottised sable; for augmentation, a chief of Astarra, fimbriated of the first. Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a unicorn saliant argent, armed, crined, and unguled sable, langued gules. Supporters: Two unicorns saliant as in the crest. MENELDUR, Valacarion II (K. Astarra). Private Arms, Meneldur, and Arms of Dominion, Kingdom of Astarra: Sable, an estoile argent. Crest: The Celestial Crown of Astarra proper, thereupon a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw an estoile argent. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. Durafin. Arms: Astarra, a bordure Or. Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant argent, armed and winged sable. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin as in the crest, gorged with a celestial crown of - 59 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. Vanir. Arms: Astarra, a label Or for difference. Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw an estoile of the first, gorged with a label Or for difference. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with an astral crown of estoiles Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with an astral crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. MENELDUR, Yavanion (K. Astarra). Arms: Sable, an estoile argent between three unicorn's horns erased point upwards bendwise Or. Crest: On a prince's helm, out of a coronet composed of a band Or and eight estoiles argent, a griffin segreant proper clutching in its dexter claw a unicorn's horn erased in bend sinister Or. Supporters: On the dexter, a griffin segreant proper, gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and charged with three unicorn's horns in fess bendwise point upwards Or; on the sinister, a unicorn argent, armed, crined, unguled, and gorged with a celestial crown of estoiles and therefrom a chain reflexed over the back Or. (Cadet of Valacarion II MENELDUR.) MIR, Thuvir (K. Astarra). Arms: Vert, two diamonds faceted point downwards argent. Crest: On a baron's helm, out of a baron's coronet, an eagle close argent, supporting in its dexter talon an escutcheon of the arms. (See also Valfin MIR.) MIR, Valfin (K. Astarra). Arms: Vert, a diamond faceted point downwards argent. Crest: On a viscount's helm, out of a viscount's coronet, an eagle rising Or, charged upon the breast with an escutcheon of the arms. (See also Thuvir MIR.) MOWBRAY, Elaine (K. Allon). Private Arms, Mowbray, and Arms of Dominion, Kingdom of Allon: Gules, a lion rampant argent.* NARO, Colot (K. Astarra). Arms: Argent, a roundel inflamed proper. Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a phoenix argent in flames proper. NICHOLS, Thomas (K. Allon). Arms: Ermine, six laurel crowns vert. O'RIVER, Thomas (W.E. and K. Allon). Arms: Argent, a fess sable between four fountains. OSTENGAEL, Kingdom of. Arms of Dominion: Quarterly Or and sable, four chessrooks counterchanged. PARAGON, Kingdom of: Arms of Dominion: Or, a lion passant gardant azure, armed and langued gules, above a trident of the second fesswise, points to dexter. LORD ADMIRAL. Arms of Office: Gules, a trident between two estoiles of twelve points Or. LORD JUSTICIAR. Arms of Office: Gules, a trident surmounted by balances Or. ORDER OF JUSTICE. Corporate Arms: Quarterly 1 and 4, Paragon; 2 and 3, the Lord Justiciar of Paragon. - 60 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 ORDER OF THE TRIDENT. Corporate Arms: Quarterly 1 and 4, Paragon; 2 and 3, the Lord Admiral of Paragon. QUILLAR, Vandir (K. Astarra). Arms: Argent gutt‚e de sang, a fleur-de-lis gules. [Uncertain.] (See also Yave QUILLAR.) QUILLAR, Yave (K. Astarra). Arms: Argent gutt‚e de sang, a fleur-de-lis and a bordure engrailed, both gules. [Uncertain.] (See also Vandir QUILLAR.) RAVENSCROFT, Ian (R. Alvaron). Arms: Gules, on a pale Or, three ravens close sable, a bordure also sable. (Cadet of Talamin RAVENSCROFT.) RAVENSCROFT, Talamin (R. Alvaron). Arms: Gules, on a pale Or, three ravens close sable. Gwalchmai (R. Alvaron, K. Allon). Arms: Ravenscroft, a crescent gules for difference. Robardin. Arms: Ravenscroft, a label argent for difference. RON, Aldar (W.E., K. Allon). Arms: Or, a dragon segreant wings elevated and addorsed azure, armed and langued gules. SELENE (K. Paragon). Arms: Argent, an upper skull adorned with spikes, a bordure, all sable. SHULA, Sandale (K. Astarra). Arms: Azure, a pall, in chief a fleur-de-lis, both Or. Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a dexter cubit arm with fist clenched in armor Or. Supporters: Two warhorses rampant argent, chain barded Or, with knights mounted, mailed azure, the dexter with a sword in the dexter hand and the sinister with a scroll in the sinister hand, both proper. SIRENE'S ORDER OF THE SILVER UNICORN. Corporate Arms: Argent, on a pile sable, a unicorn rampant of the first, armed, langued, crined, and unguled Or. TALON, Randol (W.E., K. Allon). Arms: Ermine, a falcon preying proper. TARANGEL, Arthur (A.U.). Arms: Sable, three swords in fess erect Or. TIRAN, Vanmegil (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Quarterly 1 and 4, argent, a falcon preying proper; 2 and 3, vert. TIRLOVAL, Anganir (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Ermine, on a bend gules, two fleurs-de-lis Or. (Cadet of Calahir TIRLOVAL.) TIRLOVAL, Calahir (F.S. Beretaur). Private Arms: Ermine, on a fess gules, two fleurs-de-lis Or. Arms of Office: Quarterly 1 and 4, Tirloval; 2, Loval Prefecture; 3, Sirene's Order of the Silver Unicorn. Angval. Arms: Tirloval, a label azure for difference. Calandur. Arms: Tirloval, a label of five points azure for difference. Lorminal. Private Arms: Tirloval, a bordure sable for difference. Arms of Office: Impaled on the dexter, Tirloval, a bordure sable for difference; on the sinister, Sirene's Order of the Silver Unicorn. TRALOVIL, Cirgil (K. Astarra). Arms: Gules, a cross flory Or. Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's coronet, a stag courant Or, gorged with an oak-leaf wreath vert and charged with a cross flory gules. Supporters: On the dexter, a stag saliant gardant proper; on the sinister, a grizzly bear rampant proper. TULIRNOREL, Shylor (K. Astarra). Arms: Gyronny of eight, gules and Or. Crest: On a duke's helm, out of a duke's - 61 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 coronet, a taloned dexter hand apaum‚ Or, armed gules. Supporters: Two wolves rampant gardant, the dexter gules, armed and langued Or, the sinister counterchanged. TURANCAL, Arvandur (F.S. Beretaur). Arms: Or, six acorns vert. UIDAN, Viron (K. Astarra). Arms: Or, a saltire voided in the center purpure. Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a griffin segreant Or, gorged purpure. VALEL, Valanna (K. Paragon). Arms: Sable, a tower between five estoiles Or. WESTERN EMPIRE. Arms of Dominion: Sable, a warship in full sail argent. WYVERNHALL, Barony of (K. Allon). Corporate Arms: Quarterly Or and gules, a wyvern wings elevated and addorsed vert. XYLOS, Quentin (A.U.). Arms: Barry wavy of eight azure and argent, a mermaid proper bearing a comb and mirror Or. YESTARE, Hyarmendil (K. Astarra). Arms: Quarterly gules, vert, azure, and tenn‚, a cross argent. Crest: On a count's helm, out of a count's coronet, a warhorse forcen‚ sable, caparisoned of the arms. References Dennys, Rodney. Heraldry and the Heralds. London: Jonathan Cape Ltd., 1982. Pine, L. G. The Story of Heraldry. Puttock, Col. A. G. A Dictionary of Heraldry and Related Subjects. - 62 - Encyclopedia of Novi Heraldry January 29, 1997 Under Construction - 63 -