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Clarenceux King of Arms

Clarenceux King of Arms, historically often spelled Clarencieux (both pronounced /ˈklærəns/ KLARR-ən-soo), is an officer of arms at the College of Arms in London. Clarenceux is the senior of the two provincial kings of arms and his jurisdiction is that part of England south of the River Trent. The office almost certainly existed in 1420, and there is a fair degree of probability that there was a Claroncell rex heraldus armorum in 1334. There are also some early references to the southern part of England being termed Surroy, but there is not firm evidence that there was ever a king of arms so called. The title of Clarenceux is supposedly derived from either the Honour (or estates of dominion) of the Clare earls of Gloucester, or from the Dukedom of Clarence (1362). With minor variations, the arms of Clarenceux have, from the late fifteenth century, been blazoned as Argent a Cross on a Chief Gules a Lion passant guardant crowned with an open Crown Or.

Clarenceux King of Arms
The arms of office of the Clarenceux King of Arms
 
Heraldic traditionGallo-British
JurisdictionEngland and Wales south of the river Trent
Governing bodyCollege of Arms

Timothy Duke was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms on 1 April 2021.

Holders of the office edit

Brackets indicate a date for which there is evidence the named person held this office

 
Clarenceux King of Arms Thomas Hawley in a 1556 grant of arms
 
The former Clarenceux King of Arms, Patric Dickinson, on Garter Day, dressed in the robe of the Secretary of the Order of the Garter
Arms Name[1] Dates of office[nb 1] Notes Ref
Andrew (1334) This otherwise obscure figure was named as "Clarencell rex Heraldus" in a Wardrobe Account record dated 19 June 1334. [2]
Richard Spenser (1383) Spenser is recorded as "Heraud Mariscall del Suth" on 16 September 1383. According to Godfrey and Wagner, he was possibly sent to Ireland in 1394, but no other details of his life are known. [2]
  William Horsley (1420) Horseley is recorded in the Chapter minutes at the college, dated 5 January 1420. Later lists of heralds state he was Leopard herald and Ireland King of Arms, while Thomas Lant called him Guyene and Clarenceux in his roll of officers of arms; no contemporary evidence in support of these claims has emerged. [2]
  John Cosoun c. 1425 – 6 February 1428 Cousoun was Arundel Herald in 1415 and, according to Godfrey and Wagner. "must have been" in that office in 1413, when an Arundel Herald was sent to Portugal. He served John Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk as Mowbray Herald from c. 1416. He married one Emma and had at least one son, Richard, living in 1426. [3]
  Roger Legh or Lygh 8 May 1435[nb 2] – c. 1460 Legh was later said to have been Wallingford, Rouge Croix and Chester Pursuivants, but there is no or contradictory evidence for these claims. He was appointed Gloucester Herald by 22 February 1431. As Gloucester he went to France and as Clarenceux he was sent to Scotland and Normandy, before attending Garter missions to Aragon and Poland. He was married to one Margaret and apparently died poor; one of his books was later divided into four parts (the Military Roll, a roll relating to the Aldermen of London, another to the Kings of England and the last relating to Parliament) which were divided between the British Museum (MSS. Harl. 4205 and Add. 45133) and the Guildhall Library. [4]
  William Hawkeslowe c. 1461 – 1476 Hawkeslowe was said to have held a number of heraldic offices: Wallingford, Bluemantle, Leopard and Guyene King of Arms (possibly Herald), but corroborating evidence is lacking. He was appointed Clarenceux between December 1460 and November 1461, before being sent to Scotland. He left for France in 1475, but drowned in the Spanish seas the following year. Apparently indebted at the time of his death, his widow and children were provided for by Edward IV. A number of grants of arms are known from his tenure, but no other material appears to have survived. [5]
  Sir Thomas Holme 1 August 1476 – 1493 Although said to have been Falcon pursuivant in the reign of Henry VI, Holme's first heraldic appointments for which any evidence has been found is as Rouge Croix (1457). He was Windsor Herald in 1461 and Norroy King of Arms from 1467. He resigned as Clarenceux on 4 January 1485, but was reappointed by patent on 1 May 1487 and served until his death. He took part in a number of diplomatic missions to Scotland, Burgundy, France, Brittany and Denmark, and was godfather to Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms. [6]
  Roger Machado 1494–1510 Diplomat and officer of arms of Portuguese extraction. He was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms on 24 January 1494.
  Christopher Carlill 4 November 1510 – 1511
  Thomas Benolt 1511–1534
  Thomas Tonge 1534–1536
 
Enamelled plaque of Thomas Tonge inscribed 1554 "The armys of the ryght worshepful Maister Tonge otherwyse called Maister Clarencivs and mesteris Susan hys wyfe"

A gilt copper plaque displaying in champlevé enamel the arms of Tonge (Azure, a bend cotised between six martlets) impaling White (Or, a chevron gules between three popinjays vert armed and langued gules within a bordure azure bezanty), dated 1554, survives in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. It is similar to Stall plates of Knights of the Garter used to denote seats reserved for the Knights in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. The whole is enclosed within a wreath. A motto in French is inscribed along the top: ESPOER EN DIEU (Hope in God) and an inscription in English beneath: The armys of the ryght worshepful Maister Tonge otherwyse called Maister Clarencivs and mesteris Susan hys wyfe.

