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Ordinary of arms

An ordinary of arms (or simply an ordinary) is a roll or register of coats of arms arranged systematically by design, with coats featuring the same principal elements (geometrical ordinaries and charges) grouped together.[1][2] The purpose of an ordinary is to facilitate the identification of the bearer of a coat of arms from visual evidence alone.

Thomas Jenyns' Book, an English ordinary of arms compiled in c.1398. This page shows a sequence of coats of arms featuring lions rampant. British Library, Add. MS 40851.

Ordinaries may take a form which is either graphic (consisting of a series of painted or drawn images of shields) or textual (consisting of blazons – verbal descriptions – of the coats). Most medieval and early modern manuscript ordinaries were graphic, whereas all the principal modern published ordinaries have been textual. A knowledge of the technicalities of blazon is essential for the student hoping to make best use of a textual ordinary.

By extension, ordinaries may also be compiled of other elements of heraldic display, such as crests, supporters or badges.[3]

Etymology edit

Although ordinaries of arms have been compiled since the 14th century, the actual term seems to have come into use only in the 18th century. The earliest clear attestation is found in Edmondson's Complete Body of Heraldry of 1780.[4] The derivation of the term is unclear. It may have originated in the form "ordinary book" or "book of ordinaries", meaning a collection of (geometrical) ordinaries and subordinaries, the simple figures and shapes that form the basis of many coats of arms. Alternatively, it may have arisen by analogy with a liturgical ordinary, an authoritative book containing the order of divine service.[4]

Medieval and early modern ordinaries edit

 
Extract from William Jenyn's Ordinary of c.1360, showing two pages of arms featuring roundels and annulets

The ordinary appears to have been an English development of the 14th century. No medieval ordinaries are known from continental Europe.[5]

Medieval English ordinaries include "Cooke's Ordinary", compiled in c.1340 (644 coats),[6][7] "Cotgrave's Ordinary", also of c.1340 but in blazon (556 coats),[7][8] and the larger "Thomas Jenyns' Book", compiled in c.1398 (1,595 coats).[7][9] These three are all related, and perhaps derive from a lost progenitor. An independent work is "William Jenyns' Ordinary", compiled in c.1360 (1,612 coats).[10]

In the early 16th century, Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms, planned a comprehensive painted roll and ordinary of all English arms: this was not completed, but parts of the ordinary survive in what is now known as "Prince Arthur's Book" of c.1520.[11] In the second half of the century, Robert Glover, Somerset Herald, drew on a wide range of medieval sources to compile "Glover's Ordinary", the fullest and most authoritative ordinary to date. This was assembled in its first form in 1584, and contained some 15,000 coats.[12] At the beginning of the 17th century, Augustine Vincent, Rouge Croix Pursuivant and later Windsor Herald, compiled "Vincent's Ordinary", also of about 15,000 shields, drawn in trick.[13]

Versions of Glover's Ordinary, much augmented, were published in Joseph Edmondson's Complete Body of Heraldry (1780) and in William Berry's Encyclopedia Heraldica (1828). Cotgrave's Ordinary was published in 1829, edited by Sir Harris Nicolas.[14]

Modern ordinaries edit

Papworth edit

 
Extract from Papworth's Ordinary (1874)

The principal modern ordinary of British and Irish heraldry, still not entirely superseded, is "Papworth's Ordinary" (1874), or in full An Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland, forming an extensive Ordinary of British Armorials upon an entirely new plan, compiled by John Woody Papworth. Papworth began work in 1847, making extensive use of Burke's General Armory (first published 1842; third edition with supplement 1847), copying its entries – which were arranged alphabetically by surname – onto slips of paper and rearranging them.[15] He published a prospectus in 1857, and began to issue his work in instalments shortly afterwards: nine parts had appeared by 1863, and fourteen by the time of his early death (apparently hastened by his insistent commitment to work on the project) in 1870.[16] By this point the work had proceeded as far as page 696: the remaining 429 pages were edited and brought to completion from Papworth's materials by Alfred William Morant (1828–1881). The Ordinary, containing about 50,000 entries, was published as a complete volume in 1874.[17] It rapidly established itself as a standard work of reference, and was reprinted in 1961, 1977 and 1985.

