fbpx
Wikipedia

College of Arms

The College of Arms, or Heralds' College, is a royal corporation consisting of professional officers of arms, with jurisdiction over England, Wales, Northern Ireland and some Commonwealth realms. The heralds are appointed by the British Sovereign and are delegated authority to act on behalf of the Crown in all matters of heraldry, the granting of new coats of arms, genealogical research and the recording of pedigrees. The College is also the official body responsible for matters relating to the flying of flags on land, and it maintains the official registers of flags and other national symbols. Though a part of the Royal Household of the United Kingdom, the College is self-financed, unsupported by any public funds.

College of Arms
Headquarters of the College of Arms (2011), with the dome of St Paul's Cathedral behind
Company typeRoyal Corporation
Founded2 March 1484 (incorporated)[1]
18 July 1555 (reincorporated)[2]
FounderRichard III of England
Mary I of England & Philip II of Spain
Headquarters130 Queen Victoria Street
City of London
EC4V 4BT[3]
Area served
England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Australia and New Zealand
Key people
Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk, Hereditary Earl Marshal;
David White, Garter Principal King of Arms
ServicesRecording, granting and regulation of heraldry, coats of arms and pedigrees
ParentRoyal Household of the United Kingdom[4]
Websitewww.college-of-arms.gov.uk

Founded by royal charter in 1484 by King Richard III of England, the College is one of the few remaining official heraldic authorities in Europe. Within the United Kingdom, there are two such authorities, the Court of the Lord Lyon in Scotland and the College of Arms for the rest of the United Kingdom. The College has had its home in the City of London since its foundation, and has been at its present location, on Queen Victoria Street, since 1555.[a] The College of Arms also undertakes and consults on the planning of many ceremonial occasions such as coronations, state funerals, the annual Garter Service and the State Opening of Parliament. Heralds of the College accompany the sovereign on many of these occasions.

The College comprises thirteen officers or heralds: three Kings of Arms, six Heralds of Arms and four Pursuivants of Arms. There are also seven officers extraordinary, who take part in ceremonial occasions but are not part of the College. The entire corporation is overseen by the Earl Marshal, a hereditary office always held by the Duke of Norfolk.

History edit

Foundation edit

 
Depiction of King Richard III, the College of Arms' founder, his wife Queen Anne Neville, and their son Edward of Middleham, Prince of Wales, with their heraldic crests and badges from the Rous Roll. A roll of arms painted by John Rous around 1483–1485 for the Earl of Warwick.

King Richard III's interest in heraldry was indicated by his possession of two important rolls of arms.[5] While still Duke of Gloucester and Constable of England for his brother (Edward IV) from 1469, he in the latter capacity supervised the heralds and made plans for the reform of their organisation. Soon after his accession to the throne he created Sir John Howard as Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England, who became the first Howard appointed to both positions.[5]

In the first year of his reign, the royal heralds were incorporated under royal charter dated 2 March 1484, under the Latin name "Le Garter regis armorum Anglicorum, regis armorum partium Australium, regis armorum partium Borealium, regis armorum Wallæ et heraldorum, prosecutorum, sive pursevandorum armorum."[6][7] Translated as: "the Garter King of Arms of England, the King of Arms of the Southern parts, the King of Arms of the Northern parts, the King of Arms of Wales, and all other heralds and pursuivants of arms".[8] The charter then goes on to state that the heralds "for the time being, shall be in perpetuity a body corporate in fact and name, and shall preserve a succession unbroken."[8] This charter titled "Literæ de incorporatione heraldorum" is now held in the British Museum.[9] There has been some evidence that prior to this charter, the royal heralds had already in some ways behaved like a corporation as early as 1420.[1][10][11] Nevertheless, the charter is the earliest surviving document to affirm the chapter as a corporate body of heralds.[9] The charter outlines the constitution of the officers, their hierarchy, the privileges conferred upon them and their jurisdiction over all heraldic matters in the Kingdom of England.[12]

The King empowered the College to have and use only one common seal of authority, and also instructed them to find a chaplain to celebrate mass daily for himself, Anne Neville, the Queen Consort, and his heir, Prince Edward.[5][7] The College was also granted a house named Coldharbour (formerly Poulteney's Inn) on Upper Thames Street in the parish of All-Hallows-the-Less, for storing records and living space for the heralds.[5][13][14] The house, built by Sir John de Pulteney, four times Lord Mayor of London, was said to be one of the greatest in the City of London.[15][16]

Varying fortunes edit

 
Prince Arthur's Book, an armorial of arms for Arthur, Prince of Wales, c. 1520, depicting the proliferation of lions in English heraldry

The defeat and death of Richard III at Bosworth field was a double blow for the heralds, for they lost both their patron, the King, and their benefactor, the Earl Marshal, who was also slain.[17] The victorious Henry Tudor was crowned King Henry VII soon after the battle. Henry's first Parliament of 1485 passed an Act of Resumption, in which large grants of crown properties made by his two predecessors to their supporters were cancelled.[18] Whether this act affected the status of the College's charter is debatable; however, the act did facilitate the de facto recovery of Coldharbour to the crown. Henry then granted the house to his mother Lady Margaret Beaufort, for life.[19] This was because it was supposed that the house was granted personally to John Writhe the Garter King of Arms and not to the heralds as a corporation. As a result, the heralds were left destitute and many of their books and records were lost.[1][7][11] Despite this ill treatment from the King, the heralds' position at the royal court remained, and they were compelled by the King to attend him at all times (albeit in rotation).[20]

Of the reign of King Henry VIII, it has been said that: "at no time since its establishment, was [the college] in higher estimation, nor in fuller employment, than in this reign."[21] Henry VIII was fond of pomp and magnificence, and thus gave the heralds plenty of opportunity to exercise their roles in his court. In addition, the members of the College were also expected to be regularly despatched to foreign courts on missions, whether to declare war, accompany armies, summon garrisons or deliver messages to foreign potentates and generals.[21] During his magnificent meeting with Francis I of France at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520, Henry VIII brought with him eighteen officers of arms, probably all he had, to regulate the many tournaments and ceremonies held there.[22]

 
Officers of the College of Arms riding in procession to the Westminster Tournament, from a tourney roll, made during the reign of King Henry VIII in 1511. The pursuivants to the left are identified by their reversed tabards, while the figure in the right (with the black hat) is probably Garter King of Arms Sir Thomas Wriothesley.

Nevertheless, the College's petitions to the King and to the Duke of Suffolk in 1524 and 1533 for the return of their chapter house were rejected, and the heralds were left to hold chapter in whichever palace the royal court happened to be at the time. They even resorted to meeting at each other's houses, at various guildhalls and even a hospital.[23] Furthermore, Henry VIII's habit of raising ladies in the situation of subjects to queens, and then awarding them many heraldic augmentations, which also extended to their respective families, was considered harmful to the science of heraldry.[22] The noted antiquarian and heraldist Charles Boutell commented in 1863, that the: "Arms of Queen Anne Boleyn are the first which exemplify the usage, introduced by Henry VIII, of granting to his Consorts 'Augmentations' to their paternal arms. It is a striking illustration of the degenerate condition of Heraldry under the second Tudor Sovereign."[24]

It was also in this reign in 1530, that Henry VIII conferred on the College one of its most important duties for almost a century, the heraldic visitation.[25] The provincial Kings of Arms were commissioned under a royal warrant to enter all houses and churches and given authority to deface and destroy all arms unlawfully used by any knight, esquire, or gentleman. Around the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries this duty became even more necessary as the monasteries were previously repositories of local genealogical records. From then on, all genealogical records and the duty of recording them was subsumed by the College. These visitations were serious affairs, and many individuals were charged and heavily fined for breaking the law of arms. Hundreds of these visitations were carried out well into the 17th century; the last was in 1686.[11][26]

Reincorporation edit

 
Roll of grants of arms during the Tudor period by Sir Thomas Wriothesley, c 1528

The College found a patroness in Mary I, although it must have been embarrassing for both sides, after the heralds initially proclaimed the right of her rival Lady Jane Grey to the throne. When King Edward VI died on 6 July 1553, Lady Jane Grey was proclaimed queen four days later, first in Cheapside then in Fleet Street by two heralds, trumpets blowing before them. However, when popular support swung to Mary's side, the Lord Mayor of London and his councils accompanied by the Garter King of Arms, two other heralds, and four trumpeters returned to Cheapside to proclaim Mary's ascension as rightful queen instead.[27] The College's excuse was that they were compelled in their earlier act by the Duke of Northumberland (Lady Jane's father-in-law, who was later executed), an excuse that Mary accepted.[28]

The queen and her husband (and co-sovereign) Philip II of Spain then set about granting the College a new house called Derby Place or Derby House, under a new charter, dated 18 July 1555 at Hampton Court Palace.[11][28] The house was built by Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby, who married Lady Margaret Beaufort in 1482 and was created the 1st Earl of Derby in 1485.[29] The house was built in 1503 and was given to the Crown by the 3rd Earl in 1552/3 in exchange for some land.[30] The charter stated that the house would: "enable them [the College] to assemble together, and consult, and agree amongst themselves, for the good of their faculty, and that the records and rolls might be more safely and conveniently deposited."[28] The charter also reincorporated the three kings of arms, six heralds and all other heralds and pursuivants, and their successors, into a corporation with perpetual succession. A new seal of authority, with the College's full coat of arms was also engraved. On 16 May 1565, the name "the House of the Office of Arms" was used, thereafter in May 1566 "our Colledge of Armes", and in January 1567 "our House of the College of the office of arms".[29]

Derby Place was situated in the parish of St Benedict and St Peter, south of St Paul's Cathedral, more or less on the College's present location.[1][7] There are records of the heralds carrying out modifications to the structure of Derby Place over many years. However, little record of its appearance has survived, except the description that the buildings formed three sides of a quadrangle, entered through a gate with a portcullis on the west side. On the south range, roughly where Queen Victoria Street now stands, was a large hall on the western end.[14] Derby Place's hearth tax bill from 1663, discovered in 2009 at the National Archives at Kew, showed that the building had about thirty-two rooms, which were the workplace as well as the home to eleven officers of arms.[31]

 
Armorial achievement of the College and its Kings of Arms, from Lant's Roll painted by Thomas Lant around 1595. It depicts the arms of Garter, Clarenceux, Norroy and Ulster. The additional charge in the first quarter of the first two shields, does not appear subsequently.

The reign of Mary's sister Elizabeth I saw the college's privileges confirmed by an act of Parliament[which?] in 1566. As well as the drawing up of many important internal statutes and ordinances for the College by Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, the Earl Marshal, dated 18 July 1568.[32][33] The long reign saw the College distracted by the many quarrels between Garter William Dethick, Clarenceux Robert Cooke and York Herald Ralph Brooke about their rights and annulments.[34] Disputes in which the other officers also took part, often occurred among the lesser heralds against each other. Historian Mark Noble wrote in 1805, that these fights often involved the use of "every epithet that was disgraceful to themselves and their opponents." and that "Their accusations against each other would fill a volume."[32] During these years, the College's reputation was greatly injured in the eyes of the public.[35]

The reason behind these discords were laid on the imperfect execution of the reorganisation of the College in 1568 and the uncertainty over issue of granting arms to the new and emerging gentry of the era.[34] An enquiry into the state of the College lasted for one year, finally reporting to William Cecil, Baron Burghley in 1596; as a consequence, many important measures of reform for the College were made in the reign of James I.[36] Eventually, these animosities among the heralds in the College ended only after the expulsion of one and the death of another.[32]

Civil War edit

When the English Civil War began in 1642 during the reign of King Charles I, the College was divided: three kings of arms, three heralds and one pursuivant sided with the King and the Royalists, while the other officers began to court the services of the Parliamentarian side.[37] Nevertheless, the heralds petitioned Parliament in the same year, to protect their: "Books of Record, Registers, Entries, Precedents, Arms, Pedigrees and Dignities."[38] In 1643 the heralds joined the King at Oxford, and were with him at Naseby and followed him on all of his campaigns. Sir Edward Walker the Garter King of Arms (from 1645) was even appointed, with the permission of Parliament, to act as the King's chief secretary at the negotiations at Newport. After the execution of Charles I, Walker joined Charles II in his exile in the Netherlands.[39]

Meanwhile, on 3 August 1646 the Committee of Sequestration took possession of the College premises, and kept it under its own authority. Later in October, Parliament ordered the committee to directly remove those officers whose loyalties were with the King and to nominate their own candidates to fill these vacant offices.[37] Those officers whose loyalty remained with the King were persecuted; first they were deprived of their offices, then of their emoluments, then a fine was imposed and some were even imprisoned.[40] In spite of this, the institutional College was protected by the Parliamentarians, and their rights and work continued unabated.[40][41] Edward Bysshe a Member of Parliament from Bletchingley was appointed Garter, thus "Parliament which rejected its King created for itself a King of Arms".[42] During this time the heralds continued their work and were even present on 26 June 1657 at Oliver Cromwell's second installation ceremony as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth.[43][44]

Survival edit

 
Heraldic banners and crests of King Charles II and his brother James, Duke of York (later James II), observed by Elias Ashmole, Windsor Herald. On a visitation to Berkshire in 1664–1665, the banners and crests were found at the choir stalls of St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.

On 8 May 1660, the heralds at the command of the Convention Parliament proclaimed Charles II, King at Westminster Hall Gate. It was said that William Ryley, who was originally appointed Lancaster Herald by Charles I but then sided with Cromwell, did not even have a tabard with the Royal Arms, as his own had been "plundered in the wars". He had to borrow a decorative one from the tomb of James I in Westminster Abbey instead; the garment was duly returned the next day.[45] The Restoration of Charles II annulled all the Acts of the Parliament and all the actions of the Lord Protector, without penalising any of their supporters (except for the regicides). Accordingly, all the grant of arms of the Commonwealth College was declared null and void. Furthermore, all heralds appointed during the Interregnum lost their offices, while those appointed originally by Charles I returned to their places.[46] The exception was Edward Bysshe, who was removed as Garter, but was instead appointed Clarenceux in 1661, much to the chagrin of Garter Edward Walker.[45]

In 1666 as the Great Fire of London swept through the city, Derby Place, the College's home since 1555, was completely gutted and destroyed.[1][14][47] Fortunately the College's library was saved, and at first was stored in the Palace of Whitehall, then later moved to the Palace of Westminster, where a temporary office was opened in an apartment called the Queen's court.[48] An announcement was also made in the London Gazette to draw public notice to the situation.[49] Due to a shortage of funds, the planned rebuilding of a new College was delayed until 1670.[49] It was then that Francis Sandford, the Rouge Dragon Pursuivant and Morris Emmett, the King's bricklayer, were together able to design and begin construction of a new structure on the old site.[11][50] The costs of the rebuilding was financed in stages, and the structure was erected slowly in parts. The heralds contributed significantly out of their own pockets; at the same time, they also sought subscriptions among the nobility, with the names of contributors recorded into a series of splendid manuscripts known as the Benefactors Books.[14][48]

 
The College of Arms as it looked in the 18th century, engraved by Benjamin Cole, and published in William Maitland's The History and Survey of London From Its Evolution to the Present Time in 1756.

By 1683 the College part of the structure was finished. The new building was built out of plain bricks of three storeys, with basement and attic levels in addition.[51] The College consists of an extensive range of quadrangular buildings.[48] Apart from the hall, a porter's lodge and a public office, the rest of the building was given over to the heralds as accommodation.[52] To the east and south sides three terraced houses were constructed for leases, their façade in keeping with the original design. In 1699 the hall, which for some time had been used as a library, was transformed into the Earl Marshal's Court or the Court of Chivalry; it remains so to this day. In 1776 some stylistic changes were made to the exterior of the building and some details, such as pediments and cornices were removed, transforming the building to the then popular but austere Neo-Classical style.[14]

The magnificent coronation of James II in 1685 saw the College revived as an institution of state and the monarchy.[53] However, the abrupt end of his reign saw all but one of the heralds taking the side of William of Orange and Mary II in the Glorious Revolution.[54] The period from 1704 to 1706 saw not a single grant of arms being made by the College; this nadir was attributed to the changes in attitude of the times.[55] The Acts of Union 1707 between England and Scotland, in the reign of Anne did not affect the jurisdiction or the rights of the College. The College of Arms and the Court of the Lord Lyon were to exist side by side in their respective realms. However, in the matter of precedence; the Lord Lyon, when in England, was to take immediate precedence behind Garter King of Arms.[56]

Comfortable decay edit

 
Design by Robert Abraham (1773–1850) for a new College of Arms in Trafalgar Square, at the heart of Regency London in the 1820s; the plan was not executed due to a lack of funds.