Thomas Tonge held the offices of York Herald and Norroy King of Arms. In 1534 he was created Clarenceaux King of Arms. He died in 1536 and was buried in the Church of St. Mary Overy in Southwark, now Southwark Cathedral. His wife was Susanna White, a daughter of Richard White of Hutton, Essex. She survived her husband by nearly 30 years and was the First Lady of the Privy Chamber to Queen Mary.[7]

  Thomas Hawley 1536–1557
  William Harvey 1557–1567
  Robert Cooke 1567–1594
  Richard Lee 1594–1597
  William Camden 1597–1623
  Sir Richard St George 1623–1635
  Sir William Le Neve 1635–1646
  Arthur Squibb 1646–1650
  Sir Edward Bysshe 12 June 1650 – 1658 (resigned) The eldest son of a Surrey gentleman, Bysshe was a Member of Parliament for Bletchingly, Reigate and Gatton. He was a Parliamentarian who took the covenant, intruded in Garter's office (c. 1643) and served on committees to regulate the heralds in 1641 and 1645. Parliament confirmed him as Garter on 20 October 1646 and as Clarenceux in 1650. Although he resigned from the latter eight years later, he was re-appointed in 1661, shortly after he was deposed as Garter during the Restoration. According to Godfrey and Wagner, he was a good armourist; however, his visitations provide only brief accounts of the families concerned, and he neglected his duties, both parliamentary and heraldic, from the 1660s. Despite these failings, he had ensured that the college and its records remained open during the Interregnum, much to the benefit of antiquaries, including his colleague Sir William Dugdale. [8][9]
  William Ryley 1658–1661
  Sir Edward Bysshe 10 March 1661 – 15 December 1679 Reappointment (see above). [8]
  Sir Henry St George 28 January 1680 – 16 June 1703 (promoted) The eighth son of Sir Henry St George, Garter, Henry the younger became Clarenceux King of Arms after appointments as Richmond Herald (1660) and Norroy King of Arms (1677); he succeeded his brother, Sir Thomas, as Garter King of Arms in 1703. He was remembered by contemporaries as "a timorous animal" and "incommunicative, sordid and of little learning", but he visited 12 counties as Clarenceux and donated the profits from six towards the rebuilding of the college after the Great Fire of London. His manuscript collection was sold after his death and later sold again at auction; some have returned to the college, but most remain scattered in collections. [10][11]
  Sir John Vanbrugh 1704–1726
  Knox Ward 1726–1741
  Stephen Martin Leake 30 November 1741 – 19 December 1754 (promoted) Leake was born Stephen Martin, the son of a naval officer from Essex; his maternal uncle, Admiral Sir John Leake, left his estate to Martin's parents on the condition that they adopt his surname, which they did in 1721. Despite this and work at the Navy Office, the family lost out in the South Seas crash and Leake was forced to find employment. After joining the Society of Antiquaries and publishing Nummi Britannici historia, he joined the college as Lancaster Herald in 1727 and was promoted to Norroy in 1729; after serving as Clarenceux, he was promoted to Garter King of Arms in 1754. Leake was less interested in genealogy than the rights and history of the heralds; he petitioned for the college to have a monopoly on the researching of arms and unsuccessfully tried to revive the visitations, a proposal which Anstis and the government opposed. He also opened the college's register for Dissenting and Jewish births and carried out two Garter missions. On his death, his collections passed to his brother and were eventually bought by the college. [12][13]
  Charles Townley 11 January 1755 – 27 April 1773 (promoted) Born at Tower Hill in London, Townley was the son of a merchant and educated at the Merchant Taylor's School from 1727. He bought his appointment as York Herald in 1735; he was promoted to Norroy in 1751 and, after his 18 years as Clarenceux, he was appointed Garter King of Arms in 1773. According to his predecessor Stephen Martin Leake, he received a large fortune around 1755 and neglected his heraldic duties thereafter. He was nonetheless knighted in 1761. A number of his collections are in the possession of the college, including transcribed memorial inscriptions. [14][15]
  Thomas Browne 13 May 1773 – 15 August 1774 (promoted) A native of Derbyshire, Browne was a land surveyor who was said to have worked for the Duke of Norfolk and converted his favour into heraldic appointments; the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography records that he carried out works for John Warburton, Somerset Herald. He was successively appointed Blanch Lyon (1727), Bluemantle (1737), Lancaster (1744), Norroy (1761) and Clarenceux before his appointment as Garter in 1774. Despite his success as a surveyor, he was reputed to have known little of heraldry and neglected his duties at the college. [16][17]
  Ralph Bigland 12 September 1774 – 2 March 1780 (promoted) Bigland was the son of a Middlesex tallow chandler whose ancestors have been traced to Westmorland and Lancashire. He was apprenticed to a cheesemonger in 1728 and, after 9 years service, he entered his own trade and carried out his practice for over 20 years. He travelled to the Low Countries and Scotland and supplied cheese to the allied armies during the War of the Austrian Succession; it was on these travels that he began noting down memorial inscriptions, a pursuit to which he would devote his life. He compiled a huge collection of inscriptions relating to Gloucestershire, where he travelled extensively from 1750 onwards. These interests brought him to the college, where he was appointed Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1757 and promoted to Somerset Herald in 1759, Norroy in 1773, Clarenceux and then Garter in 1780. A competent and methodical genealogist and draughtsman, he took a particular interest in parish registers and campaigned for their indexing and the inclusion of greater detail in them. After his death, the majority of his Gloucestershire notes and transcriptions were published, although a number remained in manuscript form until the 1990s. [18][19]
  Isaac Heard 16 March 1780 – 1 May 1784 (promoted) A native of Devon, Heard was educated at Honiton Grammar School before serving in the Royal Navy between 1745 and 1751. He then embarked on a career as a merchant first in Bilbao, Spain, and then London. An appointment as Bluemantle Pursuivant followed in 1759, with a promotion to Lancaster Herald two years later; in 1774, he was appointment Norroy King of Arms and Brunswick Herald, before his promotion to Clarenceux in 1780 and then Garter in 1784; he served as Earl Marshal's secretary (1782–84) and resigned as Brunswick in 1814. Heard was a proponent of the landscape heraldry which proved popular in the late Georgian period, and, inspired by his earlier travels, took a precocious interest in American genealogy. As a long-serving herald, his genealogical practice was large and much of his manuscript collection ended up in the college. [20][21]
  Thomas Lock 18 May 1784 – 24 February 1803 (promoted)
  George Harrison 1803–1820
  Sir George Nayler 30 May 1820 – 11 May 1822 (promoted) The son of a Gloucestershire surgeon, Nayler practised as a miniature painter before buying his way into the offices of Blanc Coursier Herald and Genealogist of the Order of the Bath in 1792. He used the same means to obtain a place in the college as Bluemantle Pursuivant a year later; promotion to York Herald followed in 1794 after the accidental death of its incumbent. Further appointments as King of Arms to the Royal Guelphic Order and the Order of St Michael and St George (1815 and 1818 respectively) followed before he became Clarenceux, served as deputy Garter at George IV's Coronation in 1821 and was promoted to Garter in 1822. In the latter office, he continued to run a large practice at the college and conducted missions to France, Denmark, Russia and Portugal. Much of his earlier heraldic career involved disputes with the other heralds about his sole right to record pedigrees of the Knight of the Bath; despite objections, he compiled 47 volumes, which are now in the college's possession. He also worked on a history of George IV's Coronation, which was only partially published in his lifetime, and a manuscript history of the Order of the Bath, also owned by the college. [22][23]