The great strength of Papworth's Ordinary was the rigorousness of its system of classification by blazon, which (with minor modifications) has remained the basis for all ordinaries published since: there was only one possible place for any particular coat of arms to be entered within it.[18][19] Its weakness was its dependence for its contents on Burke's General Armory and other secondary sources, which meant that it inherited many of their errors and omissions. One of the idiosyncrasies of the book (and therefore of some of its successors), which resulted in part from Papworth's decision to classify animal charges of all kinds under the primary heading "Beast", and birds of all kinds under "Bird", is that the alphabetical distribution of entries is highly unbalanced: the headings A–F account for roughly 80% of the whole, a point on which the editor had to reassure subscribers while the work was still in progress.[20]

Dictionary of British Arms edit

In 1926 Lt Col George Babington Croft Lyons left a substantial bequest to the Society of Antiquaries to prepare a revised and improved edition of Papworth. Anthony Wagner became co-general editor in 1940 and sole general editor in 1944, remaining in that position until 1995. A number of volunteers were recruited (some of them, during the war years, working in inactive periods of firewatching duties) to assemble material on index cards.[21] However, the task was a large one and progress slow, in part because of Wagner's insistence on high scholarly standards and use of primary sources, and in part because of over-ambitious plans to include in the final work a series of essays on medieval armorial families. It was eventually decided to limit the project to England, to the medieval period (pre-1530), and to publish a simple ordinary, including a name-index but without the additional essays. With the aid of computer technology, the first volume of what was now entitled the Dictionary of British Arms appeared in 1992.[22] Volume 2 was published in 1996, volume 3 in 2009, and volume 4 (the final volume) in 2014.

Scotland edit

An Ordinary of Arms for Scotland, edited by Sir James Balfour Paul, Lord Lyon King of Arms, was published in 1893, with a second updated edition appearing in 1903: this includes all arms recorded in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland from its inception in 1672 down to the end of 1901 (5,532 entries, with a name index).[23] A second volume, covering arms entered in the Register from 1902 to 1973 (a further 6,040 entries), was published in 1977: this was edited by David Reid of Robertland, Carrick Pursuivant, and Vivien Wilson.[24]

An Ordinary of Scottish Arms from Original pre-1672 Manuscripts, edited by Eilean Malden, John Malden (sometime Unicorn Pursuivant, now Slains Pursuivant) and William G. Scott, was published in 2016. This contains both an armory (arranged alphabetically by surname) and an ordinary of some 25,000 coats of arms, drawing on the evidence of medieval rolls of arms and other pre-1672 manuscript sources, but excluding that of seals.[25]

Wales edit

"An Ordinary of Welsh Arms", covering Welsh arms, crests, badges and supporters down to c.1630 (about 2,800 entries and a name index) forms the greater part of volume 3 of The Development of Welsh Heraldry by Michael Powell Siddons, published in 1993.[26] A supplementary ordinary down to c.1700 (a further 1,200 entries) is included in volume 4, published in 2006.[27]

Suffolk edit

A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms edited by Joan Corder (an ordinary of arms, containing about 6,700 entries and a name-index) was published by the Suffolk Records Society in 1965.[28] A companion volume by the same editor, A Dictionary of Suffolk Crests (containing some 25,000 entries for crests, arranged in "ordinary" form, together with a name-index), was published by the same society in 1998.[29]