The Hanoverian succession to the throne of Great Britain led to reigns with less ceremony than in any since the incorporation of the heralds.[57] The only notable incident for the college in this period, during the reign of George I, happened in 1727 when an impostor called Robert Harman pretended to be a herald. The knave was prosecuted by the College in the county of Suffolk, and was sentenced to be pilloried in several market towns on public market days and afterwards to be imprisoned and pay a fine. This hefty sentence was executed, proving that the rights of the College were still respected.[58] In 1737, during the reign of George II the College petitioned for another charter, to reaffirm their rights and remuneration; this effort proved unsuccessful. Apart from these events the influence of the College was greatly diminished.[59]

In 1742 a Sugar House was built against the wall of the College. This structure was a fire risk and the cause of great anxiety among the heralds. In 1775 the College Surveyor drew attention to this problem, but to no avail. In February 1800, the College was asked by a Select Committee of the House of Commons to report to them the state of public records; again the heralds drew attention to the proximity of the Sugar House. Members of the committee inspected the College premises and reported to the House that the College must either be moved to a new building or secured against the risk of fire. Again nothing was done; in 1812 water seeped through the walls of the College damaging records. The Surveyor traced the leak back to a shed recently erected by Alderman Smith, owner of the Sugar House, who declared his readiness to do everything he could, but who actually did very little to rectify the situation.[60] After years of negotiation the College, in 1820, bought the Sugar House from Smith for the sum of £1,500.[61]

 
Herald's College, Bennet's Hill. Drawn by Thomas H. Shepherd, engraved by W. Wallis. Jones & Co. Temple of the Muses, Finsbury Square, London, 17 April 1830

Great financial strains placed upon the College during these times were relieved when the extravagant Prince Regent (the future George IV) granted to the College an annual endowment by Royal Warrant on 29 February 1820. This generous endowment from the crown, the first since 1555, was applied towards the reparation and support of the College.[62][63] Despite the successes of the purchase of the Sugar House and the royal endowment, the College still looked upon the possibility of moving its location to a more suitable and fashionable place.[62] John Nash was at the same time laying out his plans for a new London, and, in 1822, the College, through the Deputy Earl Marshal, asked the government for a portion of land in the new districts on which to build a house to keep their records. A petition from the College was given to the Lords of the Treasury setting out the herald's reason for the move: "that the local situation of the College is so widely detached from the proper scene of the official duties and occupations of Your Memorialists and from the residences of that class of persons by whom the records in their charge are chiefly and most frequently consulted."[64]

Nash himself was asked by the College to design a new building near fashionable Trafalgar Square but Nash's elaborate plan proved too costly and ambitious for the College.[65] At the same time the College also asked Robert Abraham to submit to them a second plan for the building. When Nash heard that another architect was approached behind his back he reacted vehemently, and attacked the heralds.[66] The College nevertheless continued with their plans. However they were constantly beset by conflicts between the different officers over the amount needed to build a new building. By 1827 the college still had no coherent plan; the Duke of Norfolk ordered the College to drop the matter altogether.[67] By 1842 the heralds were reconciled with their location and once again commissioned Abraham to build a new octagonal-shaped Record Room on the site of the old Sugar House.[14]

In 1861 a proposal was made to construct a road from Blackfriars to the Mansion House; this would have resulted in the complete demolition of the College. However, protests from the heralds resulted in only parts of the south east and south west wings being sliced off, requiring extensive remodelling. The College was now a three-sided building with an open courtyard facing the New Queen Victoria Street laid out in 1866. The terrace, steps and entrance porch were also added around this time.[14][68]

Reform edit

 
1862 map showing layout of the College (labelled Herald Off.). Carter Lane and Upper Thames Street can be seen running parallel to the north and south of the College, respectively. St Benet's, Paul's Wharf, the official church of the College since 1555, can be seen to the south west.

On 18 October 1869, a warrant for a commission of inquiry into the state of the College was established. The warrant, issued on the behalf of the Duke of Norfolk, stated "that it is desirable that the College of Arms should be visited, and an inquiry instituted with the view of ascertaining whether the Rules and Orders for the good government of the said College ... are duly obeyed and fulfilled ... and whether by change of circumstances or any other cause, any new Laws, Ordinances or Regulations are necessary to be made ... for the said College."[69] The commission had three members: Lord Edward Fitzalan-Howard (the Deputy Earl Marshal), Sir William Alexander (Queen's Counsel) and Edward Bellasis (a Sergeant at Law).[70]Sir Bernard Burke (of the famous Burke's Peerage), at the time Ulster King of Arms, gave the commission the advice that the College should "be made a Government Department, let its Officers receive fixed salaries from Government, and let all its fees be paid into the public exchequer. This arrangement would, I am sure, be self-supporting and would raise at once the character of the Office and the status of the Heralds."[71] Burke's suggestion for reform was the same arrangement that had already been applied to the Lord Lyon Court in Scotland in 1867,[72] and was to be applied to his own office in 1871. However unlike the Lyon Court, which was a court of law and part of the Scottish Judiciary, the College of Arms has always been an independent corporate body overseen by the Earl Marshal. While the Lord Lyon depended on the Government for its reforms and statutes, the College has always been able to carry out changes from within itself.[73] The commission also drew attention to the fees, annulments and library of the College, as well as the general modernisation of the chapter as a whole. When the commission made its report in 1870, it recommended many changes, and these were duly made in another warrant dated 27 April 1871. Burke's recommendation, however, was not implemented.[74]

 
Sir Algar Howard, KCB, KCVO, MC, TD, was appointed Norroy King of Arms in 1931. In 1943 he became the first Norroy and Ulster King of Arms, when the two titles were merged. He served in this office until 1944 when he was promoted to Garter King of Arms; he retired in 1950.

Despite the findings of this inquiry, the issues surrounding the status and position of the College continued. At the beginning of the 20th century these issues were once again brought to the forefront. In 1903 an inquiry was set up at the instructions of Arthur Balfour, soon to be Prime Minister. The committee of inquiry was to consist of eight members; Sir Algernon West was made chairman. They were tasked to investigate "the constitution, duties and administration of the Heralds' College"; the main issues being the anomalous position of the College, who are theoretically officials of the Royal Household, but actually derive their income from fees paid by private individuals for their services.[75] Some of the members of the committee (a minority) wanted (like Burke thirty-four years earlier) to make officers of the College of Arms into "salaried civil servants of the state".[75] Despite concluding that some form of change was necessary, the inquiry categorically stated that any change "is at the present time and in present circumstances impracticable."[76] In 1905 the generous endowment from the Crown (as instituted by George IV) was stopped by the Liberal Government of the day as part of its campaign against the House of Lords and the class system.[63]

A second inquiry was established in 1928 under the chairmanship of Lord Birkenhead.[77] The inquiry was called soon after a secret memorandum, written in 1927, was circulated by the Home Office, criticising the constitution and workings of the heralds.[78] The memorandum states that "They have, as will be seen from this memorandum, in many cases attempted to interfere with the exercise by the Secretary of State of his constitutional responsibility for advising the Crown",[78] and that the College had "adopted practices in connection with matters within their jurisdiction which seem highly improper in themselves, and calculated to bring the royal prerogative into contempt."[78] These accusations concern the actions of certain heralds, who overzealously advocate the cases of their paid clients, even against the opposition of the ministers of the day.[78] Sir Anthony Wagner writes that "The officers of these departments, no doubt, in the overconfident way of their generation, esteemed the College an anachronistic and anomalous institution overdue for reform or abolition."[79] The memorandum ended by saying that "the College of Arms is a small and highly organised luxury trade, dependent for its living on supplying the demand for a fancy article among the well to do: and like many such trades it has in very many cases to create the demand before it can supply it."[78]

When the committee made their report in June 1928 they suggested several reforms to tackle the main issues which had brought the College into so much conflict with the Home Office. Firstly they concluded that the fees systems were adequate and no change was necessary in that regard. They justified this by stating that "placing all or even a few of the Officers on a fixed salary outweigh any advantages which might be expected to result from the change."[77] Secondly they concluded that from now on the College was to be entirely subordinated to the Home Office, and that a standing inter-departmental committee be established to settle any future conflicts.[77]

Present edit

 
Main entrance to the College of Arms, 2011

In 1934, on the 450th anniversary of the incorporation of the College of Arms, an exhibition was held at the College of the heralds' principal treasures and other associated interests. The exhibition was opened by the Earl Marshal and ran from 28 June to 26 July, during which time it received more than 10,000 visitors, including the Duke (George VI) and Duchess of York (Elizabeth).[80]

In 1939 at the beginning of the Second World War the College's records were moved to Thornbury Castle in Gloucestershire, the home of Major Algar Howard (the Norroy King of Arms). Meanwhile, on 10 and 11 May 1941 the College building was almost consumed by fire, which had already levelled all the buildings to the east of the College on Queen Victoria Street. The building was given up for lost, when a change in the wind saved it. At the end of the war, all of the records were returned safely to the College.[81]

In 1943 the College was given new responsibilities when the office of Ulster King of Arms was annexed and combined with those of the Norroy King of Arms, creating a new office called Norroy and Ulster King of Arms; Sir Algar Howard thus became the first to hold this office.[82]

Although the College building was saved from the war, its walls and roof were left in a perilous state. In 1954 a decision was forced upon heralds, whether to abandon the old building (which would have been profitable financially) or repair it on a scale far beyond the College's resources. Eventually with the help of the Ministry of Works and a public subscription, the building was repaired in time for the College's 4th centenary of being in possession of Derby Place.[83] The present gates to the building were added in 1956, and came originally from Goodrich Court in Herefordshire. The new gates displayed the College's arms and crest.[14]

 
The College of Arms in March 2009, with scaffolding on the west wing of the building after the 2009 fire

In the year of the quincentenary of the incorporation of the College of Arms, the College held a special service of thanksgiving at St Benet's, Paul's Wharf (the College's official church since 1555) on 2 March 1984. The Kings of Arms, Heralds and Pursuivants, ordinary and extraordinary, of the College in full uniform processed from the College towards the church together with Queen Elizabeth II, the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl Marshal and the Earl of Arundel, the Deputy Earl Marshal.[84]

On 5 February 2009 a fire broke out at the west wing on the third and fourth floor of the College building. Eight London Fire Brigade fire engines were able to bring the flames under control, in the meantime 35 people were evacuated from the building and a further 100 from adjacent buildings.[85] No records or books of the College were damaged.[86][87] Repairs to the smoke-damaged rooms and exterior brickwork were completed in December 2009.[88]

Roles edit

Ceremonial edit

 
Heralds in procession to St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle for the annual service of the Order of the Garter, 19 June 2006

The College of Arms is a part of the Royal Household of the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, as such they accompany the monarch on various state occasions.[1] These occasions are centred on the institution of the monarchy as the symbol of the state, and the expression of majesty and power through public pomp and ceremony. Presently the heralds turn out their full uniforms only twice a year; during the State Opening of Parliament and during the early summer at the Garter Service at Windsor Castle. The organisation and planning of all State ceremonies falls within the prerogative of the Earl Marshal, the College's chief.[89] As a result, the heralds have a role to perform within every significant royal ceremony.[90][91]

State Opening of Parliament takes place annually at the Houses of Parliament. The heralds, including both ordinary and extraordinary officers, form the front part of the Royal Procession, preceding the Sovereign and other Great Officers of State.[1][92] The procession starts at the bottom of the Victoria Tower, then up the Norman Porch to the Robing Chamber. Once the Sovereign has put on the Imperial State Crown, the heralds lead the monarch once again through the Royal Gallery into the House of Lords, and remain with the monarch during the speech and accompany the monarch to the bounds of the Palace.[93]

Garter Service or Garter Day is held every June on the Monday of Royal Ascot week. The annual service takes place at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. On this day new Companions of the Order of the Garter are personally invested with their insignia at the Throne Room of Windsor Castle by the Sovereign. All the members then have lunch, wearing their blue velvet robes and black velvet hats with white plumes at the Waterloo Chamber. Afterwards the members make their way on foot from the Upper Ward of the castle towards St George's Chapel. During their procession they are led by members of the College of Arms in their tabards, the Military Knights of Windsor and contingents of the Sovereign's Bodyguard. After the service, the members return to the Upper Ward by carriage.[94] This ceremony is especially significant for the Garter King of Arms, the senior officer of the College, who is an officer of the Order.[95]

 
King Edward VIII surrounded by heralds of the College of Arms prior to his only State Opening of Parliament on 3 November 1936

The participation of these two annual ceremonies are considered the least time-consuming part of the herald's roles.[96] However at other times they are involved in some of the most important ceremonies concerning the life of the British monarch. After the death of a Sovereign the Accession Council (made up of Privy Councillors and other officers such as the Lord Mayor of London) meets at St. James's Palace to make a formal proclamation of the accession of the next Sovereign. The traditional method of publishing the council's proclamation recognising the new monarch is by way of it being physically read out.[97] This task is assigned to the various members of the College by way of the Earl Marshal, who receives the text of the proclamation from the council in person. The proclamation is to be read at several locations in London. Traditionally the first reading is made from the Friary Court balcony at St James's Palace.[98] Another reading and ceremony is held at the Temple Bar. There a detachment of heralds, accompanied by troops of the Royal Horse Guards, formally demand admission to the precinct of the City of London from the City Marshall and City Remembrancer. The barrier, consisting of a silken rope (in place of the ancient bar) was then removed and the detachment would march forward to meet the Lord Mayor and City Sheriffs, where the proclamation would be read. Other readings by members of the College also occur at the corner of Chancery Lane, in Fleet Street, and at the Royal Exchange.[99][100]

During the Coronation Ceremony, members of the College form part of the Royal procession as it enters Westminster Abbey.[1] The members of the College walk in the procession in virtue of them being His Majesty's "Kings, Heralds and Pursuivants of Arms of England." They do so alongside their Scottish colleagues: the Lord Lyon, the Heralds and Pursuivants of Arms of the Lyon Court. The Garter King of Arms is usually placed next to the Lord Great Chamberlain in the procession, he has the duty of guiding, but not performing the ceremony. Garter's duties during the coronation ceremony are therefore not unlike those of a Master of Ceremonies.[101] It is only during this ceremony that the Kings of Arms are allowed to wear their distinctive crowns, the only group of individuals, apart from the King and Queen, authorised to do so.[102]

 
The heraldic funeral procession of Queen Elizabeth I of England in 1603, depicting some the heralds of the College of Arms, each carrying a piece of the Sovereign's armour

At State funerals the heralds once again take their place at the front of the royal procession as it enters the place of worship. Historically during the procession of royal funerals (usually of the Sovereign) the heralds would carry a piece of armour, representing the various marks of chivalry. These included the helm and crest, spurs, gauntlet, target (shield of arms), sword and a literal 'coat of arms' (a heraldic surcoat). This procession of chivalry was an integral part of the heraldic royal funeral. One of the most solemn role for the heralds during a royal funeral is the reading of the full list of the styles and titles of the deceased. On 9 April 2002, Garter King of Arms Peter Gwynn-Jones read out the full styles and titles of Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother at the end of her funeral service at Westminster Abbey.[103][104]

Granting and proving descent of arms edit

 
A grant of Arms for Henry Draper of Colnbrook, as issued by the Clarenceux King of Arms, Robert Cooke in 1571. The grant gave him the right to use the arms shown. The blazon reads: Golde, on a ffesse betwene thre Annulettes gules, thre standing cuppes of the felde.
 
1602 drawing of the Shakespeare coat of arms, granted in 1596

The granting of armorial bearings (coat of arms) within the United Kingdom is the sole prerogative of the British monarch. However, the monarch has delegated this power to two authorities: the Lord Lyon, with jurisdiction over Scotland, and the College of Arms, over England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Under the latter's jurisdiction, the right to arms is acquired exclusively either by proving descent in an unbroken male-line from someone registered as so entitled or by a new grant from the King of Arms.[105] Technically, however, arms can also be gained by a grant from the Crown, by prescription (meaning in use since time immemorial), by succeeding to an office, or by marriage. The descent of arms follows strongly the Law of heraldic arms, which is a branch of English law, interpreted by civil lawyers in the Court of Chivalry. Sir Edward Coke in his Commentary upon Littleton (1628) wrote that "gentry and armes is the nature of gavelkinde, for they descend to all the sonnes." Arms in England, therefore descend to all of the male lines, and not just the most senior alone (unlike in Scotland).[106][107]

When a new grant of arms is to be made, it is granted through Letters Patent. The Crown delegates all of this authority to the King of Arms, however before any letters can be issued they must have a warrant from the Earl Marshal agreeing to the granting of arms. This has been the case since 1673, when the authority of the Earl Marshal, which the heralds had challenged, was established by a royal declaration stating, among other things, that no patents of arms should be granted without his consent. This established the present system whereby royal authority to approve candidates for grants of arms is exercised by the Earl Marshal, and royal authority to grant the arms themselves is exercised by the Kings of Arms. Firstly a petition is submitted, called a memorial, to the Earl Marshal. This memorial will be drawn up for the petitioner by an officer of arms, if it is felt that such a petition would be accepted.[105][108] Currently there are no set criteria for eligibility for a grant of arms, the College recommends that "awards or honours from the Crown, civil or military commissions, university degrees, professional qualifications, public and charitable services, and eminence or good standing in national or local life" will be taken into account.[96][105][109]

 
A section of a modern grant of arms for the Rt. Rev Archibald Howard Cullen the 6th Bishop of Grahamstown. The grant was issued by the Garter King of Arms, Sir George Rothe Bellew in the 1950s.