  Ralph Bigland 4 June 1822 – 26 November 1831 (promoted) Bigland was born on 1 May 1757, the son of Joseph Owen of Salford, Lancashire, but changed his surname in 1774 at the desire of his maternal uncle, Ralph Bigland, Garter. That year, he became Rouge Dragon Pursuivant and was appointed Richmond Herald in 1780. Promotions to Norroy (1803) and Clarenceux (1822) King of Arms followed before his appointment as Garter in 1831; he is the last officer to hold all three Kingships. [24]
  Sir William Woods 26 November 1831 – 23 July 1838 (promoted) By tradition, Woods was reputed the son of the 11th Duke of Norfolk, but he bore the arms matriculated in 1812 in Scotland by one George Woods, a tailor of London and brother to a comedian called William. Whatever the case, details of his early life are also sparse. He was appointed secretary to the Knights Commander and Companions of the Order of the Bath in 1815 and then registrar of the Royal Guelphic Order later that year. He tried for Ross Herald in Scotland in 1816, but his first heraldic appointment was as Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1819, followed by Norfolk Herald in 1825, which he held jointly with Bluemantle. His promotion to Clarenceux King of Arms included service as deputy Garter (c. 1836) before a promotion to Garter itself in 1838. [25]
  Sir Edmund Lodge 1838–1839
  Joseph Hawker 1839–1846
  Francis Martin 1846–1848
  James Pulman 1848–1859
  Robert Laurie 1859–1882
  Walter Blount 1882–1894
  George Cokayne 1894–1911 Cokayne was born George Adams, but took his mother's maiden name as instructed in her will. He was educated privately and at Exeter College, Oxford, graduating in 1848. He was called to the Bar in 1853 but his first heraldic appointment was as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant in 1859, followed by promotions to Lancaster Herald in 1870 and Norroy King of Arms in 1882. As a herald, he took part in Garter missions to Portugal, Russia, Saxony, Spain and Italy, but it was as a genealogist that he is best remembered. As "G.E.C.", he published two enormous and scholarly works, The Complete Peerage and The Complete Baronetage; the former was enhanced by other editors in a second edition and is an authority on the history of the Peerage. [26]
  Sir William Weldon 1911–1919
  Charles Athill 1919–1922 [27]
  William Lindsay 1922–1926
  Gordon Lee 1926–1927 Lee was born in Aberdeen, the son of a clergyman and local historian, and educated at Westminster School. After working as an artist, he became Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1889. Promotions followed: York Herald in 1905 and Norroy King of Arms in 1922. He also served as Earl Marshal's secretary in 1911, was an authority on Japanese art and edited The Episcopal Arms of England and Wales. [28]
  Sir Arthur Cochrane 1928–1954 The son of a clergyman and hospital master, Cochrane was a wine merchant before becoming secretary to Alfred Scott-Gatty, Garter King of Arms. He was appointed Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1904, Chester Herald in 1915 and Norroy King of Arms in 1926. Godfrey and Wagner state that he produced "happy and original" coats of arms. [28]
  Archibald Russell 5 April 1954 – 30 November 1955 Russell was the son of a Chief Constable of the West Riding of Yorkshire. He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, and entered the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1915. Although he served in the Colonial Office during the first World War and in the British embassy at Madrid afterwards, he was promoted to Lancaster Herald in 1922 and was Earl Marshal's secretary (1928–44). A keen art historian and collector of drawings and prints, he published a number of works on William Blake. [29]
  Capt. Sir John Heaton-Armstrong 20 January 1956 – 27 August 1967 Following schooling at Eton and Trinity Hall, Cambridge, Heaton-Armstrong was called to the Bar and fought in France and Palestine during the first World War. From 1920 to 1921 he served in the Colonial Office, but joined the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1922 before a promotion to Chester Herald in 1926. [30]
  Lt-Col. John Walker 23 December 1968[31] – 1978 (retirement) The son of an Indian Army officer and the grandson of a Lincolnshire baronet (through his mother), Walker trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and served in the Yorkshire and Lancashire Regiment and then the 14th Sikhs. He took on a number of staff roles in India, before joining the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1947. A promotion to Lancaster Herald followed in 1953 and he served as registrar at the college from 1960 to 1967 and Inspector of the Regimental Colours, 1977–78. He died aged 71 in 1984. [32]
  Sir Anthony Wagner 2 October 1978[33] – 5 May 1995 Wagner was the son of a schoolmaster and a graduate of Balliol College, Oxford. His first appointment at the college was as Portcullis in 1931, but during the second World War, he served in the War Office and then the Ministry of Town and County Planning; a keen architectural historian, he helped to draw up guidelines on listing buildings. He was promoted to Richmond in 1943 and left the civil service for the college in 1946, where he was appointed Garter in 1961. Wagner oversaw the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill and the investiture of the Prince of Wales, and was the first director of the Heralds' Museum; on his retirement as Garter he became Clarenceux. A leading genealogist and historian of the college, Wagner published a number of important books on the topics, including Heralds of England, Heralds and Heraldry in the Middles Ages, Pedigree and Progress and English Genealogy, alongside several catalogues of the college's manuscript collection; in 1957, Oxford University awarded him the degree of DLitt and he was twice knighted, as KCB and KCVO. [34][35][36][37]
  John Brooke-Little 19 June 1995 – 1997 (retirement) Brooke-Little was educated at Clayesmore School and New College, Oxford, where his interest in heraldry grew and his friends included the future Garter, Colin Cole. He joined the Earl Marshal's staff in 1952 and was a Gold Stick Officer at the Coronation in 1953. Appointed Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1956 and Richmond Herald in 1967, Brooke-Little also served as registrar at the college (1974–82), Norroy and Ulster King of Arms and registrar of the Order of St Patrick (1980–85) and director of the Heralds' Museum from 1991 till his retirement. He founded the Heraldry Society in 1947 and served as its chairman for fifty years, after which he was its president; he edited its journal, The Coat of Arms, until 2004. His published work included updated editions of Boutell's Heraldry and Fox-Davies's Complete Guide to Heraldry. According to the Telegraph, he was the "brightest and ablest herald of his generation", but did not attain Gartership partly due to his "chaotic working practices". He died in 2006. [38][39][40]
  Hubert Chesshyre 28 April 1997 – 2010 (retirement) After graduating from Trinity College, Cambridge, and Christ Church, Oxford, Chesshyre became Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1970, before serving as Chester Herald between 1978 and 1995 and Honorary Genealogist to the Royal Victorian Order from 1987 to 2010. He was a member of the Westminster Abbey Architectural Advisory Panel and the Heraldry Society's Council. Along with Thomas Woodcock, he co-authored the Dictionary of British Arms: Medieval Armorial, volume 1. He was later found to have committed child sexual abuse.[41] [42][43]
  Patric Dickinson 1 September 2010 – 2021 (retirement) Dickinson was educated at Exeter College, Oxford, where he served as president of the Oxford Union in 1972. A research assistant at the College of Arms since 1968, his first heraldic appointment was ten years later, when he became Rouge Dragon Pursuivant. Promotions to Richmond Herald (1989) and Norroy and Ulster King of Arms (2010) followed, before he became Clarenceux. Having served as the college's treasurer since 1995, Dickinson was also the Earl Marshal's secretary from 1996 to 2012 and has been president of the Society of Genealogists since 2005. He is a Bencher of Middle Temple. [44][45]
  Timothy Duke Appointed 1 April 2021 [46]