"Garter's Ordinaries" edit

An important modern unpublished ordinary is the collection known as "Garter's Ordinaries", now held at the College of Arms. This was originally compiled by and under the direction of Sir Albert Woods, Garter King of Arms, between 1842 and his death in 1904, and was then donated to the College by his grandson, Gerald Woods Wollaston. At that time it comprised two series, one of five and the other of six volumes, plus indexes. Subsequent Garters have added to the series and kept the ordinary up to date by including within it new grants of arms. The ordinary remains in use by the members of the College, both for identifying old coats of arms, and for ensuring that new grants are sufficiently differenced from existing coats.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ Franklyn, Julian; Tanner, John (1970). An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Heraldry. Oxford: Pergamon. p. 246. ISBN 0080132979.
  2. ^ Friar, Stephen (1987). A New Dictionary of Heraldry. Sherborne: Alphabooks. p. 260. ISBN 0906670446.
  3. ^ Woodcock & Robinson (1988), p. 34
  4. ^ a b "ordinary". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ Wagner (1950), p. xv; Wagner (1952), p. 51
  6. ^ Wagner (1950), pp. 58–59
  7. ^ a b c Fox (2006)
  8. ^ Wagner (1950), p. 60
  9. ^ Wagner (1950), pp. 73–78
  10. ^ Wagner (1950), pp. 69–71; Fox (2009)
  11. ^ Wagner (1957), pp. 258–59; Campbell & Steer (1988), pp. 387–88; Woodcock & Robinson (1988), colour plate 1
  12. ^ Ramsay, Nigel (2008) [2004]. "Glover, Robert (1543/4–1588)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/10833. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ Campbell & Steer (1988), pp. 409–10
  14. ^ Nicolas, Sir Harris, ed. (1829). "A Roll of Arms compiled in the reign of King Edward III, and apparently between the years 1337–1350". Rolls of Arms of the Reigns of Henry III and Edward III. London: William Pickering.
  15. ^ Collins (1942), pp. 4–5
  16. ^ Collins (1942), pp. 5–6
  17. ^ Collins (1942), pp. 6–7
  18. ^ Collins (1942), pp. 8–10
  19. ^ For further details, see Woodcock, T. (2014). "Structure of the Ordinary". In Woodcock, T.; Flower, Sarah (eds.). Dictionary of British Arms: Medieval Ordinary. Vol. 4. London: Society of Antiquaries. pp. ix–xv. ISBN 978-0-85431-297-9.
  20. ^ Collins (1942), p. 6
  21. ^ Wagner, Sir Anthony (1970). "Hugh Stanford London (1884–1959)". In London, Hugh Stanford (ed.). The Life of William Bruges, the first Garter King of Arms. Harleian Society. Vol. 111–12. London: Harleian Society. pp. xiv–xv.
  22. ^ Chesshyre, D.H.B. (1992). "History of the Project". In Chesshyre, D.H.B.; Woodcock, Thomas (eds.). Dictionary of British Arms: Medieval Ordinary. Vol. 1. London: Society of Antiquaries. pp. viii–xiv. ISBN 0854312587.
  23. ^ Paul, Sir James Balfour (1903). An Ordinary of Arms contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland (2nd ed.). Edinburgh: William Green & Sons.
  24. ^ Reid, David; Wilson, Vivien, eds. (1977). An Ordinary of Arms contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland, 1902–1973. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: H.M.S.O. ISBN 0-9505299-0-7.
  25. ^ Malden, Eilean; Malden, John; Scott, William G., eds. (2016). An Ordinary of Scottish Arms from Original pre-1672 Manuscripts. Edinburgh: Heraldry Society of Scotland. ISBN 9780952525899.
  26. ^ Siddons, Michael Powell (1993). The Development of Welsh Heraldry. Vol. 3. Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales. pp. 1–170. ISBN 090715851X.
  27. ^ Siddons, Michael Powell (2006). The Development of Welsh Heraldry. Vol. 4. Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales. pp. 267–358. ISBN 1862250448.
  28. ^ Corder, Joan, ed. (1965). A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms. Suffolk Records Society. Vol. 7. Ipswich: Suffolk Records Society.
  29. ^ Corder, Joan, ed. (1998). A Dictionary of Suffolk Crests: heraldic crests of Suffolk families. Suffolk Records Society. Vol. 40. Woodbridge: Suffolk Records Society.
  30. ^ Wagner (1952), pp. 50–51