In the past this issue of eligibility has been a source of great conflict between the heralds; such submissions are made on an officer for clients basis, which meant some 'unsuitability' was ignored in lieu of profit by past officers. Suitability rested on the phrase "eminent men", originally the test applied was one of wealth or social status, as any man entitled to bear a coat of arms was expected to be a gentleman.[96] By 1530, the heralds applied a property qualification, requiring successful candidates for a grant of arms to have an income from land of £10 per annum, or movable wealth of £300. However this was not always the case, in 1616 Ralph Brooke, York Herald, tricked Garter King of Arms, William Segar, into granting a coat of arms to Gregory Brandon, a common hangman, for a fee of 22 shillings.[110][111] When the king found out he had them both imprisoned at Marshalsea, they were freed a few days later.[112]

The fee for the grant of arms is due when the memorial is submitted, the amount being laid out in the Earl Marshal's Warrant. As of 1 January 2023 the fees for a personal grant of arms, including a crest is £8,050, a grant to a non-profit body is £16,455 and to a commercial company is £24,510. This grant may include a grant of a badge, supporters or a standard, depending on the letters pattent.[105] The fees mainly go towards commissioning the artwork and calligraphy on the vellum Letters Patent, which must be done by hand and is in a sense a work of art in itself, plus other administrative costs borne by the heralds, and for the upkeep of the College.

Once the Earl Marshal has approved the petition he will issue his Warrant to the King of Arms, this will allow them to proceed with the granting of the arms. It is during this stage that the designing and formation of the arms begin. Although the King of Arms has full discretion over the composition of the arms, he will take into full account the wishes of the applicant. These will include allusions and references to the applicant's life and achievements. The design of any new coat of arms must abide by all the rules of heraldry as well as being entirely original and distinct from all previous arms recorded at the College's archives. A preliminary sketch will then be approved and sent to the petitioner for approval.[105][108]

 
The coat of arms of city of Bridgetown in the capital and largest city of Barbados. The arms were granted to the city on 20 September 1960 by the College of Arms.

As soon as the composition of the blazon is agreed to by both parties a final grant could then be created. This takes the form of a handmade colourfully illuminated and decorated Letters Patent. The letter is written and painted in vellum by a College artist and scrivener. The grant is then signed and sealed by the King of Arms, it is then handed to the petitioner, authorising the use of arms blazoned therein as the perpetual property of himself and his heirs. A copy of the grant is always made for the College's own register.[105][108]

Once granted, a coat of arms becomes the hereditary and inheritable property of the owner and his descendants. However, this can only be so if the inheritor is a legitimate male-line descendant of the person originally granted with the arms. To establish the right to arms by descent, one must be able to prove that an ancestor had his arms recorded in the registers of the College. If there is a possibility of such an inheritance, one must first make contact with an officer-in-waiting at the College, who could then advise on the course of action and the cost of such a search. The research into a descent of arms requires details of paternal ancestry, which will involve the examination of genealogical records. The first step involve a search of the family name in the College's archives, as coats of arms and family name has no connection, the officer could prove, through this method, that there is in fact no descent. However, if a connection is found a genealogical research outside of the College's archives would then be undertaken to provide definitive evidence of descent from an armigerous individual.[109][113]

Change of names edit

The College of Arms is also an authorised location for enrolling a change of name. In common law there is no obligation to undergo any particular formality to change one's name. However, it is possible to execute a deed poll, more specifically a deed of change of name, as a demonstration of intention to adopt and henceforth use a new name, and deeds poll may be enrolled either in the High Court or in the College. On being enrolled the deed is customarily 'gazetted', that is published in the London Gazette. The deed poll is not entered on the registers, but is still published, if the name change only affects one's given name.[114]

Change of name and arms edit

It is also possible to change one's coat of arms, with or without adopting or appending a new surname, by Royal Licence, that is to say a licence in the form of a warrant from the Crown directed to the Kings of Arms instructing them to exemplify the transferred arms or a version of them to the licensee in his or her new name. Royal Licences are issued on the advice of Garter King of Arms and are usually dependent on there being some constraining circumstances such as a testamentary injunction (a requirement in a will) or a good reason to wish to perpetuate a particular coat of arms. The Royal Licence is of no effect until and unless the exemplification is issued and recorded in the College. Royal Licences are gazetted and make a deed poll unnecessary.[114]

Genealogical records edit

 
An example of an Elizabethan pedigree of the Euery (de Euro) family of Northumberland, barons of Warkworth and Clavering. Scrivened and illuminated by Somerset Herald, Robert Glover circa 1570 to 1588

Due to the inheritable nature of coats of arms the College have also been involved in genealogy since the 15th century. The College regularly conduct genealogical research for individuals with families in the British Isles of all social classes. As the College is also the official repository of genealogical materials such as pedigree charts and family trees.[115] The College's extensive records within this realm of study dates back over five centuries.[113] An individual could, if he so wishes, have his family's pedigree placed inside the College's records. This would require the services of an officer of the College who would then draft a pedigree. The officer would ensure that the pedigree was in the correct format and also advise the client on the documentary evidences necessary to supports such a draft. After this is done, the officer would submit the pedigree to a chapter of two other officers, who would then examine the pedigree for any mistakes or in some cases demand more research. After this examination is completed the pedigree would then be scrivened and placed into the pedigree register of the College.[115]

Roll of the Peerage edit

The House of Lords Act 1999 removed the automatic right of hereditary peers to a seat in the House of Lords. Prior to the passage of this Act, anyone succeeding to a title in the peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, would prove their succession by a writ of summons to Parliament.[116] All peers receiving such writs were enrolled in the Register of Lords Spiritual and Temporal, a document maintained by the Clerk of the Parliaments. As a result of the Act, the Register of Lords Spiritual and Temporal only records the name of life peers and the 92 hereditary peers left in the House of Lords. This meant that the register was incomplete as it excludes most of the other hereditary peers, who are not part of the House of Lords.[117]

On 1 June 2004 a Royal Warrant issued by Queen Elizabeth II states "that it is desirable for a full record to be kept of all of Our subjects who are Peers", this new record would be named the Roll of the Peerage. The warrant was later published in the London Gazette on 11 June 2004.[118] The warrant handed the responsibility of maintaining the roll to the Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs, in 2007 this responsibility was assumed by the Crown Office within the newly created Ministry of Justice. The warrant also stipulated that the Secretary of State would act in consultation with the Garter King of Arms and the Lord Lyon King of Arms. The roll would then be published by the College of Arms; currently an online edition is available.[119]

Outside the UK edit

The College of Arms states that it is the "official heraldic authority for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and much of the Commonwealth including Australia and New Zealand".[120] The position of New Zealand Herald Extraordinary was established in 1978, subordinate to the Garter Principal King of Arms.[121] However, the official status of the college in Australia has not been confirmed by the federal government. The Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet advised in 2018 that grants from the College of Arms were "well established as one way Australians can obtain heraldic insignia if they wish to do so", but that they had the same status as those by "a local artist, graphics studio or heraldry specialist".[122] The policy of the Australian Heraldry Society is that the College of Arms does not have official heraldic authority over Australia, but that the federal government should establish a national body equivalent to the Canadian Heraldic Authority or South Africa's Bureau of Heraldry.[123]

Earl Marshal edit

 
Courtroom of the Earl Marshal, Court of Chivalry, College of Arms, London

The Earl Marshal is one of the Great Officers of State, and the office has existed since 1386. Many of the holders of the office have been related to each other; however, it was not until 1672 that the office became fully hereditary. In that year Henry Howard was appointed to the position by King Charles II. In 1677 he also succeeded to the Dukedom of Norfolk as the 6th Duke, thus combining the two titles for his successors.[89][124]

The office originates from that of Marshal, one of the English monarch's chief military officers. As such he became responsible for all matters concerning war and together with the Lord High Constable held the joint post as judges of the Court of Chivalry. After the decline of medieval chivalry, the role of Earl Marshal came to concern all matters of state and royal ceremonies. By the 16th century this supervision came to include the College of Arms and its heralds.[1][89] Thus the Earl Marshal became the head and chief of the College of Arms; all important matters concerning its governance, including the appointment of new heralds, must meet with his approval.[125] The Earl Marshal also has authority over the flying of flags within England and Wales, as does Lord Lyon King of Arms in Scotland. The Officers of Arms at the College of Arms maintain the only official registers of national and other flags and they advise national and local Government, and other bodies and individuals, on the flying of flags.[citation needed]

Head of the College of Arms
Arms Titles and offices Name
(date of succession)
Notes
  Duke of Norfolk,
Earl Marshal and Hereditary Marshal of England
Edward William Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk, GCVO, DL
(24 June 2002)[citation needed]
Edward, Duke of Norfolk (born 2 December 1956) assumed the office of Earl Marshal on the death of his father Miles, 17th Duke of Norfolk in 2002. The heir-apparent to the office is the incumbent's oldest son Henry Fitzalan-Howard, Earl of Arundel (born 3 December 1987).[citation needed]

Court of Chivalry edit

The High Court of Chivalry or the Earl Marshal's Court is a specialised civil court in England, presided over by the Earl Marshal.[13] The first references made about the court was in 1348. The court has jurisdiction over all matters relating to heraldry as it legalises and enforce decisions of the College of Arms. The court considers all cases relating to questions of status, including disputes over social rank and the law of arms, for example complaints on the infringement of the use of another individual's coat of arms. The Court of Chivalry meets on the premises of the College of Arms, however the last time it met was in 1954, the first time in 230 years.[126]

Heralds of the College edit

The College of Arms is a corporation of thirteen heralds, styled Officers in Ordinary. This thirteen can be divided hierarchically into three distinctive ranks: three Kings of Arms, six Heralds of Arms and four Pursuivants of Arms. There are also presently seven Officers Extraordinary, who take part in ceremonial occasions but are not part of the College. As members of the Royal Household, the heralds are appointed at the pleasure of the Sovereign on the recommendation of the Earl Marshal.[125][127] The Officers in Ordinary are appointed by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm, and the Officers Extraordinary by Royal Sign Manual; all appointments are announced in the London Gazette.[128]

All of the officers in Ordinary of the College were first instituted at different dates (some even before the incorporation of the College), some originating as private servants of noblemen, some being Royal from the start. They take their names and badges from the titles and royal badges of the monarchs of England.[128] The officers Extraordinary, however take their names from the titles and estates of the Earl Marshal, they were also created at different dates for ceremonial purposes.[11]

Wages edit

The College is almost entirely self-financed, and is not a recipient of any regular public funding.[4] Its officers do have official salaries, which are paid for by the Crown. The salaries of the officers were raised during the reign of King James I, but were reduced under William IV.[63] These salaries per annum reflected the living costs of the day; however today the amount is seen only as nominal payment. In addition to their official duties, the heralds have for many centuries undertaken private practice in heraldry and genealogy, for which professional fees are charged.[4][125] HM Treasury pays Garter King of Arms for work undertaken for the Government.[129] As of 27 January 2021, the payments made to Sir Thomas Woodcock, since his appointment as Garter totalled £651,515.[129] Additionally, since 2018, the Treasury has provided Garter with an expenses fund of £35,000 per annum to cover business expenses such as secretarial support, cleaning and postage.[129] As of 27 January 2021, Garter has received £74,579.02 to cover expenses.[129]

Officers in Ordinary 1618[130] 1831[130] Present[125]
Garter King of Arms
£100
£49 1s. 4d
£49.07
Provincial Kings of Arms
£40
£20 5s.
£20.25
Heralds
£26 13s. 4d
£17 16s.
£17.80
Pursuivants
£20
£13 19s.
£13.95

Uniforms edit

 
William Camden as Clarenceux King of Arms in the funeral procession of Elizabeth I in 1603. Camden is holding a "coate" possibly a royal tabard or surcoat bearing the Royal Arms of England.

The most recognisable item of the herald's wardrobe has always been their tabards. Since the 13th century, records of this distinctive garment were apparent. At first it is likely that the herald wore his master's cast-off coat, but even from the beginning that would have had special significance, signifying that he was in effect his master's representative. Especially when his master was a sovereign prince, the wearing of his coat would haven given the herald a natural diplomatic status.[131] John Anstis wrote that: "The Wearing the outward Robes of the Prince, hath been esteemed by the Consent of Nations, to be an extraordinary Instance of Favour and Honour, as in the Precedent of Mordecai, under a king of Persia."[131] The last King of England to have worn a tabard with his arms was probably King Henry VII. Today the herald's tabard is a survivor of history, much like the judges' wigs and (until the last century) the bishop's gaiters.[131]

 
Sir William Henry Weldon, the Norroy King of Arms from 1894 until 1911, wearing the tabard and donning the crown of the King of Arms at the 1902 coronation of King Edward VII

The tabards of the different officers can be distinguished by the type of fabric used to make them. A tabard of a King of Arms is made of velvet and cloth of gold, the tabard of a Herald of satin and that of a Pursuivant of damask silk. The tabards of all heralds (Ordinary and Extraordinary) are inscribed with the Sovereign's royal arms, richly embroidered. It was once the custom for pursuivants to wear their tabards with the sleeves at the front and back, in fact in 1576 a pursuivant was fined for presuming to wear his tabard like a herald[124][132] but this practice was ended during the reign of James II. Until 1888 all tabards were provided to the heralds by the Crown, however in that year a parsimonious Treasury refused to ask Parliament for funds for the purpose. Ever since then heralds either paid for their own tabards or bought the one used by their predecessors. The newest tabard was made in 1963 for the Welsh Herald Extraordinary. A stock of them is now held by the Lord Chamberlain, from which a loan "during tenure of office" is made upon each appointment.[133] They are often sent to Ede & Ravenscroft for repair or replacement. In addition, heralds and pursuivants wear black velvet caps with a badge embroidered.

 
A modern-day tabard of a Herald of Arms, made of silk satin

Apart from the tabards, the heralds also wear scarlet court uniforms with gold embroidery during formal events; with white breeches and stockings for coronations and black for all other times together with black patent court shoes with gold buckles (the Scottish heralds wear black wool serge military style trousers with wide gold oak leaf lace on the side seams and black patent ankle boots; or for women, a long black skirt). The heralds are also entitled to distinctive sceptres, which have been a symbol of their office since the Tudor period.[134] In 1906 new sceptres were made, most likely the initiative of Sir Alfred Scott-Gatty. These take the form of short black batons with gilded ends, each with a representation of the badges of the different offices of the heralds. In 1953 these were replaced by white staves, with gilded metal handles and at its head a blue dove in a golden coronet or a "martinet".[135] These blue martinets are derived from the arms of the College.[136] Another of the heralds' insignia of office is the Collar of SS, which they wear over their uniforms.[102] During inclement weather, a large black cape is worn. At state funerals, they would wear a wide sash of black silk sarsenet over their tabards (in ancient times, they would have worn long black hooded cloaks under their tabards).

The three Kings of Arms have also been entitled to wear a crown since the 13th century. However, it was not until much later that the specific design of the crown was regulated. The silver-gilt crown is composed of sixteen acanthus leaves alternating in height, inscribed with a line from Psalm 51 in Latin: Miserere mei Deus secundum magnam misericordiam tuam (translated: Have mercy on me O God according to Thy great mercy).[124][137] Within the crown is a cap of crimson velvet, lined with ermine, having at the top a large tuft of tassels, wrought in gold. In medieval times the king of arms were required to wear their crowns and attend to the Sovereign on four high feasts of the year: Christmas, Easter, Whitsuntide and All Saint's Day. Today, the crown is reserved for the most solemn of occasions. The last time these crowns were worn was at the coronation of King Charles III and Camilla in 2023.[102] At other times, kings of arms wear a black bicorne trimmed with white ostrich feathers when performing duties outdoors, or a black velvet cap, depending on circumstances of occasion.

The New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary is a special case when it comes to uniform. Although they do wear the tabard, they only do so when in the UK performing duties. When in New Zealand, they simply wear morning dress as official uniform, together with their chains and baton.