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Dates down to 1963 are from Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 75–101. The start date is the date of the Patent instituting them as Garter except where otherwise noted. Appointees died in office unless otherwise stated.
  2. ^ Date of creation, given in Godfrey and Wagner 1963, p. 76

Citations

  1. ^ Office-holders down to 1963 are from Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 75–101
  2. ^ a b c Godfrey and Wagner 1963, p. 75
  3. ^ Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 75–76
  4. ^ Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 76–77
  5. ^ Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 77–78
  6. ^ Godfrey and Wagner 1963, pp. 78–79
  7. ^ Catalogue entry item # 4358-1857, Victoria and Albert Museum
  8. ^ a b Godfrey and Wagner, 1963 pp. 53, 88
  9. ^ Peter Sherlock, "Bysshe, Sir Edward (c.1610–1679)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  10. ^ Thomas Woodcock, "St George, Sir Henry (1581–1644)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008
  11. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 55-56, 90
  12. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 58-59, 91
  13. ^ C. E. A. Cheesman, "Leake, Stephen Martin (1702–1773)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  14. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 59-60, 91
  15. ^ Thompson Cooper, "Townley, Sir Charles (1713–1774)", rev. J. A. Marchand, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008
  16. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 60, 91
  17. ^ Thompson Cooper, "Browne, Thomas (1702–1780)", rev. J. A. Marchand, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  18. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 61, 92
  19. ^ P. L. Dickinson, "Bigland, Ralph (1712–1784)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008
  20. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 61-62, 92
  21. ^ D. V. White, "Heard, Sir Isaac (1730–1822)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2006
  22. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 63-65, 93
  23. ^ Thomas Woodcock, "Nayler, Sir George (bap. 1764, d. 1831)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008
  24. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 65, 93
  25. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 66, 93
  26. ^ G. S. Woods, "Cokayne, George Edward (1825–1911)", rev. P. W. Hammond, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  27. ^ Blackmansbury. Pinhorns. 1967. p. 54. Retrieved 24 May 2021. Charles Harold Athill, MVO, FSA (1853–1922) was Clarenceux King of Arms from 1919 until his death.
  28. ^ a b Wagner and Godfrey 1963, pp. 74-101
  29. ^ "Russell, Archibald George Blomefield", Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014
  30. ^ "Heaton-Armstrong, Sir John Dunamace", Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014
  31. ^ London Gazette, 31 December 1968 (issue 44755), p. 13920
  32. ^ "Walker, John Riddell Bromhead", Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014
  33. ^ London Gazette, 5 October 1978 (issue number 47657), p. 11838
  34. ^ Godfrey and Wagner, pp. 73-74
  35. ^ "Wagner, Sir Anthony (Richard)", Who Was Who [online edition April 2014] (Oxford University Press)
  36. ^ Thomas, Jr, Robert McG. (20 May 1995). "Sir Anthony Wagner, 86, Dies; Medievalist and Senior Herald". New York Times. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  37. ^ Adrian Ailes, "Wagner, Sir Anthony Richard (1908–1995)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  38. ^ London Gazette, 27 June 1995 (issue 54085), p. 8847
  39. ^ "John Brooke-Little", The Telegraph, 16 February 2006
  40. ^ "Brooke-Little, John Philip Brooke", Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014
  41. ^ Jamie Doward (30 March 2019). "Honours system under scrutiny after sex abuser kept title for years". The Observer. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  42. ^ Supplement to the London Gazette, 2 May 1997 (issue 54755), p. 5289
  43. ^ "Chesshyre, (David) Hubert (Boothby)", Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, Nov 2014
  44. ^ "No. 59536". The London Gazette. 6 September 2010. p. 17131.
  45. ^ "Dickinson, Patric Laurence", Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, Nov 2014
  46. ^ "No. 63314". The London Gazette. 8 April 2021. p. 6485.