Bibliography edit

  • Campbell, Louise; Steer, Francis (1988). A Catalogue of Manuscripts in the College of Arms Collections: Volume 1. London: College of Arms. ISBN 0-9506980-1-6.
  • Collins, S. M. (1942). "Papworth and his Ordinary". Antiquaries Journal. 22: 3–16. doi:10.1017/s0003581500003668. S2CID 161716978.
  • Fox, Paul A. (2006). "Fourteenth-century ordinaries of arms: Part 1: Thomas Jenyns' Book and its precursors". Coat of Arms. 3rd ser. 2: 97–102.
  • Fox, Paul A. (2009). "Fourteenth-century ordinaries of arms: Part 2: William Jenyns' Ordinary". Coat of Arms. 3rd ser. 5: 55–64.
  • Wagner, Anthony Richard (1950). A Catalogue of English Medieval Rolls of Arms. Aspilogia. Vol. 1. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries.
  • Wagner, Anthony Richard (1957). Rolls of Arms: Henry III. Aspilogia. Vol. 2. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries.
  • Wagner, Anthony (1952). The Records and Collections of the College of Arms. London: Burke's Peerage.
  • Woodcock, Thomas; Robinson, John Martin (1988). The Oxford Guide to Heraldry. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-211658-4.

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This article is about directories of coats of arms For the geometrical figures used in the design of coats of arms see Ordinary heraldry An ordinary of arms or simply an ordinary is a roll or register of coats of arms arranged systematically by design with coats featuring the same principal elements geometrical ordinaries and charges grouped together 1 2 The purpose of an ordinary is to facilitate the identification of the bearer of a coat of arms from visual evidence alone Thomas Jenyns Book an English ordinary of arms compiled in c 1398 This page shows a sequence of coats of arms featuring lions rampant British Library Add MS 40851 Ordinaries may take a form which is either graphic consisting of a series of painted or drawn images of shields or textual consisting of blazons verbal descriptions of the coats Most medieval and early modern manuscript ordinaries were graphic whereas all the principal modern published ordinaries have been textual A knowledge of the technicalities of blazon is essential for the student hoping to make best use of a textual ordinary By extension ordinaries may also be compiled of other elements of heraldic display such as crests supporters or badges 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Medieval and early modern ordinaries 3 Modern ordinaries 3 1 Papworth 3 2 Dictionary of British Arms 3 3 Scotland 3 4 Wales 3 5 Suffolk 3 6 Garter s Ordinaries 4 References 5 BibliographyEtymology editAlthough ordinaries of arms have been compiled since the 14th century the actual term seems to have come into use only in the 18th century The earliest clear attestation is found in Edmondson s Complete Body of Heraldry of 1780 4 The derivation of the term is unclear It may have originated in the form ordinary book or book of ordinaries meaning a collection of geometrical ordinaries and subordinaries the simple figures and shapes that form the basis of many coats of arms Alternatively it may have arisen by analogy with a liturgical ordinary an authoritative book containing the order of divine service 4 Medieval and early modern ordinaries edit nbsp Extract from William Jenyn s Ordinary of c 1360 showing two pages of arms featuring roundels and annuletsThe ordinary appears to have been an English development of the 14th century No medieval ordinaries are known from continental Europe 5 Medieval English ordinaries include Cooke s Ordinary compiled in c 1340 644 coats 6 7 Cotgrave s Ordinary also of c 1340 but in blazon 556 coats 7 8 and the larger Thomas Jenyns Book compiled in c 1398 1 595 coats 7 9 These three are all related and perhaps derive from a lost progenitor An independent work is William Jenyns Ordinary compiled in c 1360 1 612 coats 10 In the early 16th century Thomas Wriothesley Garter King of Arms planned a comprehensive painted roll and ordinary of all English arms this was not completed but parts of the ordinary survive in what is now known as Prince Arthur s Book of c 1520 11 In the second half of the century Robert Glover Somerset Herald drew on a wide range of medieval sources to compile Glover s Ordinary the fullest and most authoritative ordinary to date This was assembled in its first form in 1584 and contained some 15 000 coats 12 At the beginning