Qualifications edit

 
Heraldic representation of a King of Arms's crown

There are no formal qualifications for a herald, but certain specialist knowledge and discipline are required. Most of the current officers are trained lawyers and historians. Noted heraldist and writer Sir John Ferne wrote in The Glory of Generositie in 1586 that a herald "ought to be a Gentlemen and an Old man not admitting into that sacred office everie glasier, painter & tricker, or a meere blazonner of Armes: for to the office of a herald is requisite the skill of many faculties and professions of literature, and likewise the knowledge of warres."[109] Some of the greatest scholars and eminent antiquarians of their age were members of the College, such as Robert Glover, William Camden, Sir William Dugdale, Elias Ashmole, John Anstis, Sir Anthony Wagner and John Brooke-Little.[138]

Even with these examples, many controversial appointments were made throughout the College's history. For example, in 1704 the architect and dramatist Sir John Vanbrugh was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms, although he knew little of heraldry and genealogy and was known to have ridiculed both.[90][138] Nevertheless, he was also described as "possibly the most distinguished man who has ever worn a herald's tabard."[139] Noted antiquarian William Oldys, appointed Norroy King of Arms in 1756, was described as being "rarely sober in the afternoon, never after supper", and "much addicted to low company".[138]

List of heralds edit

Officers in Ordinary edit

Kings of Arms[125]
Arms Office Name
(date of appointment)
Notes
  The senior King of Arms (his title is a reference to the Order of the Garter). The office was instituted in 1415 by King Henry V.[141]
  Whose province is the part of England south of the River Trent. Clarenceux is the senior of the provincial King of Arms. The office was instituted around 1334.[141] Its name derives from the royal Dukedom of Clarence.
  Whose province is the part of England north of the River Trent (Norroy) and Northern Ireland (Ulster). The office was created in 1943, when the office of Norroy King of Arms and Ulster King of Arms were combined. Independently, the office of Norroy was instituted around 1276, probably the most ancient of all the heralds. While Ulster was instituted in 1552 under Edward VI.[141] "Norroy" is simply French for "north king", while Ulster is the name of a traditional province roughly equivalent to modern-day Northern Ireland.
Heralds of Arms in Ordinary[125]
Badge Office Name
(date of appointment)
Notes
  From 1421 to 1485 Richmond was a herald to John, Duke of Bedford, George, Duke of Clarence, and Henry, Earl of Richmond, all of whom held the Honour (estate) of Richmond.[141]
  The first York Herald is believed to have been an officer to Edmund of Langley, Duke of York around the year 1385. The office became a royal herald in 1484.[141]
  It has been suggested that the office was instituted specifically for the Order of the Garter in 1348, or that it predates the Order and was in use as early as 1338.[141]
  Originally a servant of the Earls and Dukes of Lancaster, first appeared in 1347, making a proclamation at the Siege of Calais.[141]
 
Vacant
Since 2021
In the year 1448, Somerset Herald is known to have served the Duke of Somerset.[141]
 
Vacant
Since 2023
Said to have been created by King Edward III, as a herald to Edward, the Black Prince, who was also Earl of Chester.[141]
Pursuivants of Arms in Ordinary[125]
Badge Office Name
(date of appointment)
Notes
 
Mark John Rosborough Scott, Esq., MA (Oxon)
(13 June 2019)[148]
Said to have been instituted by Henry V for the Order of the Garter service, from where the title probably derives.[141]
 
Dominic Charles Davenport Ingram, Esq., MA, MSt, DPhil (Oxon)
(21 February 2022)[149]
Instituted by Henry VII around 1490 in reference to the badge of his mother Lady Margaret Beaufort.[141]
 
Thomas Andrew Johnston, Esq., BA (Tasmania)
(20 February 2023)[150]
Named after St George's Cross which has been a symbol of England since the time of the Crusades, instituted around 1418.[141]
 
Phillip Alan Bone, Esq., BA, MSt, DPhil (Oxon)
(6 November 2023)[151]
Instituted by Henry VII on 29 October 1485, the office is named after the red dragon of Wales.[141]

Officers Extraordinary edit

Officers of Arms Extraordinary[125]
Badge Office Name
(date of appointment)
Notes
  Created in 1978, one special case, who, although not a member of the College, holds a permanent post created to oversee heraldry in New Zealand; he works together with the College to grant new arms for people and bodies in that country (where he himself lives and works).[152][153] The badge is a crowned Maori koru.
  Revived in 1887 by the Earl Marshal, who was also the Duke of Norfolk and Baron Maltravers, originally instituted around 1540.[155]
  Beginning in 1539 this officer was a herald to the dukes of Norfolk, though the first holder, John James, was paid a salary by King Henry VIII.[157]
 
Thomas Owen Saunders Lloyd, OBE, DL, MA (Cantab), FSA
(2 August 2010)[158]
There was a Wales Herald in the late fourteenth century, around 1393, but the office was short-lived. It was re-established in 1963 as an officer of arms extraordinary.[159]
  Though a royal herald, Arundel is not a member of the College of Arms, and was originally a private herald in the household of Thomas Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel, originally instituted around 1413. The office was revived in 1727.[161]
  As with the other extraordinary offices of arms and inspired by baronies held by the Duke of Norfolk, its appointment was first made for the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1837.[163]

Armorial achievement of the College edit

Coat of arms of College of Arms
 
Notes
The doves in the arms of the College of Arms, are always represented with the sinister wing closed, and dexter wing extended and inverted. The positions of the wings have given rise to much curious speculation. Arthur Charles Fox-Davies wrote in 1909, that the arms was clearly based on the attributed arms of King Edward the Confessor, which was composed of a cross patonce between five martlets, all or.[164] John Brooke-Little on the other hand wrote in 1950 that: "These arms may have been derived from those used by John Wrythe who was Garter at the time of the foundation of the College of Arms in 1484."[165]
Adopted
1484 (hypothetical), 1555 (definite)[166]
Crest
On a ducal coronet or, a dove rising azure[167][168]
Escutcheon
Argent, a cross gules (Cross of St. George) between four doves, the dexter wing of each expanded and inverted azure[167][168]
Supporters
Two lions rampant guardant argent, ducally gorged or[168][169]
Motto
DILIGENT AND SECRET[166]
Badge
  A dove, the dexter wing expanded and inverted azure, ducally gorged or
Symbolism
The dove has always been a traditional symbol of the herald's office.[165] John de Bado Aureo in his heraldic treatise (c. 1390), wrote that the dove was a messenger of peace and gladness, as appeared in the eighth chapter of the Book of Genesis.[166]

See also edit

Other institutions linked to the College of Arms
Similar heraldic authorities in other parts of the world
Subjects under the jurisdiction of the College

Notes edit

  1. ^ The College originally occupied a property between St Paul's and Thames St, known as Derby Place, which burned in the Great Fire. The replacement building, known simply as the College of Arms or Herald's College, was built on the same property. When Queen Victoria St was built it crossed the south end of the College's property; the building was then remodelled to front onto the new street.

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The history of the Royal heralds and the College of Arms". College of Arms. from the original on 13 April 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  2. ^ "Privy Council: Record of Charters Granted". Privy Council Office. from the original on 14 October 2011. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  3. ^ "Contact Us". College of Arms. from the original on 30 June 2019. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "How the College of Arms works". College of Arms. from the original on 30 January 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d Wagner 1967, p. 130
  6. ^ "LITERÆ DE INCORPORATIONE HERALDORUM". S.Uemura's Web Page. from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d Robson 1830, p. 36
  8. ^ a b Fox-Davies 1900, p. 95 (translated by author from Latin)
  9. ^ a b Fox-Davies 1900, p. 88
  10. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 68
  11. ^ a b c d e f Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 140
  12. ^ Fox-Davies 1900, p. 89
  13. ^ a b Bedingfeld & Gwynn-Jones 1993, p. 32
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h "Architecture of the College". College of Arms. from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  15. ^ Noble 1805, p. 54
  16. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 131
  17. ^ Noble 1805, p. 55
  18. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 134
  19. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 135
  20. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 136
  21. ^ a b Noble 1805, p. 101
  22. ^ a b Noble 1805, p. 107
  23. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 181
  24. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 242
  25. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 125
  26. ^ Noble 1805, p. 105
  27. ^ Noble 1805, p. 149
  28. ^ a b c Noble 1805, p. 150
  29. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 182
  30. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 183
  31. ^ . College of Arms. Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  32. ^ a b c Noble 1805, p. 160
  33. ^ Fox-Davies 1900, p. 101
  34. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 199
  35. ^ Noble 1805, p. 195
  36. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 222
  37. ^ a b Noble 1805, p. 227
  38. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 256
  39. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 254
  40. ^ a b Noble 1805, p. 228
  41. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 257
  42. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 258
  43. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 259
  44. ^ Noble 1805, p. 256
  45. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 263
  46. ^ Noble 1805, p. 267
  47. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 108
  48. ^ a b c Robson 1830, p. 37
  49. ^ a b Noble 1805, p. 269
  50. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 306
  51. ^ Noble 1805, p. 270
  52. ^ Noble 1805, p. 271
  53. ^ Noble 1805, p. 295
  54. ^ Noble 1805, p. 301
  55. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 318
  56. ^ Noble 1805, p. 350
  57. ^ Noble 1805, p. 348
  58. ^ Noble 1805, p. 352
  59. ^ Noble 1805, p. 375
  60. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 472
  61. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 474
  62. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 475
  63. ^ a b c Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 141
  64. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 477
  65. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 478
  66. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 479
  67. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 486
  68. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 489
  69. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 518
  70. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 507
  71. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 512
  72. ^ "Lyon King of Arms Act of 1867". legislation.gov.uk. 5 September 2001. from the original on 13 October 2010. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  73. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 513
  74. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 527
  75. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 535
  76. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 536
  77. ^ a b c "Committee on the Heralds' College". The National Archives. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  78. ^ a b c d e "Constitution and Working of the College of Heralds". The National Archives. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  79. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 540
  80. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 547
  81. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 548
  82. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 551
  83. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 528
  84. ^ "The Guild Church of St Benet, Paul's Wharf: A Brief History" (PDF). stbenetwelshchurch.org.uk. (PDF) from the original on 12 June 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  85. ^ "Fire at heraldry records building". BBC News. 5 February 2009. from the original on 8 February 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  86. ^ Johnson, Wesley (5 February 2009). "Fire hits College of Arms". The Independent. UK. from the original on 17 March 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  87. ^ "The College of Arms Newsletter, March 2009". College of Arms. from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  88. ^ "The College of Arms Newsletter, October 2009". College of Arms. from the original on 21 January 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  89. ^ a b c "Official Royal posts: Earl Marshal". The Royal Household. from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  90. ^ a b Bedingfeld & Gwynn-Jones 1993, p. 37
  91. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 110
  92. ^ "UK Politics: A–Z of Parliament: State Opening of Parliament – Royal Procession". BBC News. 15 October 1998. from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  93. ^ "Pomp and Circumstance at Westminster". Christine Riding for BBC Online. from the original on 6 February 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  94. ^ "The Monarchy Today – Royal events and ceremonies – Garter Service". The Royal Household. from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  95. ^ "Members of the Order of the Garter". The Royal Household. from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  96. ^ a b c Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 142
  97. ^ "Rules of Royal Succession". Political and Constitutional Reform Committee. from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  98. ^ "Royal Residences: St. James's Palace". The Royal Household. from the original on 9 March 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  99. ^ "How a New King Succeeds to the Throne". The New York Times. 25 June 1902. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  100. ^ "New King proclaimed to-morrow". The Guardian. UK. 6 April 2000. from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  101. ^ "Ancient Coronation Traditions & Etiquette: Part 5". London Online. from the original on 28 November 2011. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  102. ^ a b c Robson 1830, p. 35
  103. ^ Alderson, Andrew; Lusher, Adam (7 April 2002). "Queen Mother's 'human side' seen in poems and hymns". The Telegraph. London. from the original on 24 January 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  104. ^ Moss, Stephen (10 April 2002). "Wit, wisdom, and not a burgundy tie in sight". The Guardian. UK. from the original on 13 June 2014. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  105. ^ a b c d e f "Granting of Arms". College of Arms. from the original on 13 June 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  106. ^ Brooke-Little 1978, p. 265
  107. ^ Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 33
  108. ^ a b c Brooke-Little 1978, p. 267
  109. ^ a b c Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 143
  110. ^ Pegge, Samuel (1818). Curialia Miscellanea; or, Anecdotes of Old Times; Regal, Noble, Gentilitial, and Miscellaneous: ... London: J. Nichols, Son, and Bentley. pp. 335–336.
  111. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 219
  112. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 220
  113. ^ a b "Proving a right to arms". College of Arms. from the original on 31 May 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  114. ^ a b "Changes of Name". College of Arms. from the original on 21 June 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  115. ^ a b "Registering a Pedigree". College of Arms. from the original on 21 June 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  116. ^ "House of Lords Act 1999". legislation.gov.uk. 11 November 1999. from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  117. ^ "Introductory text to the Roll of the Peerage". College of Arms. 1 June 2004. from the original on 18 March 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  118. ^ "No. 57314". The London Gazette. 11 June 2004. pp. 7320–7321.
  119. ^ "The Roll of the Peerage" (PDF). College of Arms. 1 June 2004. (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  120. ^ "Home". College of Arms. Retrieved 24 April 2020. The College of Arms is the official heraldic authority for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and much of the Commonwealth including Australia and New Zealand.
  121. ^ "New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  122. ^ "College of Arms (Question No. 806)". Hansard. Australian House of Representatives. 7 February 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  123. ^ "Australian Heraldic Authority". Australian Heraldry Society. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  124. ^ a b c Boutell 1863, p. 109
  125. ^ a b c d e f g h "The current officers of arms". College of Arms. from the original on 21 June 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  126. ^ Janin, Hunt (2004). Medieval Justice: Cases and Laws in France, England and Germany, 500–1500. London: McFarland & Company. pp. 145–146. ISBN 0-7864-1841-9. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  127. ^ Bedingfeld & Gwynn-Jones 1993, p. 24
  128. ^ a b Woodcock & Robinson 1988, p. 139
  129. ^ a b c d "HM Treasury Payments to Garter King of Arms Sir Thomas Woodcock – a Freedom of Information request to Her Majesty's Treasury". WhatDoTheyKnow. 3 January 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  130. ^ a b Wagner 1967, p. 100
  131. ^ a b c Wagner 1967, p. 79
  132. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 80
  133. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 83
  134. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 91
  135. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 93
  136. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 92
  137. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 90
  138. ^ a b c "Some past heralds". College of Arms. from the original on 18 August 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  139. ^ Wagner 1967, p. 326
  140. ^ "No. 63408". The London Gazette. 5 July 2021. p. 77.
  141. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m . College of Arms. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  142. ^ "Crown Office", The London Gazette, 9 April 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  143. ^ "Crown Office", The London Gazette, 9 April 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  144. ^ "No. 59387". The London Gazette. 12 April 2010. p. 6285.
  145. ^ "No. 62064". The London Gazette. 27 September 2017. p. 18030.
  146. ^ "Windsor Herald". College of Arms. 13 July 2019. from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  147. ^ "No. 64221". The London Gazette. 7 November 2023. p. 22370.
  148. ^ Bluemantle Pursuivant, College of Arms, 13 June 2019, from the original on 14 July 2019, retrieved 14 June 2019
  149. ^ "Portcullis Pursuivant - College of Arms".
  150. ^ "Rouge Croix Pursuivant - College of Arms".
  151. ^ "New Appointments - College of Arms".
  152. ^ a b "New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. from the original on 29 January 2012. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  153. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 47
  154. ^ "No. 51716". The London Gazette. 27 April 1989. p. 5041.
  155. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 43
  156. ^ "No. 53849". The London Gazette. 15 November 1994. p. 15981.
  157. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 45
  158. ^ "No. 59505". The London Gazette. 2 August 2010. p. 14735.
  159. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 49
  160. ^ "Arundel Herald - College of Arms".
  161. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 40
  162. ^ "No. 55291". The London Gazette. 26 October 1998. p. 11553.
  163. ^ Chesshyre & Ailes 1986, p. 42
  164. ^ Fox-Davies & Johnston 1909, p. 244
  165. ^ a b Brooke-Little 1978, p. 232
  166. ^ a b c Wagner 1967, p. 133
  167. ^ a b Boutell 1867, p. 131
  168. ^ a b c Fox-Davies & Johnston 1909, p. 47
  169. ^ Boutell 1867, p. 132
Bibliography

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • College of Arms Trust
  • The National Archives' page for the College of Arms
  • The White Lion Society
  • College of Arms Foundation USA 11 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Heraldry Society