Bibliography

  • The College of Arms, Queen Victoria Street : being the sixteenth and final monograph of the London Survey Committee, Walter H. Godfrey, assisted by Sir Anthony Wagner, with a complete list of the officers of arms, prepared by H. Stanford London, (London, 1963)
  • A History of the College of Arms &c, Mark Noble, (London, 1804)

External links edit

  • The College of Arms
  • CUHGS Officer of Arms Index

clarenceux, king, arms, historically, often, spelled, clarencieux, both, pronounced, klarr, officer, arms, college, arms, london, clarenceux, senior, provincial, kings, arms, jurisdiction, that, part, england, south, river, trent, office, almost, certainly, ex. Clarenceux King of Arms historically often spelled Clarencieux both pronounced ˈ k l aer e n s uː KLARR en soo is an officer of arms at the College of Arms in London Clarenceux is the senior of the two provincial kings of arms and his jurisdiction is that part of England south of the River Trent The office almost certainly existed in 1420 and there is a fair degree of probability that there was a Claroncell rex heraldus armorum in 1334 There are also some early references to the southern part of England being termed Surroy but there is not firm evidence that there was ever a king of arms so called The title of Clarenceux is supposedly derived from either the Honour or estates of dominion of the Clare earls of Gloucester or from the Dukedom of Clarence 1362 With minor variations the arms of Clarenceux have from the late fifteenth century been blazoned as Argent a Cross on a Chief Gules a Lion passant guardant crowned with an open Crown Or Clarenceux King of ArmsThe arms of office of the Clarenceux King of Arms Heraldic traditionGallo BritishJurisdictionEngland and Wales south of the river TrentGoverning bodyCollege of ArmsTimothy Duke was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms on 1 April 2021 Contents 1 Holders of the office 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHolders of the office editBrackets indicate a date for which there is evidence the named person held this office nbsp Clarenceux King of Arms Thomas Hawley in a 1556 grant of arms nbsp The former Clarenceux King of Arms Patric Dickinson on Garter Day dressed in the robe of the Secretary of the Order of the GarterArms Name 1 Dates of office nb 1 Notes RefAndrew 1334 This otherwise obscure figure was named as Clarencell rex Heraldus in a Wardrobe Account record dated 19 June 1334 2 Richard Spenser 1383 Spenser is recorded as Heraud Mariscall del Suth on 16 September 1383 According to Godfrey and Wagner he was possibly sent to Ireland in 1394 but no other details of his life are known 2 nbsp William Horsley 1420 Horseley is recorded in the Chapter minutes at the college dated 5 January 1420 Later lists of heralds state he was Leopard herald and Ireland King of Arms while Thomas Lant called him Guyene and Clarenceux in his roll of officers of arms no contemporary evidence in support of these claims has emerged 2 nbsp John Cosoun c 1425 6 February 1428 Cousoun was Arundel Herald in 1415 and according to Godfrey and Wagner must have been in that office in 1413 when an Arundel Herald was sent to Portugal He served John Mowbray Duke of Norfolk as Mowbray Herald from c 1416 He married one Emma and had at least one son Richard living in 1426 3 nbsp Roger Legh or Lygh 8 May 1435 nb 2 c 1460 Legh was later said to have been Wallingford Rouge Croix and Chester Pursuivants but there is no or contradictory evidence for these claims He was appointed Gloucester Herald by 22 February 1431 As Gloucester he went to France and as Clarenceux he was sent to Scotland and Normandy before attending Garter missions to Aragon and Poland He was married to one Margaret and apparently died poor one of his books was later divided into four parts the Military Roll a roll relating to the Aldermen of London another to the Kings of England and the last relating to Parliament which were divided between the British Museum MSS Harl 4205 and Add 45133 and the Guildhall Library 4 nbsp William Hawkeslowe c 1461 1476 Hawkeslowe was said to have held a number of heraldic offices Wallingford Bluemantle Leopard and Guyene King of Arms possibly Herald but corroborating evidence is lacking He was appointed Clarenceux between December 1460 and November 1461 before being sent to Scotland He left for France in 1475 but drowned in the Spanish seas the following year Apparently indebted at the time of his death his widow and children were provided for by Edward IV A number of grants of arms are known from his tenure but no other material appears to have survived 5 nbsp Sir Thomas Holme 1 August 1476 1493 Although said to have been Falcon pursuivant in the reign of Henry VI Holme s first heraldic appointments for which any evidence has been found is as Rouge Croix 1457 He was Windsor Herald in 1461 and Norroy King of Arms from 1467 He resigned as Clarenceux on 4 January 1485 but was reappointed by patent on 1 May 1487 and served until his death He took part in a number of diplomatic missions to Scotland Burgundy France Brittany and Denmark and was godfather to Thomas Wriothesley Garter King of Arms 6 nbsp Roger Machado 1494 1510 Diplomat and officer of arms of Portuguese extraction He was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms on 24 January 1494 nbsp Christopher Carlill 4 November 1510 1511 nbsp Thomas Benolt 1511 1534 nbsp Thomas Tonge 1534 1536 nbsp Enamelled plaque of Thomas Tonge inscribed 1554 The armys of the ryght worshepful Maister Tonge otherwyse called Maister Clarencivs and mesteris Susan hys wyfe A gilt copper plaque displaying in champleve enamel the arms of Tonge Azure a bend cotised between six martlets impaling White Or a chevron gules between three popinjays vert armed and langued gules within a bordure azure bezanty dated 1554 survives in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum London It is similar to Stall plates of Knights of the Garter used to denote seats reserved for the Knights in St George s Chapel Windsor Castle The whole is enclosed within a wreath A motto in French is inscribed along the top ESPOER EN DIEU Hope in God and an inscription in English beneath The armys of the ryght worshepful Maister Tonge otherwyse called Maister Clarencivs and mesteris Susan hys wyfe Thomas Tonge held the offices of York Herald and Norroy King of Arms In 1534 he was created Clarenceaux King of Arms He died in 1536 and was buried in the Church of St Mary Overy in Southwark now Southwark Cathedral His wife was Susanna White a daughter of Richard White of Hutton Essex She survived her husband by nearly 30 years and was the First Lady of the Privy Chamber to Queen Mary 7 nbsp Thomas Hawley 1536 1557 nbsp William Harvey 1557 1567 nbsp Robert Cooke 1567 1594 nbsp Richard Lee 1594 1597 nbsp William Camden 1597 