of the 17th century Augustine Vincent Rouge Croix Pursuivant and later Windsor Herald compiled Vincent s Ordinary also of about 15 000 shields drawn in trick 13 Versions of Glover s Ordinary much augmented were published in Joseph Edmondson s Complete Body of Heraldry 1780 and in William Berry s Encyclopedia Heraldica 1828 Cotgrave s Ordinary was published in 1829 edited by Sir Harris Nicolas 14 Modern ordinaries editPapworth edit nbsp Extract from Papworth s Ordinary 1874 The principal modern ordinary of British and Irish heraldry still not entirely superseded is Papworth s Ordinary 1874 or in full An Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland forming an extensive Ordinary of British Armorials upon an entirely new plan compiled by John Woody Papworth Papworth began work in 1847 making extensive use of Burke s General Armory first published 1842 third edition with supplement 1847 copying its entries which were arranged alphabetically by surname onto slips of paper and rearranging them 15 He published a prospectus in 1857 and began to issue his work in instalments shortly afterwards nine parts had appeared by 1863 and fourteen by the time of his early death apparently hastened by his insistent commitment to work on the project in 1870 16 By this point the work had proceeded as far as page 696 the remaining 429 pages were edited and brought to completion from Papworth s materials by Alfred William Morant 1828 1881 The Ordinary containing about 50 000 entries was published as a complete volume in 1874 17 It rapidly established itself as a standard work of reference and was reprinted in 1961 1977 and 1985 The great strength of Papworth s Ordinary was the rigorousness of its system of classification by blazon which with minor modifications has remained the basis for all ordinaries published since there was only one possible place for any particular coat of arms to be entered within it 18 19 Its weakness was its dependence for its contents on Burke s General Armory and other secondary sources which meant that it inherited many of their errors and omissions One of the idiosyncrasies of the book and therefore of some of its successors which resulted in part from Papworth s decision to classify animal charges of all kinds under the primary heading Beast and birds of all kinds under Bird is that the alphabetical distribution of entries is highly unbalanced the headings A F account for roughly 80 of the whole a point on which the editor had to reassure subscribers while the work was still in progress 20 Dictionary of British Arms edit In 1926 Lt Col George Babington Croft Lyons left a substantial bequest to the Society of Antiquaries to prepare a revised and improved edition of Papworth Anthony Wagner became co general editor in 1940 and sole general editor in 1944 remaining in that position until 1995 A number of volunteers were recruited some of them during the war years working in inactive periods of firewatching duties to assemble material on index cards 21 However the task was a large one and progress slow in part because of Wagner s insistence on high scholarly standards and use of primary sources and in part because of over ambitious plans to include in the final work a series of essays on medieval armorial families It was eventually decided to limit the project to England to the medieval period pre 1530 and to publish a simple ordinary including a name index but without the additional essays With the aid of computer technology the first volume of what was now entitled the Dictionary of British Arms appeared in 1992 22 Volume 2 was published in 1996 volume 3 in 2009 and volume 4 the final volume in 2014 Scotland edit Main article Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland An Ordinary of Arms for Scotland edited by Sir James Balfour Paul Lord Lyon King of Arms was published in 1893 with a second updated edition appearing in 1903 this includes all arms recorded in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland from its inception in 1672 down to the end of 1901 5 532 entries with a name index 23 A second volume covering arms entered in the Register from 1902 to 1973 a further 6 040 entries was published in 1977 this was edited by David Reid of Robertland Carrick Pursuivant and Vivien Wilson 24 An Ordinary of Scottish Arms from Original pre 1672 Manuscripts edited by Eilean Malden John Malden sometime Unicorn Pursuivant now Slains Pursuivant