51°30′44″N 0°05′56″W / 51.51222°N 0.09889°W / 51.51222; -0.09889

college, arms, heralds, college, royal, corporation, consisting, professional, officers, arms, with, jurisdiction, over, england, wales, northern, ireland, some, commonwealth, realms, heralds, appointed, british, sovereign, delegated, authority, behalf, crown,. The College of Arms or Heralds College is a royal corporation consisting of professional officers of arms with jurisdiction over England Wales Northern Ireland and some Commonwealth realms The heralds are appointed by the British Sovereign and are delegated authority to act on behalf of the Crown in all matters of heraldry the granting of new coats of arms genealogical research and the recording of pedigrees The College is also the official body responsible for matters relating to the flying of flags on land and it maintains the official registers of flags and other national symbols Though a part of the Royal Household of the United Kingdom the College is self financed unsupported by any public funds College of ArmsHeadquarters of the College of Arms 2011 with the dome of St Paul s Cathedral behindCompany typeRoyal CorporationFounded2 March 1484 incorporated 1 18 July 1555 reincorporated 2 FounderRichard III of EnglandMary I of England amp Philip II of SpainHeadquarters130 Queen Victoria Street City of London EC4V 4BT 3 Area servedEngland Wales Northern Ireland Australia and New ZealandKey peopleEdward Fitzalan Howard 18th Duke of Norfolk Hereditary Earl Marshal David White Garter Principal King of ArmsServicesRecording granting and regulation of heraldry coats of arms and pedigreesParentRoyal Household of the United Kingdom 4 Websitewww wbr college of arms wbr gov wbr ukFounded by royal charter in 1484 by King Richard III of England the College is one of the few remaining official heraldic authorities in Europe Within the United Kingdom there are two such authorities the Court of the Lord Lyon in Scotland and the College of Arms for the rest of the United Kingdom The College has had its home in the City of London since its foundation and has been at its present location on Queen Victoria Street since 1555 a The College of Arms also undertakes and consults on the planning of many ceremonial occasions such as coronations state funerals the annual Garter Service and the State Opening of Parliament Heralds of the College accompany the sovereign on many of these occasions The College comprises thirteen officers or heralds three Kings of Arms six Heralds of Arms and four Pursuivants of Arms There are also seven officers extraordinary who take part in ceremonial occasions but are not part of the College The entire corporation is overseen by the Earl Marshal a hereditary office always held by the Duke of Norfolk Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Varying fortunes 1 3 Reincorporation 1 4 Civil War 1 5 Survival 1 6 Comfortable decay 1 7 Reform 1 8 Present 2 Roles 2 1 Ceremonial 2 2 Granting and proving descent of arms 2 3 Change of names 2 4 Change of name and arms 2 5 Genealogical records 2 6 Roll of the Peerage 2 7 Outside the UK 3 Earl Marshal 3 1 Court of Chivalry 4 Heralds of the College 4 1 Wages 4 2 Uniforms 4 3 Qualifications 4 4 List of heralds 4 4 1 Officers in Ordinary 4 4 2 Officers Extraordinary 5 Armorial achievement of the College 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editFoundation edit nbsp Depiction of King Richard III the College of Arms founder his wife Queen Anne Neville and their son Edward of Middleham Prince of Wales with their heraldic crests and badges from the Rous Roll A roll of arms painted by John Rous around 1483 1485 for the Earl of Warwick King Richard III s interest in heraldry was indicated by his possession of two important rolls of arms 5 While still Duke of Gloucester and Constable of England for his brother Edward IV from 1469 he in the latter capacity supervised the heralds and made plans for the reform of their organisation Soon after his accession to the throne he created Sir John Howard as Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England who became the first Howard appointed to both positions 5 In the first year of his reign the royal heralds were incorporated under royal charter dated 2 March 1484 under the Latin name Le Garter regis armorum Anglicorum regis armorum partium Australium regis armorum partium Borealium regis armorum Wallae et heraldorum prosecutorum sive pursevandorum armorum 6 7 Translated as the Garter King of Arms of England the King of Arms of the Southern parts the King of Arms of the Northern parts the King of Arms of Wales and all other heralds and pursuivants of arms 8 The charter then goes on to state that the heralds for the time being shall be in perpetuity a body corporate in fact and name and shall preserve a succession unbroken 8 This charter titled Literae de incorporatione heraldorum is now held in the British Museum 9 There has been some evidence that prior to this charter the royal heralds had already in some ways behaved like a corporation as early as 1420 1 10 11 Nevertheless the charter is the earliest surviving document to affirm the chapter as a corporate body of heralds 9 The charter outlines the constitution of the officers their hierarchy the privileges conferred upon them and their jurisdiction over all heraldic matters in the Kingdom of England 12 The King empowered the College to have and use only one common seal of authority and also instructed them to find a chaplain to celebrate mass daily for himself Anne Neville the Queen Consort and his heir Prince Edward 5 7 The College was also granted a house named Coldharbour formerly Poulteney s Inn on Upper Thames Street in the parish of All Hallows the Less for storing records and living space for the heralds 5 13 14 The house built by Sir John de Pulteney four times Lord Mayor of London was said to be one of the greatest in the City of London 15 16 Varying fortunes edit nbsp Prince Arthur s Book an armorial of arms for Arthur Prince of Wales c 1520 depicting the proliferation of lions in English heraldryThe defeat and death of Richard III at Bosworth field was a double blow for the heralds for they lost both their patron the King and their benefactor the Earl Marshal who was also slain 17 The victorious Henry Tudor was crowned King Henry VII soon after the battle Henry s first Parliament of 1485 passed an Act of Resumption in which large grants of crown properties made by his two predecessors to their supporters were cancelled 18 Whether this act affected the status of the College s charter is debatable however the act did facilitate the de facto recovery of Coldharbour to the crown Henry then granted the house to his mother Lady Margaret Beaufort for life 19 This was because it was supposed that the house was granted personally to John Writhe the Garter King of Arms and not to the heralds as a corporation As a result the heralds were left destitute and many of their books and records were lost 1 7 11 Despite this ill treatment from the King the heralds position at the royal court remained and they were compelled by the King to attend him at all times albeit in rotation 20 Of the reign of King Henry VIII it has been said that at no time since its establishment was the college in higher estimation nor in fuller employment than in this reign 21 Henry VIII was fond of pomp and magnificence and thus gave the heralds plenty of opportunity to exercise their roles in his court In addition the members of the College were also expected to be regularly despatched to foreign courts on missions whether to declare war accompany armies summon garrisons or deliver messages to foreign potentates and generals 21 During his magnificent meeting with Francis I of France at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520 Henry VIII brought with him eighteen officers of arms probably all he had to regulate the many tournaments and ceremonies held there 22 nbsp Officers of the College of Arms riding in procession to the Westminster Tournament from a tourney roll made during the reign of King Henry VIII in 1511 The pursuivants to the left are identified by their reversed tabards while the figure in the right with the black hat is probably Garter King of Arms Sir Thomas Wriothesley Nevertheless the College s petitions to the King and to the Duke of Suffolk in 1524 and 1533 for the return of their chapter house were rejected and the heralds were left to hold chapter in whichever palace the royal court happened to be at the time They even resorted to meeting at each other s houses at various guildhalls and even a hospital 23 Furthermore Henry VIII s habit of raising ladies in the situation of subjects to queens and then awarding them many heraldic augmentations which also extended to their respective families was considered harmful to the science of heraldry 22 The noted antiquarian and heraldist Charles Boutell commented in 1863 that the Arms of Queen Anne Boleyn are the first which exemplify the usage introduced by Henry VIII of granting to his Consorts Augmentations to their paternal arms It is a striking illustration of the degenerate condition of Heraldry under the second Tudor Sovereign 24 It was also in this reign in 1530 that Henry VIII conferred on the College one of its most important duties for almost a century the heraldic visitation 25 The provincial Kings of Arms were commissioned under a royal warrant to enter all houses and churches and given authority to deface and destroy all arms unlawfully used by any knight esquire or gentleman Around the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries this duty became even more necessary as the monasteries were previously repositories of local genealogical records From then on all genealogical records and the duty of recording them was subsumed by the College These visitations were serious affairs and many individuals were charged and heavily fined for breaking the law of arms Hundreds of these visitations were carried out well into the 17th century the last was in 1686 11 26 Reincorporation edit nbsp Roll of grants of arms during the Tudor period by Sir Thomas Wriothesley c 1528The College found a patroness in Mary I although it must have been embarrassing for both sides after the heralds initially proclaimed the right of her rival Lady Jane Grey to the throne When King Edward VI died on 6 July 1553 Lady Jane Grey was proclaimed queen four days later first in Cheapside then in Fleet Street by two heralds trumpets blowing before them However when popular support swung to Mary s side the Lord Mayor of London and his councils accompanied by the Garter King of Arms two other heralds and four trumpeters returned to Cheapside to proclaim Mary s ascension as rightful queen instead 27 The College s excuse was that they were compelled in their earlier act by the Duke of Northumberland Lady Jane s father in law who was later executed an excuse that Mary accepted 28 The queen and her husband and co sovereign Philip II of Spain then set about granting the College a new house called Derby Place or Derby House under a new charter dated 18 July 1555 at Hampton Court Palace 11 28 The house was built by Thomas Stanley 1st Earl of Derby who married Lady Margaret Beaufort in 1482 and was created the 1st Earl of Derby in 1485 29 The house was built in 1503 and was given to the Crown by the 3rd Earl in 1552 3 in exchange for some land 30 The charter stated that the house would enable them the College to assemble together and consult and agree amongst themselves for the good of their faculty and that the records and rolls might be more safely and conveniently deposited 28 The charter also reincorporated the three kings of arms six heralds and all other heralds and pursuivants and their successors into a corporation with perpetual succession A new seal of authority with the College s full coat of arms was also engraved On 16 May 1565 the name the House of the Office of Arms was used thereafter in May 1566 our Colledge of Armes and in January 1567 our House of the College of the office of arms 29 Derby Place was situated in the parish of St Benedict and St Peter south of St Paul s Cathedral more or less on the College s present location 1 7 There are records of the heralds carrying out modifications to the structure of Derby Place over many years However little record of its appearance has survived except the description that the buildings formed three sides of a quadrangle entered through a gate with a portcullis on the west side On the south range roughly where Queen Victoria Street now stands was a large hall on the western end 14 Derby Place s hearth tax bill from 1663 discovered in 2009 at the National Archives at Kew showed that the building had about thirty two rooms which were the workplace as well as the home to eleven officers of arms 31 nbsp Armorial achievement of the College and its Kings of Arms from Lant s Roll painted by Thomas Lant around 1595 It depicts the arms of Garter Clarenceux Norroy and Ulster The additional charge in the first quarter of the first two shields does not appear subsequently The reign of Mary s sister Elizabeth I saw the college s privileges confirmed by an act of Parliament which in 1566 As well as the drawing up of many important internal statutes and ordinances for the College by Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk the Earl Marshal dated 18 July 1568 32 33 The long reign saw the College distracted by the many quarrels between Garter William Dethick Clarenceux Robert Cooke and York Herald Ralph Brooke about their rights and annulments 34 Disputes in which the other officers also took part often occurred among the lesser heralds against each other Historian Mark Noble wrote in 1805 that these fights often involved the use of every epithet that was disgraceful to themselves and their opponents and that Their accusations against each other would fill a volume 32 During these years the College s reputation was greatly injured in the eyes of the public 35 The reason behind these discords were laid on the imperfect execution of the reorganisation of the College in 1568 and the uncertainty over issue of granting arms to the new and emerging gentry of the era 34 An enquiry into the state of the College lasted for one year finally reporting to William Cecil Baron Burghley in 1596 as a consequence many important measures of reform for the College were made in the reign of James I 36 Eventually these animosities among the heralds in the College ended only after the expulsion of one and the death of another 32 Civil War edit When the English Civil War began in 1642 during the reign of King Charles I the College was divided three kings of arms three heralds and one pursuivant sided with the King and the Royalists while the other officers began to court the services of the Parliamentarian side 37 Nevertheless the heralds petitioned Parliament in the same year to protect their Books of Record Registers Entries Precedents Arms Pedigrees and Dignities 38 In 1643 the heralds joined the King at Oxford and were with him at Naseby and followed him on all of his campaigns Sir Edward Walker the Garter King of Arms from 1645 was even appointed with the permission of Parliament to act as the King s chief secretary at the negotiations at Newport After the execution of Charles I Walker joined Charles II in his exile in the Netherlands 39 Meanwhile on 3 August 1646 the Committee of Sequestration took possession of the College premises and kept it under its own authority Later in October Parliament ordered the committee to directly remove those officers whose loyalties were with the King and to nominate their own candidates to fill these vacant offices 37 Those officers whose loyalty remained with the King were persecuted first they were deprived of their offices then of their emoluments then a fine was imposed and some were even imprisoned 40 In spite of this the institutional College was protected by the Parliamentarians and their rights and work continued unabated 40 41 Edward Bysshe a Member of Parliament from Bletchingley was appointed Garter thus Parliament which rejected its King created for itself a King of Arms 42 During this time the heralds continued their work and were even present on 26 June 1657 at Oliver Cromwell s second installation ceremony as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth 43 44 Survival edit nbsp Heraldic banners and crests of King Charles II and his brother James Duke of York later James II observed by Elias Ashmole Windsor Herald On a visitation to Berkshire in 1664 1665 the banners and crests were found at the choir stalls of St George s Chapel Windsor Castle On 8 May 1660 the heralds at the command of the Convention Parliament proclaimed Charles II King at Westminster Hall Gate It was said that William Ryley who was originally appointed Lancaster Herald by Charles I but then sided with Cromwell did not even have a tabard with the Royal Arms as his own had been plundered in the wars He had to borrow a decorative one from the tomb of James I in Westminster Abbey instead the garment was duly returned the next day 45 The Restoration of Charles II annulled all the Acts of the Parliament and all the actions of the Lord Protector without penalising any of their supporters except for the regicides Accordingly all the grant of arms of the Commonwealth College was declared null and void Furthermore all heralds appointed during the Interregnum lost their offices while those appointed originally by Charles I returned to their places 46 The exception was Edward Bysshe who was removed as Garter but was instead appointed Clarenceux in 1661 much to the chagrin of Garter Edward Walker 45 In 1666 as the Great Fire of London swept through the city Derby Place the College s home since 1555 was completely gutted and destroyed 1 14 47 Fortunately the College s library was saved and at first was stored in the Palace of Whitehall then later moved to the Palace of Westminster where a temporary office was opened in an apartment called the Queen s court 48 An announcement was also made in the London Gazette to draw public notice to the situation 49 Due to a shortage of funds the planned rebuilding of a new College was delayed until 1670 49 It was then that Francis Sandford the Rouge Dragon Pursuivant and Morris Emmett the King s bricklayer were together able to design and begin construction of a new structure on the old site 11 50 The costs of the rebuilding was financed in stages and the structure was erected slowly in parts The heralds contributed significantly out of their own pockets at the same time they also sought subscriptions among the nobility with the names of contributors recorded into a series of splendid manuscripts known as the Benefactors Books 14 48 nbsp The College of Arms as it looked in the 18th century engraved by Benjamin Cole and published in William Maitland s The History and Survey of London From Its Evolution to the Present Time in 1756 By 1683 the College part of the structure was finished The new building was built out of plain bricks of three storeys with basement and attic levels in addition 51 The College consists of an extensive range of quadrangular buildings 48 Apart from the hall a porter s lodge and a public office the rest of the building was given over to the heralds as accommodation 52 To the east and south sides three terraced houses were constructed for leases their facade in keeping with the original design In 1699 the hall which for some time had been used as a library was transformed into the Earl Marshal s Court or the Court of Chivalry it remains so to this day In 1776 some stylistic changes were made to the exterior of the building and some details such as pediments and cornices were removed transforming the building to the then popular but austere Neo Classical style 14 The magnificent coronation of James II in 1685 saw the College revived as an institution of state and the monarchy 53 However the abrupt end of his reign saw all but one of the heralds taking the side of William of Orange and Mary II in the Glorious Revolution 54 The period from 1704 to 1706 saw not a single grant of arms being made by the College this nadir was attributed to the changes in attitude of the times 55 The Acts of Union 1707 between England and Scotland in the reign of Anne did not affect the jurisdiction or the rights of the College The College of Arms and the Court of the Lord Lyon were to exist side by side in their respective realms However in the matter of precedence the Lord Lyon when in England was to take immediate precedence behind Garter King of Arms 56 Comfortable decay edit nbsp Design by Robert Abraham 1773 1850 for a new College of Arms in Trafalgar Square at the heart of Regency London in the 1820s the plan was not executed due to a lack of funds The Hanoverian succession to the throne of Great Britain led to reigns with less ceremony than in any since the incorporation of the heralds 57 The only notable incident for the college in this period during the reign of George I happened in 1727 when an impostor called Robert Harman pretended to be a herald The knave was prosecuted by the College