1623 nbsp Sir Richard St George 1623 1635 nbsp Sir William Le Neve 1635 1646 nbsp Arthur Squibb 1646 1650 nbsp Sir Edward Bysshe 12 June 1650 1658 resigned The eldest son of a Surrey gentleman Bysshe was a Member of Parliament for Bletchingly Reigate and Gatton He was a Parliamentarian who took the covenant intruded in Garter s office c 1643 and served on committees to regulate the heralds in 1641 and 1645 Parliament confirmed him as Garter on 20 October 1646 and as Clarenceux in 1650 Although he resigned from the latter eight years later he was re appointed in 1661 shortly after he was deposed as Garter during the Restoration According to Godfrey and Wagner he was a good armourist however his visitations provide only brief accounts of the families concerned and he neglected his duties both parliamentary and heraldic from the 1660s Despite these failings he had ensured that the college and its records remained open during the Interregnum much to the benefit of antiquaries including his colleague Sir William Dugdale 8 9 nbsp William Ryley 1658 1661 nbsp Sir Edward Bysshe 10 March 1661 15 December 1679 Reappointment see above 8 nbsp Sir Henry St George 28 January 1680 16 June 1703 promoted The eighth son of Sir Henry St George Garter Henry the younger became Clarenceux King of Arms after appointments as Richmond Herald 1660 and Norroy King of Arms 1677 he succeeded his brother Sir Thomas as Garter King of Arms in 1703 He was remembered by contemporaries as a timorous animal and incommunicative sordid and of little learning but he visited 12 counties as Clarenceux and donated the profits from six towards the rebuilding of the college after the Great Fire of London His manuscript collection was sold after his death and later sold again at auction some have returned to the college but most remain scattered in collections 10 11 nbsp Sir John Vanbrugh 1704 1726 nbsp Knox Ward 1726 1741 nbsp Stephen Martin Leake 30 November 1741 19 December 1754 promoted Leake was born Stephen Martin the son of a naval officer from Essex his maternal uncle Admiral Sir John Leake left his estate to Martin s parents on the condition that they adopt his surname which they did in 1721 Despite this and work at the Navy Office the family lost out in the South Seas crash and Leake was forced to find employment After joining the Society of Antiquaries and publishing Nummi Britannici historia he joined the college as Lancaster Herald in 1727 and was promoted to Norroy in 1729 after serving as Clarenceux he was promoted to Garter King of Arms in 1754 Leake was less interested in genealogy than the rights and history of the heralds he petitioned for the college to have a monopoly on the researching of arms and unsuccessfully tried to revive the visitations a proposal which Anstis and the government opposed He also opened the college s register for Dissenting and Jewish births and carried out two Garter missions On his death his collections passed to his brother and were eventually bought by the college 12 13 nbsp Charles Townley 11 January 1755 27 April 1773 promoted Born at Tower Hill in London Townley was the son of a merchant and educated at the Merchant Taylor s School from 1727 He bought his appointment as York Herald in 1735 he was promoted to Norroy in 1751 and after his 18 years as Clarenceux he was appointed Garter King of Arms in 1773 According to his predecessor Stephen Martin Leake he received a large fortune around 1755 and neglected his heraldic duties thereafter He was nonetheless knighted in 1761 A number of his collections are in the possession of the college including transcribed memorial inscriptions 14 15 nbsp Thomas Browne 13 May 1773 15 August 1774 promoted A native of Derbyshire Browne was a land surveyor who was said to have worked for the Duke of Norfolk and converted his favour into heraldic appointments the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography records that he carried out works for John Warburton Somerset Herald He was successively appointed Blanch Lyon 1727 Bluemantle 1737 Lancaster 1744 Norroy 1761 and Clarenceux before his appointment as Garter in 1774 Despite his success as a surveyor he was reputed to have known little of heraldry and neglected his duties at the college 16 17 nbsp Ralph Bigland 12 September 1774 2 March 1780 promoted Bigland was the son of a Middlesex tallow chandler whose ancestors have been traced to Westmorland and Lancashire He was apprenticed to a cheesemonger in 1728 and after 9 years service he entered his own trade and carried out his practice for over 20 years He travelled to the Low Countries and Scotland and supplied cheese to the allied armies during the War of the Austrian Succession it was on these travels that he began noting down memorial inscriptions a pursuit to which he would devote his life He compiled a huge collection of inscriptions relating to Gloucestershire where he travelled extensively from 1750 onwards These interests brought him to the college where he was appointed Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1757 and promoted to Somerset Herald in 1759 Norroy in 1773 Clarenceux and then Garter in 1780 A competent and methodical genealogist and draughtsman he took a particular interest in parish registers and campaigned for their indexing and the inclusion of greater detail in them After his death the majority of his Gloucestershire notes and transcriptions were published although a number remained in manuscript form until the 1990s 18 19 nbsp Isaac Heard 16 March 1780 1 May 1784 promoted A native of Devon Heard was educated at Honiton Grammar School before serving in the Royal Navy between 1745 and 1751 He then embarked on a career as a merchant first in Bilbao Spain and then London An appointment as Bluemantle Pursuivant followed in 1759 with a promotion to Lancaster Herald two years later in 1774 he was appointment Norroy King of Arms and Brunswick Herald before his promotion to Clarenceux in 1780 and then Garter in 1784 he served as Earl Marshal s secretary 1782 84 and resigned as Brunswick in 1814 Heard was a proponent of the landscape heraldry which proved popular in the late Georgian period and inspired by his earlier travels took a precocious interest in American genealogy As a long serving herald his genealogical practice was large and much of his manuscript collection ended up in the college 20 21 nbsp Thomas Lock 18 May 1784 24 February 1803 promoted nbsp George Harrison 1803 1820 nbsp Sir George Nayler 30 May 1820 11 May 1822 promoted The son of a Gloucestershire surgeon Nayler practised as a miniature painter before buying his way into the offices of Blanc Coursier Herald and Genealogist of the Order of the Bath in 1792 He used the same means to obtain a place in the college as Bluemantle Pursuivant a year later promotion to York Herald followed in 1794 after the accidental