in the county of Suffolk and was sentenced to be pilloried in several market towns on public market days and afterwards to be imprisoned and pay a fine This hefty sentence was executed proving that the rights of the College were still respected 58 In 1737 during the reign of George II the College petitioned for another charter to reaffirm their rights and remuneration this effort proved unsuccessful Apart from these events the influence of the College was greatly diminished 59 In 1742 a Sugar House was built against the wall of the College This structure was a fire risk and the cause of great anxiety among the heralds In 1775 the College Surveyor drew attention to this problem but to no avail In February 1800 the College was asked by a Select Committee of the House of Commons to report to them the state of public records again the heralds drew attention to the proximity of the Sugar House Members of the committee inspected the College premises and reported to the House that the College must either be moved to a new building or secured against the risk of fire Again nothing was done in 1812 water seeped through the walls of the College damaging records The Surveyor traced the leak back to a shed recently erected by Alderman Smith owner of the Sugar House who declared his readiness to do everything he could but who actually did very little to rectify the situation 60 After years of negotiation the College in 1820 bought the Sugar House from Smith for the sum of 1 500 61 nbsp Herald s College Bennet s Hill Drawn by Thomas H Shepherd engraved by W Wallis Jones amp Co Temple of the Muses Finsbury Square London 17 April 1830Great financial strains placed upon the College during these times were relieved when the extravagant Prince Regent the future George IV granted to the College an annual endowment by Royal Warrant on 29 February 1820 This generous endowment from the crown the first since 1555 was applied towards the reparation and support of the College 62 63 Despite the successes of the purchase of the Sugar House and the royal endowment the College still looked upon the possibility of moving its location to a more suitable and fashionable place 62 John Nash was at the same time laying out his plans for a new London and in 1822 the College through the Deputy Earl Marshal asked the government for a portion of land in the new districts on which to build a house to keep their records A petition from the College was given to the Lords of the Treasury setting out the herald s reason for the move that the local situation of the College is so widely detached from the proper scene of the official duties and occupations of Your Memorialists and from the residences of that class of persons by whom the records in their charge are chiefly and most frequently consulted 64 Nash himself was asked by the College to design a new building near fashionable Trafalgar Square but Nash s elaborate plan proved too costly and ambitious for the College 65 At the same time the College also asked Robert Abraham to submit to them a second plan for the building When Nash heard that another architect was approached behind his back he reacted vehemently and attacked the heralds 66 The College nevertheless continued with their plans However they were constantly beset by conflicts between the different officers over the amount needed to build a new building By 1827 the college still had no coherent plan the Duke of Norfolk ordered the College to drop the matter altogether 67 By 1842 the heralds were reconciled with their location and once again commissioned Abraham to build a new octagonal shaped Record Room on the site of the old Sugar House 14 In 1861 a proposal was made to construct a road from Blackfriars to the Mansion House this would have resulted in the complete demolition of the College However protests from the heralds resulted in only parts of the south east and south west wings being sliced off requiring extensive remodelling The College was now a three sided building with an open courtyard facing the New Queen Victoria Street laid out in 1866 The terrace steps and entrance porch were also added around this time 14 68 Reform edit nbsp 1862 map showing layout of the College labelled Herald Off Carter Lane and Upper Thames Street can be seen running parallel to the north and south of the College respectively St Benet s Paul s Wharf the official church of the College since 1555 can be seen to the south west On 18 October 1869 a warrant for a commission of inquiry into the state of the College was established The warrant issued on the behalf of the Duke of Norfolk stated that it is desirable that the College of Arms should be visited and an inquiry instituted with the view of ascertaining whether the Rules and Orders for the good government of the said College are duly obeyed and fulfilled and whether by change of circumstances or any other cause any new Laws Ordinances or Regulations are necessary to be made for the said College 69 The commission had three members Lord Edward Fitzalan Howard the Deputy Earl Marshal Sir William Alexander Queen s Counsel and Edward Bellasis a Sergeant at Law 70 Sir Bernard Burke of the famous Burke s Peerage at the time Ulster King of Arms gave the commission the advice that the College should be made a Government Department let its Officers receive fixed salaries from Government and let all its fees be paid into the public exchequer This arrangement would I am sure be self supporting and would raise at once the character of the Office and the status of the Heralds 71 Burke s suggestion for reform was the same arrangement that had already been applied to the Lord Lyon Court in Scotland in 1867 72 and was to be applied to his own office in 1871 However unlike the Lyon Court which was a court of law and part of the Scottish Judiciary the College of Arms has always been an independent corporate body overseen by the Earl Marshal While the Lord Lyon depended on the Government for its reforms and statutes the College has always been able to carry out changes from within itself 73 The commission also drew attention to the fees annulments and library of the College as well as the general modernisation of the chapter as a whole When the commission made its report in 1870 it recommended many changes and these were duly made in another warrant dated 27 April 1871 Burke s recommendation however was not implemented 74 nbsp Sir Algar Howard KCB KCVO MC TD was appointed Norroy King of Arms in 1931 In 1943 he became the first Norroy and Ulster King of Arms when the two titles were merged He served in this office until 1944 when he was promoted to Garter King of Arms he retired in 1950 Despite the findings of this inquiry the issues surrounding the status and position of the College continued At the beginning of the 20th century these issues were once again brought to the forefront In 1903 an inquiry was set up at the instructions of Arthur Balfour soon to be Prime Minister The committee of inquiry was to consist of eight members Sir Algernon West was made chairman They were tasked to investigate the constitution duties and administration of the Heralds College the main issues being the anomalous position of the College who are theoretically officials of the Royal Household but actually derive their income from fees paid by private individuals for their services 75 Some of the members of the committee a minority wanted like Burke thirty four years earlier to make officers of the College of Arms into salaried civil servants of the state 75 Despite concluding that some form of change was necessary the inquiry categorically stated that any change is at the present time and in present circumstances impracticable 76 In 1905 the generous endowment from the Crown as instituted by George IV was stopped by the Liberal Government of the day as part of its campaign against the House of Lords and the class system 63 A second inquiry was established in 1928 under the chairmanship of Lord Birkenhead 77 The inquiry was called soon after a secret memorandum written in 1927 was circulated by the Home Office criticising the constitution and workings of the heralds 78 The memorandum states that They have as will be seen from this memorandum in many cases attempted to interfere with the exercise by the Secretary of State of his constitutional responsibility for advising the Crown 78 and that the College had adopted practices in connection with matters within their jurisdiction which seem highly improper in themselves and calculated to bring the royal prerogative into contempt 78 These accusations concern the actions of certain heralds who overzealously advocate the cases of their paid clients even against the opposition of the ministers of the day 78 Sir Anthony Wagner writes that The officers of these departments no doubt in the overconfident way of their generation esteemed the College an anachronistic and anomalous institution overdue for reform or abolition 79 The memorandum ended by saying that the College of Arms is a small and highly organised luxury trade dependent for its living on supplying the demand for a fancy article among the well to do and like many such trades it has in very many cases to create the demand before it can supply it 78 When the committee made their report in June 1928 they suggested several reforms to tackle the main issues which had brought the College into so much conflict with the Home Office Firstly they concluded that the fees systems were adequate and no change was necessary in that regard They justified this by stating that placing all or even a few of the Officers on a fixed salary outweigh any advantages which might be expected to result from the change 77 Secondly they concluded that from now on the College was to be entirely subordinated to the Home Office and that a standing inter departmental committee be established to settle any future conflicts 77 Present edit nbsp Main entrance to the College of Arms 2011In 1934 on the 450th anniversary of the incorporation of the College of Arms an exhibition was held at the College of the heralds principal treasures and other associated interests The exhibition was opened by the Earl Marshal and ran from 28 June to 26 July during which time it received more than 10 000 visitors including the Duke George VI and Duchess of York Elizabeth 80 In 1939 at the beginning of the Second World War the College s records were moved to Thornbury Castle in Gloucestershire the home of Major Algar Howard the Norroy King of Arms Meanwhile on 10 and 11 May 1941 the College building was almost consumed by fire which had already levelled all the buildings to the east of the College on Queen Victoria Street The building was given up for lost when a change in the wind saved it At the end of the war all of the records were returned safely to the College 81 In 1943 the College was given new responsibilities when the office of Ulster King of Arms was annexed and combined with those of the Norroy King of Arms creating a new office called Norroy and Ulster King of Arms Sir Algar Howard thus became the first to hold this office 82 Although the College building was saved from the war its walls and roof were left in a perilous state In 1954 a decision was forced upon heralds whether to abandon the old building which would have been profitable financially or repair it on a scale far beyond the College s resources Eventually with the help of the Ministry of Works and a public subscription the building was repaired in time for the College s 4th centenary of being in possession of Derby Place 83 The present gates to the building were added in 1956 and came originally from Goodrich Court in Herefordshire The new gates displayed the College s arms and crest 14 nbsp The College of Arms in March 2009 with scaffolding on the west wing of the building after the 2009 fireIn the year of the quincentenary of the incorporation of the College of Arms the College held a special service of thanksgiving at St Benet s Paul s Wharf the College s official church since 1555 on 2 March 1984 The Kings of Arms Heralds and Pursuivants ordinary and extraordinary of the College in full uniform processed from the College towards the church together with Queen Elizabeth II the Duke of Norfolk the Earl Marshal and the Earl of Arundel the Deputy Earl Marshal 84 On 5 February 2009 a fire broke out at the west wing on the third and fourth floor of the College building Eight London Fire Brigade fire engines were able to bring the flames under control in the meantime 35 people were evacuated from the building and a further 100 from adjacent buildings 85 No records or books of the College were damaged 86 87 Repairs to the smoke damaged rooms and exterior brickwork were completed in December 2009 88 Roles editCeremonial edit nbsp Heralds in procession to St George s Chapel Windsor Castle for the annual service of the Order of the Garter 19 June 2006The College of Arms is a part of the Royal Household of the Sovereign of the United Kingdom as such they accompany the monarch on various state occasions 1 These occasions are centred on the institution of the monarchy as the symbol of the state and the expression of majesty and power through public pomp and ceremony Presently the heralds turn out their full uniforms only twice a year during the State Opening of Parliament and during the early summer at the Garter Service at Windsor Castle The organisation and planning of all State ceremonies falls within the prerogative of the Earl Marshal the College s chief 89 As a result the heralds have a role to perform within every significant royal ceremony 90 91 State Opening of Parliament takes place annually at the Houses of Parliament The heralds including both ordinary and extraordinary officers form the front part of the Royal Procession preceding the Sovereign and other Great Officers of State 1 92 The procession starts at the bottom of the Victoria Tower then up the Norman Porch to the Robing Chamber Once the Sovereign has put on the Imperial State Crown the heralds lead the monarch once again through the Royal Gallery into the House of Lords and remain with the monarch during the speech and accompany the monarch to the bounds of the Palace 93 Garter Service or Garter Day is held every June on the Monday of Royal Ascot week The annual service takes place at St George s Chapel Windsor Castle On this day new Companions of the Order of the Garter are personally invested with their insignia at the Throne Room of Windsor Castle by the Sovereign All the members then have lunch wearing their blue velvet robes and black velvet hats with white plumes at the Waterloo Chamber Afterwards the members make their way on foot from the Upper Ward of the castle towards St George s Chapel During their procession they are led by members of the College of Arms in their tabards the Military Knights of Windsor and contingents of the Sovereign s Bodyguard After the service the members return to the Upper Ward by carriage 94 This ceremony is especially significant for the Garter King of Arms the senior officer of the College who is an officer of the Order 95 nbsp King Edward VIII surrounded by heralds of the College of Arms prior to his only State Opening of Parliament on 3 November 1936The participation of these two annual ceremonies are considered the least time consuming part of the herald s roles 96 However at other times they are involved in some of the most important ceremonies concerning the life of the British monarch After the death of a Sovereign the Accession Council made up of Privy Councillors and other officers such as the Lord Mayor of London meets at St James s Palace to make a formal proclamation of the accession of the next Sovereign The traditional method of publishing the council s proclamation recognising the new monarch is by way of it being physically read out 97 This task is assigned to the various members of the College by way of the Earl Marshal who receives the text of the proclamation from the council in person The proclamation is to be read at several locations in London Traditionally the first reading is made from the Friary Court balcony at St James s Palace 98 Another reading and ceremony is held at the Temple Bar There a detachment of heralds accompanied by troops of the Royal Horse Guards formally demand admission to the precinct of the City of London from the City Marshall and City Remembrancer The barrier consisting of a silken rope in place of the ancient bar was then removed and the detachment would march forward to meet the Lord Mayor and City Sheriffs where the proclamation would be read Other readings by members of the College also occur at the corner of Chancery Lane in Fleet Street and at the Royal Exchange 99 100 During the Coronation Ceremony members of the College form part of the Royal procession as it enters Westminster Abbey 1 The members of the College walk in the procession in virtue of them being His Majesty s Kings Heralds and Pursuivants of Arms of England They do so alongside their Scottish colleagues the Lord Lyon the Heralds and Pursuivants of Arms of the Lyon Court The Garter King of Arms is usually placed next to the Lord Great Chamberlain in the procession he has the duty of guiding but not performing the ceremony Garter s duties during the coronation ceremony are therefore not unlike those of a Master of Ceremonies 101 It is only during this ceremony that the Kings of Arms are allowed to wear their distinctive crowns the only group of individuals apart from the King and Queen authorised to do so 102 nbsp The heraldic funeral procession of Queen Elizabeth I of England in 1603 depicting some the heralds of the College of Arms each carrying a piece of the Sovereign s armourAt State funerals the heralds once again take their place at the front of the royal procession as it enters the place of worship Historically during the procession of royal funerals usually of the Sovereign the heralds would carry a piece of armour representing the various marks of chivalry These included the helm and crest spurs gauntlet target shield of arms sword and a literal coat of arms a heraldic surcoat This procession of chivalry was an integral part of the heraldic royal funeral One of the most solemn role for the heralds during a royal funeral is the reading of the full list of the styles and titles of the deceased On 9 April 2002 Garter King of Arms Peter Gwynn Jones read out the full styles and titles of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother at the end of her funeral service at Westminster Abbey 103 104 Granting and proving descent of arms edit nbsp A grant of Arms for Henry Draper of Colnbrook as issued by the Clarenceux King of Arms Robert Cooke in 1571 The grant gave him the right to use the arms shown The blazon reads Golde on a ffesse betwene thre Annulettes gules thre standing cuppes of the felde nbsp 1602 drawing of the Shakespeare coat of arms granted in 1596The granting of armorial bearings coat of arms within the United Kingdom is the sole prerogative of the British monarch However the monarch has delegated this power to two authorities the Lord Lyon with jurisdiction over Scotland and the College of Arms over England Wales and Northern Ireland Under the latter s jurisdiction the right to arms is acquired exclusively either by proving descent in an unbroken male line from someone registered as so entitled or by a new grant from the King of Arms 105 Technically however arms can also be gained by a grant from the Crown by prescription meaning in use since time immemorial by succeeding to an office or by marriage The descent of arms follows strongly the Law of heraldic arms which is a branch of English law interpreted by civil lawyers in the Court of Chivalry Sir Edward Coke in his Commentary upon Littleton 1628 wrote that gentry and armes is the nature of gavelkinde for they descend to all the sonnes Arms in England therefore descend to all of the male lines and not just the most senior alone unlike in Scotland 106 107 When a new grant of arms is to be made it is granted through Letters Patent The Crown delegates all of this authority to the King of Arms however before any letters can be issued they must have a warrant from the Earl Marshal agreeing to the granting of arms This has been the case since 1673 when the authority of the Earl Marshal which the heralds had challenged was established by a royal declaration stating among other things that no patents of arms should be granted without his consent This established the present system whereby royal authority to approve candidates for grants of arms is exercised by the Earl Marshal and royal authority to grant the arms themselves is exercised by the Kings of Arms Firstly a petition is submitted called a memorial to the Earl Marshal This memorial will be drawn up for the petitioner by an officer of arms if it is felt that such a petition would be accepted 105 108 Currently there are no set criteria for eligibility for a grant of arms the College recommends that awards or honours from the Crown civil or military commissions university degrees professional qualifications public and charitable services and eminence or