death of its incumbent Further appointments as King of Arms to the Royal Guelphic Order and the Order of St Michael and St George 1815 and 1818 respectively followed before he became Clarenceux served as deputy Garter at George IV s Coronation in 1821 and was promoted to Garter in 1822 In the latter office he continued to run a large practice at the college and conducted missions to France Denmark Russia and Portugal Much of his earlier heraldic career involved disputes with the other heralds about his sole right to record pedigrees of the Knight of the Bath despite objections he compiled 47 volumes which are now in the college s possession He also worked on a history of George IV s Coronation which was only partially published in his lifetime and a manuscript history of the Order of the Bath also owned by the college 22 23 nbsp Ralph Bigland 4 June 1822 26 November 1831 promoted Bigland was born on 1 May 1757 the son of Joseph Owen of Salford Lancashire but changed his surname in 1774 at the desire of his maternal uncle Ralph Bigland Garter That year he became Rouge Dragon Pursuivant and was appointed Richmond Herald in 1780 Promotions to Norroy 1803 and Clarenceux 1822 King of Arms followed before his appointment as Garter in 1831 he is the last officer to hold all three Kingships 24 nbsp Sir William Woods 26 November 1831 23 July 1838 promoted By tradition Woods was reputed the son of the 11th Duke of Norfolk but he bore the arms matriculated in 1812 in Scotland by one George Woods a tailor of London and brother to a comedian called William Whatever the case details of his early life are also sparse He was appointed secretary to the Knights Commander and Companions of the Order of the Bath in 1815 and then registrar of the Royal Guelphic Order later that year He tried for Ross Herald in Scotland in 1816 but his first heraldic appointment was as Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1819 followed by Norfolk Herald in 1825 which he held jointly with Bluemantle His promotion to Clarenceux King of Arms included service as deputy Garter c 1836 before a promotion to Garter itself in 1838 25 nbsp Sir Edmund Lodge 1838 1839 nbsp Joseph Hawker 1839 1846 nbsp Francis Martin 1846 1848 nbsp James Pulman 1848 1859 nbsp Robert Laurie 1859 1882 nbsp Walter Blount 1882 1894 nbsp George Cokayne 1894 1911 Cokayne was born George Adams but took his mother s maiden name as instructed in her will He was educated privately and at Exeter College Oxford graduating in 1848 He was called to the Bar in 1853 but his first heraldic appointment was as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant in 1859 followed by promotions to Lancaster Herald in 1870 and Norroy King of Arms in 1882 As a herald he took part in Garter missions to Portugal Russia Saxony Spain and Italy but it was as a genealogist that he is best remembered As G E C he published two enormous and scholarly works The Complete Peerage and The Complete Baronetage the former was enhanced by other editors in a second edition and is an authority on the history of the Peerage 26 nbsp Sir William Weldon 1911 1919 nbsp Charles Athill 1919 1922 27 nbsp William Lindsay 1922 1926 nbsp Gordon Lee 1926 1927 Lee was born in Aberdeen the son of a clergyman and local historian and educated at Westminster School After working as an artist he became Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1889 Promotions followed York Herald in 1905 and Norroy King of Arms in 1922 He also served as Earl Marshal s secretary in 1911 was an authority on Japanese art and edited The Episcopal Arms of England and Wales 28 nbsp Sir Arthur Cochrane 1928 1954 The son of a clergyman and hospital master Cochrane was a wine merchant before becoming secretary to Alfred Scott Gatty Garter King of Arms He was appointed Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1904 Chester Herald in 1915 and Norroy King of Arms in 1926 Godfrey and Wagner state that he produced happy and original coats of arms 28 nbsp Archibald Russell 5 April 1954 30 November 1955 Russell was the son of a Chief Constable of the West Riding of Yorkshire He was educated at Eton and Christ Church Oxford and entered the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1915 Although he served in the Colonial Office during the first World War and in the British embassy at Madrid afterwards he was promoted to Lancaster Herald in 1922 and was Earl Marshal s secretary 1928 44 A keen art historian and collector of drawings and prints he published a number of works on William Blake 29 nbsp Capt Sir John Heaton Armstrong 20 January 1956 27 August 1967 Following schooling at Eton and Trinity Hall Cambridge Heaton Armstrong was called to the Bar and fought in France and Palestine during the first World War From 1920 to 1921 he served in the Colonial Office but joined the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1922 before a promotion to Chester Herald in 1926 30 nbsp Lt Col John Walker 23 December 1968 31 1978 retirement The son of an Indian Army officer and the grandson of a Lincolnshire baronet through his mother Walker trained at the Royal Military College Sandhurst and served in the Yorkshire and Lancashire Regiment and then the 14th Sikhs He took on a number of staff roles in India before joining the college as Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1947 A promotion to Lancaster Herald followed in 1953 and he served as registrar at the college from 1960 to 1967 and Inspector of the Regimental Colours 1977 78 He died aged 71 in 1984 32 nbsp Sir Anthony Wagner 2 October 1978 33 5 May 1995 Wagner was the son of a schoolmaster and a graduate of Balliol College Oxford His first appointment at the college was as Portcullis in 1931 but during the second World War he served in the War Office and then the Ministry of Town and County Planning a keen architectural historian he helped to draw up guidelines on listing buildings He was promoted to Richmond in 1943 and left the civil service for the college in 1946 where he was appointed Garter in 1961 Wagner oversaw the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill and the investiture of the Prince of Wales and was the first director of the Heralds Museum on his retirement as Garter he became Clarenceux A leading genealogist and historian of the college Wagner published a number of important books on the topics including Heralds of England Heralds and Heraldry in the Middles Ages Pedigree and Progress and English Genealogy alongside several catalogues of the college s manuscript collection in 1957 Oxford University awarded him the degree of DLitt and he was twice knighted as KCB and KCVO 34 35 36 37 nbsp John Brooke Little 19 June 1995 1997 retirement Brooke Little was educated at Clayesmore School and New College Oxford where his interest in heraldry grew and his friends included the