good standing in national or local life will be taken into account 96 105 109 nbsp A section of a modern grant of arms for the Rt Rev Archibald Howard Cullen the 6th Bishop of Grahamstown The grant was issued by the Garter King of Arms Sir George Rothe Bellew in the 1950s In the past this issue of eligibility has been a source of great conflict between the heralds such submissions are made on an officer for clients basis which meant some unsuitability was ignored in lieu of profit by past officers Suitability rested on the phrase eminent men originally the test applied was one of wealth or social status as any man entitled to bear a coat of arms was expected to be a gentleman 96 By 1530 the heralds applied a property qualification requiring successful candidates for a grant of arms to have an income from land of 10 per annum or movable wealth of 300 However this was not always the case in 1616 Ralph Brooke York Herald tricked Garter King of Arms William Segar into granting a coat of arms to Gregory Brandon a common hangman for a fee of 22 shillings 110 111 When the king found out he had them both imprisoned at Marshalsea they were freed a few days later 112 The fee for the grant of arms is due when the memorial is submitted the amount being laid out in the Earl Marshal s Warrant As of 1 January 2023 the fees for a personal grant of arms including a crest is 8 050 a grant to a non profit body is 16 455 and to a commercial company is 24 510 This grant may include a grant of a badge supporters or a standard depending on the letters pattent 105 The fees mainly go towards commissioning the artwork and calligraphy on the vellum Letters Patent which must be done by hand and is in a sense a work of art in itself plus other administrative costs borne by the heralds and for the upkeep of the College Once the Earl Marshal has approved the petition he will issue his Warrant to the King of Arms this will allow them to proceed with the granting of the arms It is during this stage that the designing and formation of the arms begin Although the King of Arms has full discretion over the composition of the arms he will take into full account the wishes of the applicant These will include allusions and references to the applicant s life and achievements The design of any new coat of arms must abide by all the rules of heraldry as well as being entirely original and distinct from all previous arms recorded at the College s archives A preliminary sketch will then be approved and sent to the petitioner for approval 105 108 nbsp The coat of arms of city of Bridgetown in the capital and largest city of Barbados The arms were granted to the city on 20 September 1960 by the College of Arms As soon as the composition of the blazon is agreed to by both parties a final grant could then be created This takes the form of a handmade colourfully illuminated and decorated Letters Patent The letter is written and painted in vellum by a College artist and scrivener The grant is then signed and sealed by the King of Arms it is then handed to the petitioner authorising the use of arms blazoned therein as the perpetual property of himself and his heirs A copy of the grant is always made for the College s own register 105 108 Once granted a coat of arms becomes the hereditary and inheritable property of the owner and his descendants However this can only be so if the inheritor is a legitimate male line descendant of the person originally granted with the arms To establish the right to arms by descent one must be able to prove that an ancestor had his arms recorded in the registers of the College If there is a possibility of such an inheritance one must first make contact with an officer in waiting at the College who could then advise on the course of action and the cost of such a search The research into a descent of arms requires details of paternal ancestry which will involve the examination of genealogical records The first step involve a search of the family name in the College s archives as coats of arms and family name has no connection the officer could prove through this method that there is in fact no descent However if a connection is found a genealogical research outside of the College s archives would then be undertaken to provide definitive evidence of descent from an armigerous individual 109 113 Change of names edit The College of Arms is also an authorised location for enrolling a change of name In common law there is no obligation to undergo any particular formality to change one s name However it is possible to execute a deed poll more specifically a deed of change of name as a demonstration of intention to adopt and henceforth use a new name and deeds poll may be enrolled either in the High Court or in the College On being enrolled the deed is customarily gazetted that is published in the London Gazette The deed poll is not entered on the registers but is still published if the name change only affects one s given name 114 Change of name and arms edit It is also possible to change one s coat of arms with or without adopting or appending a new surname by Royal Licence that is to say a licence in the form of a warrant from the Crown directed to the Kings of Arms instructing them to exemplify the transferred arms or a version of them to the licensee in his or her new name Royal Licences are issued on the advice of Garter King of Arms and are usually dependent on there being some constraining circumstances such as a testamentary injunction a requirement in a will or a good reason to wish to perpetuate a particular coat of arms The Royal Licence is of no effect until and unless the exemplification is issued and recorded in the College Royal Licences are gazetted and make a deed poll unnecessary 114 Genealogical records edit nbsp An example of an Elizabethan pedigree of the Euery de Euro family of Northumberland barons of Warkworth and Clavering Scrivened and illuminated by Somerset Herald Robert Glover circa 1570 to 1588Due to the inheritable nature of coats of arms the College have also been involved in genealogy since the 15th century The College regularly conduct genealogical research for individuals with families in the British Isles of all social classes As the College is also the official repository of genealogical materials such as pedigree charts and family trees 115 The College s extensive records within this realm of study dates back over five centuries 113 An individual could if he so wishes have his family s pedigree placed inside the College s records This would require the services of an officer of the College who would then draft a pedigree The officer would ensure that the pedigree was in the correct format and also advise the client on the documentary evidences necessary to supports such a draft After this is done the officer would submit the pedigree to a chapter of two other officers who would then examine the pedigree for any mistakes or in some cases demand more research After this examination is completed the pedigree would then be scrivened and placed into the pedigree register of the College 115 Roll of the Peerage edit Main article Roll of the Peerage The House of Lords Act 1999 removed the automatic right of hereditary peers to a seat in the House of Lords Prior to the passage of this Act anyone succeeding to a title in the peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom would prove their succession by a writ of summons to Parliament 116 All peers receiving such writs were enrolled in the Register of Lords Spiritual and Temporal a document maintained by the Clerk of the Parliaments As a result of the Act the Register of Lords Spiritual and Temporal only records the name of life peers and the 92 hereditary peers left in the House of Lords This meant that the register was incomplete as it excludes most of the other hereditary peers who are not part of the House of Lords 117 On 1 June 2004 a Royal Warrant issued by Queen Elizabeth II states that it is desirable for a full record to be kept of all of Our subjects who are Peers this new record would be named the Roll of the Peerage The warrant was later published in the London Gazette on 11 June 2004 118 The warrant handed the responsibility of maintaining the roll to the Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs in 2007 this responsibility was assumed by the Crown Office within the newly created Ministry of Justice The warrant also stipulated that the Secretary of State would act in consultation with the Garter King of Arms and the Lord Lyon King of Arms The roll would then be published by the College of Arms currently an online edition is available 119 Outside the UK edit The College of Arms states that it is the official heraldic authority for England Wales Northern Ireland and much of the Commonwealth including Australia and New Zealand 120 The position of New Zealand Herald Extraordinary was established in 1978 subordinate to the Garter Principal King of Arms 121 However the official status of the college in Australia has not been confirmed by the federal government The Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet advised in 2018 that grants from the College of Arms were well established as one way Australians can obtain heraldic insignia if they wish to do so but that they had the same status as those by a local artist graphics studio or heraldry specialist 122 The policy of the Australian Heraldry Society is that the College of Arms does not have official heraldic authority over Australia but that the federal government should establish a national body equivalent to the Canadian Heraldic Authority or South Africa s Bureau of Heraldry 123 Earl Marshal editMain article Earl Marshal nbsp Courtroom of the Earl Marshal Court of Chivalry College of Arms LondonThe Earl Marshal is one of the Great Officers of State and the office has existed since 1386 Many of the holders of the office have been related to each other however it was not until 1672 that the office became fully hereditary In that year Henry Howard was appointed to the position by King Charles II In 1677 he also succeeded to the Dukedom of Norfolk as the 6th Duke thus combining the two titles for his successors 89 124 The office originates from that of Marshal one of the English monarch s chief military officers As such he became responsible for all matters concerning war and together with the Lord High Constable held the joint post as judges of the Court of Chivalry After the decline of medieval chivalry the role of Earl Marshal came to concern all matters of state and royal ceremonies By the 16th century this supervision came to include the College of Arms and its heralds 1 89 Thus the Earl Marshal became the head and chief of the College of Arms all important matters concerning its governance including the appointment of new heralds must meet with his approval 125 The Earl Marshal also has authority over the flying of flags within England and Wales as does Lord Lyon King of Arms in Scotland The Officers of Arms at the College of Arms maintain the only official registers of national and other flags and they advise national and local Government and other bodies and individuals on the flying of flags citation needed Head of the College of ArmsArms Titles and offices Name date of succession Notes nbsp Duke of Norfolk Earl Marshal and Hereditary Marshal of England Edward William Fitzalan Howard 18th Duke of Norfolk GCVO DL 24 June 2002 citation needed Edward Duke of Norfolk born 2 December 1956 assumed the office of Earl Marshal on the death of his father Miles 17th Duke of Norfolk in 2002 The heir apparent to the office is the incumbent s oldest son Henry Fitzalan Howard Earl of Arundel born 3 December 1987 citation needed Court of Chivalry edit Main article Court of Chivalry The High Court of Chivalry or the Earl Marshal s Court is a specialised civil court in England presided over by the Earl Marshal 13 The first references made about the court was in 1348 The court has jurisdiction over all matters relating to heraldry as it legalises and enforce decisions of the College of Arms The court considers all cases relating to questions of status including disputes over social rank and the law of arms for example complaints on the infringement of the use of another individual s coat of arms The Court of Chivalry meets on the premises of the College of Arms however the last time it met was in 1954 the first time in 230 years 126 Heralds of the College editThe College of Arms is a corporation of thirteen heralds styled Officers in Ordinary This thirteen can be divided hierarchically into three distinctive ranks three Kings of Arms six Heralds of Arms and four Pursuivants of Arms There are also presently seven Officers Extraordinary who take part in ceremonial occasions but are not part of the College As members of the Royal Household the heralds are appointed at the pleasure of the Sovereign on the recommendation of the Earl Marshal 125 127 The Officers in Ordinary are appointed by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the Realm and the Officers Extraordinary by Royal Sign Manual all appointments are announced in the London Gazette 128 All of the officers in Ordinary of the College were first instituted at different dates some even before the incorporation of the College some originating as private servants of noblemen some being Royal from the start They take their names and badges from the titles and royal badges of the monarchs of England 128 The officers Extraordinary however take their names from the titles and estates of the Earl Marshal they were also created at different dates for ceremonial purposes 11 Wages edit The College is almost entirely self financed and is not a recipient of any regular public funding 4 Its officers do have official salaries which are paid for by the Crown The salaries of the officers were raised during the reign of King James I but were reduced under William IV 63 These salaries per annum reflected the living costs of the day however today the amount is seen only as nominal payment In addition to their official duties the heralds have for many centuries undertaken private practice in heraldry and genealogy for which professional fees are charged 4 125 HM Treasury pays Garter King of Arms for work undertaken for the Government 129 As of 27 January 2021 update the payments made to Sir Thomas Woodcock since his appointment as Garter totalled 651 515 129 Additionally since 2018 the Treasury has provided Garter with an expenses fund of 35 000 per annum to cover business expenses such as secretarial support cleaning and postage 129 As of 27 January 2021 Garter has received 74 579 02 to cover expenses 129 Officers in Ordinary 1618 130 1831 130 Present 125 Garter King of Arms 100 49 1s 4d 49 07Provincial Kings of Arms 40 20 5s 20 25Heralds 26 13s 4d 17 16s 17 80Pursuivants 20 13 19s 13 95Uniforms edit nbsp William Camden as Clarenceux King of Arms in the funeral procession of Elizabeth I in 1603 Camden is holding a coate possibly a royal tabard or surcoat bearing the Royal Arms of England The most recognisable item of the herald s wardrobe has always been their tabards Since the 13th century records of this distinctive garment were apparent At first it is likely that the herald wore his master s cast off coat but even from the beginning that would have had special significance signifying that he was in effect his master s representative Especially when his master was a sovereign prince the wearing of his coat would haven given the herald a natural diplomatic status 131 John Anstis wrote that The Wearing the outward Robes of the Prince hath been esteemed by the Consent of Nations to be an extraordinary Instance of Favour and Honour as in the Precedent of Mordecai under a king of Persia 131 The last King of England to have worn a tabard with his arms was probably King Henry VII Today the herald s tabard is a survivor of history much like the judges wigs and until the last century the bishop s gaiters 131 nbsp Sir William Henry Weldon the Norroy King of Arms from 1894 until 1911 wearing the tabard and donning the crown of the King of Arms at the 1902 coronation of King Edward VIIThe tabards of the different officers can be distinguished by the type of fabric used to make them A tabard of a King of Arms is made of velvet and cloth of gold the tabard of a Herald of satin and that of a Pursuivant of damask silk The tabards of all heralds Ordinary and Extraordinary are inscribed with the Sovereign s royal arms richly embroidered It was once the custom for pursuivants to wear their tabards with the sleeves at the front and back in fact in 1576 a pursuivant was fined for presuming to wear his tabard like a herald 124 132 but this practice was ended during the reign of James II Until 1888 all tabards were provided to the heralds by the Crown however in that year a parsimonious Treasury refused to ask Parliament for funds for the purpose Ever since then heralds either paid for their own tabards or bought the one used by their predecessors The newest tabard was made in 1963 for the Welsh Herald Extraordinary A stock of them is now held by the Lord Chamberlain from which a loan during tenure of office is made upon each appointment 133 They are often sent to Ede amp Ravenscroft for repair or replacement In addition heralds and pursuivants wear black velvet caps with a badge embroidered nbsp A modern day tabard of a Herald of Arms made of silk satinApart from the tabards the heralds also wear scarlet court uniforms with gold embroidery during formal events with white breeches and stockings for coronations and black for all other times together with black patent court shoes with gold buckles the Scottish heralds wear black wool serge military style trousers with wide gold oak leaf lace on the side seams and black patent ankle boots or for women a long black skirt The heralds are also entitled to distinctive sceptres which have been a symbol of their office since the Tudor period 134 In 1906 new sceptres were made most likely the initiative of Sir Alfred Scott Gatty These take the form of short black batons with gilded ends each with a representation of the badges of the different offices of the heralds In 1953 these were replaced by white staves with gilded metal handles and at its head a blue dove in a golden coronet or a martinet 135 These blue martinets are derived from the arms of the College 136 Another of the heralds insignia of office is the Collar of SS which they wear over their uniforms 102 During inclement weather a large black cape is worn At state funerals they would wear a wide sash of black silk sarsenet over their tabards in ancient times they would have worn long black hooded cloaks under their tabards The three Kings of Arms have also been entitled to wear a crown since the 13th century However it was not until much later that the specific design of the crown was regulated The silver gilt crown is composed of sixteen acanthus leaves alternating in height inscribed with a line from Psalm 51 in Latin Miserere mei Deus secundum magnam misericordiam tuam translated Have mercy on me O God according to Thy great mercy 124 137 Within the crown is a cap of crimson velvet lined with ermine having at the top a large tuft of tassels wrought in gold In medieval times the king of arms were required to wear their crowns and attend to the Sovereign on four high feasts of the year Christmas Easter Whitsuntide and All Saint s Day Today the crown is reserved for the most solemn of occasions The last time these crowns were worn was at the coronation of King Charles III and Camilla in 2023 102 At other times kings of arms wear a black bicorne trimmed with white ostrich feathers when performing duties outdoors or a black velvet cap depending on circumstances of occasion The New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary is a special case when it comes to uniform Although they do wear the tabard they only do so when in the UK performing duties When in New Zealand they simply wear morning dress as official uniform together with their chains and baton Qualifications edit nbsp Heraldic representation of a King of Arms s crownThere are no formal qualifications for a herald but certain specialist knowledge and discipline are required Most of the current officers are trained lawyers and historians Noted heraldist and writer Sir John Ferne wrote in The Glory of Generositie in 1586 that a herald ought to be a Gentlemen and an Old man not admitting into that sacred office everie glasier painter amp tricker or a meere blazonner of Armes for to the office of a herald is requisite the skill of many faculties and professions of literature and likewise the knowledge of warres 109 Some of the greatest scholars and eminent antiquarians of their age were members of the College such as Robert Glover William Camden Sir William Dugdale Elias Ashmole John Anstis Sir Anthony Wagner and John Brooke Little 138 Even with these examples many controversial appointments were made throughout the College s history For example in 1704 the architect and dramatist Sir John Vanbrugh was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms although he knew