future Garter Colin Cole He joined the Earl Marshal s staff in 1952 and was a Gold Stick Officer at the Coronation in 1953 Appointed Bluemantle Pursuivant in 1956 and Richmond Herald in 1967 Brooke Little also served as registrar at the college 1974 82 Norroy and Ulster King of Arms and registrar of the Order of St Patrick 1980 85 and director of the Heralds Museum from 1991 till his retirement He founded the Heraldry Society in 1947 and served as its chairman for fifty years after which he was its president he edited its journal The Coat of Arms until 2004 His published work included updated editions of Boutell s Heraldry and Fox Davies s Complete Guide to Heraldry According to the Telegraph he was the brightest and ablest herald of his generation but did not attain Gartership partly due to his chaotic working practices He died in 2006 38 39 40 nbsp Hubert Chesshyre 28 April 1997 2010 retirement After graduating from Trinity College Cambridge and Christ Church Oxford Chesshyre became Rouge Croix Pursuivant in 1970 before serving as Chester Herald between 1978 and 1995 and Honorary Genealogist to the Royal Victorian Order from 1987 to 2010 He was a member of the Westminster Abbey Architectural Advisory Panel and the Heraldry Society s Council Along with Thomas Woodcock he co authored the Dictionary of British Arms Medieval Armorial volume 1 He was later found to have committed child sexual abuse 41 42 43 nbsp Patric Dickinson 1 September 2010 2021 retirement Dickinson was educated at Exeter College Oxford where he served as president of the Oxford Union in 1972 A research assistant at the College of Arms since 1968 his first heraldic appointment was ten years later when he became Rouge Dragon Pursuivant Promotions to Richmond Herald 1989 and Norroy and Ulster King of Arms 2010 followed before he became Clarenceux Having served as the college s treasurer since 1995 Dickinson was also the Earl Marshal s secretary from 1996 to 2012 and has been president of the Society of Genealogists since 2005 He is a Bencher of Middle Temple 44 45 nbsp Timothy Duke Appointed 1 April 2021 46 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clarenceux King of Arms Heraldry Officer of ArmsReferences editNotes Dates down to 1963 are from Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 75 101 The start date is the date of the Patent instituting them as Garter except where otherwise noted Appointees died in office unless otherwise stated Date of creation given in Godfrey and Wagner 1963 p 76 Citations Office holders down to 1963 are from Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 75 101 a b c Godfrey and Wagner 1963 p 75 Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 75 76 Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 76 77 Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 77 78 Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 78 79 Catalogue entry item 4358 1857 Victoria and Albert Museum a b Godfrey and Wagner 1963 pp 53 88 Peter Sherlock Bysshe Sir Edward c 1610 1679 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Thomas Woodcock St George Sir Henry 1581 1644 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2008 Godfrey and Wagner pp 55 56 90 Godfrey and Wagner pp 58 59 91 C E A Cheesman Leake Stephen Martin 1702 1773 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Godfrey and Wagner pp 59 60 91 Thompson Cooper Townley Sir Charles 1713 1774 rev J A Marchand Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2008 Godfrey and Wagner pp 60 91 Thompson Cooper Browne Thomas 1702 1780 rev J A Marchand Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Godfrey and Wagner pp 61 92 P L Dickinson Bigland Ralph 1712 1784 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2008 Godfrey and Wagner pp 61 62 92 D V White Heard Sir Isaac 1730 1822 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn May 2006 Godfrey and Wagner pp 63 65 93 Thomas Woodcock Nayler Sir George bap 1764 d 1831 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2008 Godfrey and Wagner pp 65 93 Godfrey and Wagner pp 66 93 G S Woods Cokayne George Edward 1825 1911 rev P W Hammond Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Blackmansbury Pinhorns 1967 p 54 Retrieved 24 May 2021 Charles Harold Athill MVO FSA 1853 1922 was Clarenceux King of Arms from 1919 until his death a b Wagner and Godfrey 1963 pp 74 101 Russell Archibald George Blomefield Who Was Who A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 1920 2015 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn April 2014 Heaton Armstrong Sir John Dunamace Who Was Who A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 1920 2015 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn April 2014 London Gazette 31 December 1968 issue 44755 p 13920 Walker John Riddell Bromhead Who Was Who A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 1920 2015 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn April 2014 London Gazette 5 October 1978 issue number 47657 p 11838 Godfrey and Wagner pp 73 74 Wagner Sir Anthony Richard Who Was Who online edition April 2014 Oxford University Press Thomas Jr Robert McG 20 May 1995 Sir Anthony Wagner 86 Dies Medievalist and Senior Herald New York Times Retrieved 12 August 2015 Adrian Ailes Wagner Sir Anthony Richard 1908 1995 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 London Gazette 27 June 1995 issue 54085 p 8847 John Brooke Little The Telegraph 16 February 2006 Brooke Little John Philip Brooke Who Was Who A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 1920 2015 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn April 2014 Jamie Doward 30 March 2019 Honours system under scrutiny after sex abuser kept title for years The Observer Retrieved 1 April 2019 Supplement to the London Gazette 2 May 1997 issue 54755 p 5289 Chesshyre David Hubert Boothby Who s Who 2014 A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 2014 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn Nov 2014 No 59536 The London Gazette 6 September 2010 p 17131 Dickinson Patric Laurence Who s Who 2014 A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 2014 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn Nov 2014 No 63314 The London Gazette 8 April 2021 p 6485 Bibliography The College of Arms Queen Victoria Street being the sixteenth and final monograph of the London Survey Committee Walter H Godfrey assisted by Sir Anthony Wagner with a complete list of the officers of arms prepared by H Stanford London London 1963 A History of the College of Arms amp c Mark Noble London 1804 External links editThe College of Arms CUHGS Officer of Arms Index Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clarenceux King of Arms amp oldid 1189337651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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