little of heraldry and genealogy and was known to have ridiculed both 90 138 Nevertheless he was also described as possibly the most distinguished man who has ever worn a herald s tabard 139 Noted antiquarian William Oldys appointed Norroy King of Arms in 1756 was described as being rarely sober in the afternoon never after supper and much addicted to low company 138 List of heralds edit Officers in Ordinary edit Kings of Arms 125 Arms Office Name date of appointment Notes nbsp Garter King of Arms David Vines White MA Cantab MA Londin 1 July 2021 140 The senior King of Arms his title is a reference to the Order of the Garter The office was instituted in 1415 by King Henry V 141 nbsp Clarenceux King of Arms Timothy Hugh Stewart Duke MA Cantab FSA 1 April 2021 142 Whose province is the part of England south of the River Trent Clarenceux is the senior of the provincial King of Arms The office was instituted around 1334 141 Its name derives from the royal Dukedom of Clarence nbsp Norroy and Ulster King of Arms Robert John Baptist Noel MA Oxon MPhil Cantab 1 April 2021 143 Whose province is the part of England north of the River Trent Norroy and Northern Ireland Ulster The office was created in 1943 when the office of Norroy King of Arms and Ulster King of Arms were combined Independently the office of Norroy was instituted around 1276 probably the most ancient of all the heralds While Ulster was instituted in 1552 under Edward VI 141 Norroy is simply French for north king while Ulster is the name of a traditional province roughly equivalent to modern day Northern Ireland Heralds of Arms in Ordinary 125 Badge Office Name date of appointment Notes nbsp Richmond Herald of Arms in Ordinary Clive Edwin Alexander Cheesman MA Oxon PhD San Marino 7 April 2010 144 From 1421 to 1485 Richmond was a herald to John Duke of Bedford George Duke of Clarence and Henry Earl of Richmond all of whom held the Honour estate of Richmond 141 nbsp York Herald of Arms in Ordinary Michael Peter Desmond O Donoghue MA Cantab 31 May 2012 145 The first York Herald is believed to have been an officer to Edmund of Langley Duke of York around the year 1385 The office became a royal herald in 1484 141 nbsp Windsor Herald of Arms in Ordinary John Michael Allen Petrie OBE MSc Londin MSc Oxon 5 July 2019 146 It has been suggested that the office was instituted specifically for the Order of the Garter in 1348 or that it predates the Order and was in use as early as 1338 141 nbsp Lancaster Herald of Arms in Ordinary Adam Simon Tuck Esq MA Cantab MA LCC 2 November 2023 147 Originally a servant of the Earls and Dukes of Lancaster first appeared in 1347 making a proclamation at the Siege of Calais 141 nbsp Somerset Herald of Arms in Ordinary VacantSince 2021 In the year 1448 Somerset Herald is known to have served the Duke of Somerset 141 nbsp Chester Herald of Arms in Ordinary VacantSince 2023 Said to have been created by King Edward III as a herald to Edward the Black Prince who was also Earl of Chester 141 Pursuivants of Arms in Ordinary 125 Badge Office Name date of appointment Notes nbsp Bluemantle Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary Mark John Rosborough Scott Esq MA Oxon 13 June 2019 148 Said to have been instituted by Henry V for the Order of the Garter service from where the title probably derives 141 nbsp Portcullis Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary Dominic Charles Davenport Ingram Esq MA MSt DPhil Oxon 21 February 2022 149 Instituted by Henry VII around 1490 in reference to the badge of his mother Lady Margaret Beaufort 141 nbsp Rouge Croix Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary Thomas Andrew Johnston Esq BA Tasmania 20 February 2023 150 Named after St George s Cross which has been a symbol of England since the time of the Crusades instituted around 1418 141 nbsp Rouge Dragon Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary Phillip Alan Bone Esq BA MSt DPhil Oxon 6 November 2023 151 Instituted by Henry VII on 29 October 1485 the office is named after the red dragon of Wales 141 Officers Extraordinary edit Officers of Arms Extraordinary 125 Badge Office Name date of appointment Notes nbsp New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary Phillip Patrick O Shea CNZM CVO 6 February 1978 152 Created in 1978 one special case who although not a member of the College holds a permanent post created to oversee heraldry in New Zealand he works together with the College to grant new arms for people and bodies in that country where he himself lives and works 152 153 The badge is a crowned Maori koru nbsp Maltravers Herald of Arms Extraordinary John Martin Robinson MA St And DPhil Oxon FSA 25 January 1989 154 Revived in 1887 by the Earl Marshal who was also the Duke of Norfolk and Baron Maltravers originally instituted around 1540 155 nbsp Norfolk Herald of Arms Extraordinary David Rankin Hunt CVO MBE TD 25 October 1994 156 Beginning in 1539 this officer was a herald to the dukes of Norfolk though the first holder John James was paid a salary by King Henry VIII 157 nbsp Wales Herald of Arms Extraordinary Thomas Owen Saunders Lloyd OBE DL MA Cantab FSA 2 August 2010 158 There was a Wales Herald in the late fourteenth century around 1393 but the office was short lived It was re established in 1963 as an officer of arms extraordinary 159 nbsp Arundel Herald of Arms Extraordinary Anne Elizabeth Curry BA MA Manc PhD Tees FSA 3 May 2022 160 Though a royal herald Arundel is not a member of the College of Arms and was originally a private herald in the household of Thomas Fitzalan Earl of Arundel originally instituted around 1413 The office was revived in 1727 161 nbsp Fitzalan Pursuivant of Arms Extraordinary Major General Alastair Andrew Bernard Reibey Bruce of Crionaich OBE VR DL 7 October 1998 162 As with the other extraordinary offices of arms and inspired by baronies held by the Duke of Norfolk its appointment was first made for the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1837 163 Armorial achievement of the College editCoat of arms of College of Arms nbsp Notes The doves in the arms of the College of Arms are always represented with the sinister wing closed and dexter wing extended and inverted The positions of the wings have given rise to much curious speculation Arthur Charles Fox Davies wrote in 1909 that the arms was clearly based on the attributed arms of King Edward the Confessor which was composed of a cross patonce between five martlets all or 164 John Brooke Little on the other hand wrote in 1950 that These arms may have been derived from those used by John Wrythe who was Garter at the time of the foundation of the College of Arms in 1484 165 Adopted 1484 hypothetical 1555 definite 166 Crest On a ducal coronet or a dove rising azure 167 168 Escutcheon Argent a cross gules Cross of St George between four doves the dexter wing of each expanded and inverted azure 167 168 Supporters Two lions rampant guardant argent ducally gorged or 168 169 Motto DILIGENT AND SECRET 166 Badge nbsp A dove the dexter wing expanded and inverted azure ducally gorged or Symbolism The dove has always been a traditional symbol of the herald s office 165 John de Bado Aureo in his heraldic treatise c 1390 wrote that the dove was a messenger of peace and gladness as appeared in the eighth chapter of the Book of Genesis 166 See also editOther institutions linked to the College of ArmsSt Benet Paul s Wharf The official church of the College Heralds Museum Former museum displaying objects from the College situated within Waterloo Barracks Tower of London now closed White Lion Society founded in 1986 as a society to benefit the College of Arms through donations of useful items and publications Similar heraldic authorities in other parts of the worldCourt of the Lord Lyon Scotland United Kingdom Canadian Heraldic Authority Canada Genealogical Office Republic of Ireland Council of Heraldry and Vexillology French Community Belgium Flemish Heraldic Council Flemish Community Belgium Bureau of Heraldry South Africa National Archives of Sweden United States Army Institute of Heraldry The Heraldry Society An organisation devoted to the studying of heraldrySubjects under the jurisdiction of the CollegeEnglish heraldry Welsh heraldry Australian heraldry New Zealand heraldryNotes edit The College originally occupied a property between St Paul s and Thames St known as Derby Place which burned in the Great Fire The replacement building known simply as the College of Arms or Herald s College was built on the same property When Queen Victoria St was built it crossed the south end of the College s property the building was then remodelled to front onto the new street References editCitations a b c d e f g h i The history of the Royal heralds and the College of Arms College of Arms Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Privy Council Record of Charters Granted Privy Council Office Archived from the original on 14 October 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Contact Us College of Arms Archived from the original on 30 June 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2019 a b c How the College of Arms works College of Arms Archived from the original on 30 January 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c d Wagner 1967 p 130 LITERAE DE INCORPORATIONE HERALDORUM S Uemura s Web Page Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c d Robson 1830 p 36 a b Fox Davies 1900 p 95 translated by author from Latin a b Fox Davies 1900 p 88 Wagner 1967 p 68 a b c d e f Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 140 Fox Davies 1900 p 89 a b Bedingfeld amp Gwynn Jones 1993 p 32 a b c d e f g h Architecture of the College College of Arms Archived from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 Noble 1805 p 54 Wagner 1967 p 131 Noble 1805 p 55 Wagner 1967 p 134 Wagner 1967 p 135 Wagner 1967 p 136 a b Noble 1805 p 101 a b Noble 1805 p 107 Wagner 1967 p 181 Boutell 1863 p 242 Boutell 1863 p 125 Noble 1805 p 105 Noble 1805 p 149 a b c Noble 1805 p 150 a b Wagner 1967 p 182 Wagner 1967 p 183 The College of Arms Newsletter December 2009 College of Arms Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c Noble 1805 p 160 Fox Davies 1900 p 101 a b Wagner 1967 p 199 Noble 1805 p 195 Wagner 1967 p 222 a b Noble 1805 p 227 Wagner 1967 p 256 Wagner 1967 p 254 a b Noble 1805 p 228 Wagner 1967 p 257 Wagner 1967 p 258 Wagner 1967 p 259 Noble 1805 p 256 a b Wagner 1967 p 263 Noble 1805 p 267 Boutell 1863 p 108 a b c Robson 1830 p 37 a b Noble 1805 p 269 Wagner 1967 p 306 Noble 1805 p 270 Noble 1805 p 271 Noble 1805 p 295 Noble 1805 p 301 Wagner 1967 p 318 Noble 1805 p 350 Noble 1805 p 348 Noble 1805 p 352 Noble 1805 p 375 Wagner 1967 p 472 Wagner 1967 p 474 a b Wagner 1967 p 475 a b c Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 141 Wagner 1967 p 477 Wagner 1967 p 478 Wagner 1967 p 479 Wagner 1967 p 486 Wagner 1967 p 489 Wagner 1967 p 518 Wagner 1967 p 507 Wagner 1967 p 512 Lyon King of Arms Act of 1867 legislation gov uk 5 September 2001 Archived from the original on 13 October 2010 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Wagner 1967 p 513 Wagner 1967 p 527 a b Wagner 1967 p 535 Wagner 1967 p 536 a b c Committee on the Heralds College The National Archives Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c d e Constitution and Working of the College of Heralds The National Archives Retrieved 27 January 2012 Wagner 1967 p 540 Wagner 1967 p 547 Wagner 1967 p 548 Wagner 1967 p 551 Wagner 1967 p 528 The Guild Church of St Benet Paul s Wharf A Brief History PDF stbenetwelshchurch org uk Archived PDF from the original on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Fire at heraldry records building BBC News 5 February 2009 Archived from the original on 8 February 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Johnson Wesley 5 February 2009 Fire hits College of Arms The Independent UK Archived from the original on 17 March 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2012 The College of Arms Newsletter March 2009 College of Arms Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 The College of Arms Newsletter October 2009 College of Arms Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c Official Royal posts Earl Marshal The Royal Household Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b Bedingfeld amp Gwynn Jones 1993 p 37 Boutell 1863 p 110 UK Politics A Z of Parliament State Opening of Parliament Royal Procession BBC News 15 October 1998 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Pomp and Circumstance at Westminster Christine Riding for BBC Online Archived from the original on 6 February 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 The Monarchy Today Royal events and ceremonies Garter Service The Royal Household Archived from the original on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Members of the Order of the Garter The Royal Household Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 142 Rules of Royal Succession Political and Constitutional Reform Committee Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Royal Residences St James s Palace The Royal Household Archived from the original on 9 March 2009 Retrieved 27 January 2012 How a New King Succeeds to the Throne The New York Times 25 June 1902 Retrieved 27 January 2012 New King proclaimed to morrow The Guardian UK 6 April 2000 Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Ancient Coronation Traditions amp Etiquette Part 5 London Online Archived from the original on 28 November 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c Robson 1830 p 35 Alderson Andrew Lusher Adam 7 April 2002 Queen Mother s human side seen in poems and hymns The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 24 January 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Moss Stephen 10 April 2002 Wit wisdom and not a burgundy tie in sight The Guardian UK Archived from the original on 13 June 2014 Retrieved 27 January 2012 a b c d e f Granting of Arms College of Arms Archived from the original on 13 June 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 Brooke Little 1978 p 265 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 33 a b c Brooke Little 1978 p 267 a b c Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 143 Pegge Samuel 1818 Curialia Miscellanea or Anecdotes of Old Times Regal Noble Gentilitial and Miscellaneous London J Nichols Son and Bentley pp 335 336 Wagner 1967 p 219 Wagner 1967 p 220 a b Proving a right to arms College of Arms Archived from the original on 31 May 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 a b Changes of Name College of Arms Archived from the original on 21 June 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 a b Registering a Pedigree College of Arms Archived from the original on 21 June 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 House of Lords Act 1999 legislation gov uk 11 November 1999 Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Introductory text to the Roll of the Peerage College of Arms 1 June 2004 Archived from the original on 18 March 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2012 No 57314 The London Gazette 11 June 2004 pp 7320 7321 The Roll of the Peerage PDF College of Arms 1 June 2004 Archived PDF from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Home College of Arms Retrieved 24 April 2020 The College of Arms is the official heraldic authority for England Wales Northern Ireland and much of the Commonwealth including Australia and New Zealand New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Retrieved 24 April 2020 College of Arms Question No 806 Hansard Australian House of Representatives 7 February 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Australian Heraldic Authority Australian Heraldry Society Retrieved 24 April 2020 a b c Boutell 1863 p 109 a b c d e f g h The current officers of arms College of Arms Archived from the original on 21 June 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 Janin Hunt 2004 Medieval Justice Cases and Laws in France England and Germany 500 1500 London McFarland amp Company pp 145 146 ISBN 0 7864 1841 9 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Bedingfeld amp Gwynn Jones 1993 p 24 a b Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 139 a b c d HM Treasury Payments to Garter King of Arms Sir Thomas Woodcock a Freedom of Information request to Her Majesty s Treasury WhatDoTheyKnow 3 January 2021 Retrieved 27 January 2021 a b Wagner 1967 p 100 a b c Wagner 1967 p 79 Wagner 1967 p 80 Wagner 1967 p 83 Wagner 1967 p 91 Wagner 1967 p 93 Wagner 1967 p 92 Wagner 1967 p 90 a b c Some past heralds College of Arms Archived from the original on 18 August 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2016 Wagner 1967 p 326 No 63408 The London Gazette 5 July 2021 p 77 a b c d e f g h i j k l m The origin and history of the various heraldic offices College of Arms Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 2 March 2017 Crown Office The London Gazette 9 April 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 Crown Office The London Gazette 9 April 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 No 59387 The London Gazette 12 April 2010 p 6285 No 62064 The London Gazette 27 September 2017 p 18030 Windsor Herald College of Arms 13 July 2019 Archived from the original on 13 July 2019 Retrieved 13 July 2019 No 64221 The London Gazette 7 November 2023 p 22370 Bluemantle Pursuivant College of Arms 13 June 2019 archived from the original on 14 July 2019 retrieved 14 June 2019 Portcullis Pursuivant College of Arms Rouge Croix Pursuivant College of Arms New Appointments College of Arms a b New Zealand Herald of Arms Extraordinary Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Archived from the original on 29 January 2012 Retrieved 27 January 2012 Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 47 No 51716 The London Gazette 27 April 1989 p 5041 Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 43 No 53849 The London Gazette 15 November 1994 p 15981 Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 45 No 59505 The London Gazette 2 August 2010 p 14735 Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 49 Arundel Herald College of Arms Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 40 No 55291 The London Gazette 26 October 1998 p 11553 Chesshyre amp Ailes 1986 p 42 Fox Davies amp Johnston 1909 p 244 a b Brooke Little 1978 p 232 a b c Wagner 1967 p 133 a b Boutell 1867 p 131 a b c Fox Davies amp Johnston 1909 p 47 Boutell 1867 p 132 BibliographyBedingfeld Henry Gwynn Jones Peter 1993 Heraldry London Bison Books ISBN 1 85422 433 6 Brooke Little J P FSA 1978 1950 Boutell s Heraldry Revised ed London Frederick Warne ISBN 0 7232 2096 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Boutell Charles 1863 A Manual of Heraldry Historical and Popular London Windsor And Newton ISBN 1 146 28954 5 Boutell Charles 1867 English Heraldry London Cassell Petter and Galpin OCLC 315176864 Chesshyre Hubert Ailes Adrian 1986 Heralds of Today A Biographical List of the Officers of the College of Arms London 1963 86 Gerrards Cross Buckinghamshire Van Duren Publishers Limited ISBN 978 0905715315 Chesshyre Hubert Ailes Adrian 2001 Heralds of Today A Biographical List of the Officers of the College of Arms London 1987 2001 London Illuminata Publishers ISBN 0 9537845 1 7 Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1900 The right to bear arms London E Stock ASIN B000SII87Q Fox Davies Arthur Charles Johnston Graham 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry New York Dodge Pub Co ISBN 0 517 26643 1 Noble Mark 1805 A History of the College of Arms And the Lives of All the Kings Heralds and Pursuivants from the Reign of Richard III Founder of the College Until the Present Time London J Debrett ISBN 1 142 50652 5 Robson Thomas 1830 The British herald or Cabinet of armorial bearings of the nobility amp gentry of Great Britain amp Ireland from the earliest to the present time United Kingdom Turner amp Marwood ISBN 1 142 19756 5 Wagner Sir Anthony 1967 Heralds of England A History of the Office and College of Arms London Her Majesty s Stationery Office ASIN B000X8511W permanent dead link Woodcock Thomas Robinson John Martin 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry London Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211658 4 Further reading editWagner Sir Anthony Godfrey Walter H 1963 Survey of London Monograph 16 College of Arms Queen Victoria Street British History Online Retrieved 11 February 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to College of Arms Official website nbsp College of Arms Trust The National Archives page for the College of Arms The White Lion Society College of Arms Foundation USA Archived 11 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Heraldry Society Portals nbsp Australia nbsp Heraldry nbsp England nbsp London nbsp New Zealand nbsp Northern Ireland nbsp Wales 51 30 44 N 0 05 56 W 51 51222 N 0 09889 W 51 51222 0 09889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title College of Arms amp oldid 1203132525, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.