and William G Scott was published in 2016 This contains both an armory arranged alphabetically by surname and an ordinary of some 25 000 coats of arms drawing on the evidence of medieval rolls of arms and other pre 1672 manuscript sources but excluding that of seals 25 Wales edit An Ordinary of Welsh Arms covering Welsh arms crests badges and supporters down to c 1630 about 2 800 entries and a name index forms the greater part of volume 3 of The Development of Welsh Heraldry by Michael Powell Siddons published in 1993 26 A supplementary ordinary down to c 1700 a further 1 200 entries is included in volume 4 published in 2006 27 Suffolk edit A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms edited by Joan Corder an ordinary of arms containing about 6 700 entries and a name index was published by the Suffolk Records Society in 1965 28 A companion volume by the same editor A Dictionary of Suffolk Crests containing some 25 000 entries for crests arranged in ordinary form together with a name index was published by the same society in 1998 29 Garter s Ordinaries edit An important modern unpublished ordinary is the collection known as Garter s Ordinaries now held at the College of Arms This was originally compiled by and under the direction of Sir Albert Woods Garter King of Arms between 1842 and his death in 1904 and was then donated to the College by his grandson Gerald Woods Wollaston At that time it comprised two series one of five and the other of six volumes plus indexes Subsequent Garters have added to the series and kept the ordinary up to date by including within it new grants of arms The ordinary remains in use by the members of the College both for identifying old coats of arms and for ensuring that new grants are sufficiently differenced from existing coats 30 References edit Franklyn Julian Tanner John 1970 An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Heraldry Oxford Pergamon p 246 ISBN 0080132979 Friar Stephen 1987 A New Dictionary of Heraldry Sherborne Alphabooks p 260 ISBN 0906670446 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 34 a b ordinary Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Wagner 1950 p xv Wagner 1952 p 51 Wagner 1950 pp 58 59 a b c Fox 2006 Wagner 1950 p 60 Wagner 1950 pp 73 78 Wagner 1950 pp 69 71 Fox 2009 Wagner 1957 pp 258 59 Campbell amp Steer 1988 pp 387 88 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 colour plate 1 Ramsay Nigel 2008 2004 Glover Robert 1543 4 1588 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10833 Subscription or UK public library membership required Campbell amp Steer 1988 pp 409 10 Nicolas Sir Harris ed 1829 A Roll of Arms compiled in the reign of King Edward III and apparently between the years 1337 1350 Rolls of Arms of the Reigns of Henry III and Edward III London William Pickering Collins 1942 pp 4 5 Collins 1942 pp 5 6 Collins 1942 pp 6 7 Collins 1942 pp 8 10 For further details see Woodcock T 2014 Structure of the Ordinary In Woodcock T Flower Sarah eds Dictionary of British Arms Medieval Ordinary Vol 4 London Society of Antiquaries pp ix xv ISBN 978 0 85431 297 9 Collins 1942 p 6 Wagner Sir Anthony 1970 Hugh Stanford London 1884 1959 In London Hugh Stanford ed The Life of William Bruges the first Garter King of Arms Harleian Society Vol 111 12 London Harleian Society pp xiv xv Chesshyre D H B 1992 History of the Project In Chesshyre D H B Woodcock Thomas eds Dictionary of British Arms Medieval Ordinary Vol 1 London Society of Antiquaries pp viii xiv ISBN 0854312587 Paul Sir James Balfour 1903 An Ordinary of Arms contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland 2nd ed Edinburgh William Green amp Sons Reid David Wilson Vivien eds 1977 An Ordinary of Arms contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland 1902 1973 Vol 2 Edinburgh H M S O ISBN 0 9505299 0 7 Malden Eilean Malden John Scott William G eds 2016 An Ordinary of Scottish Arms from Original pre 1672 Manuscripts Edinburgh Heraldry Society of Scotland ISBN 9780952525899 Siddons Michael Powell 1993 The Development of Welsh Heraldry Vol 3 Aberystwyth National Library of Wales pp 1 170 ISBN 090715851X Siddons Michael Powell 2006 The Development of Welsh Heraldry Vol 4 Aberystwyth National Library of Wales pp 267 358 ISBN 1862250448 Corder Joan ed 1965 A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms Suffolk Records Society Vol 7 Ipswich Suffolk Records Society Corder Joan ed 1998 A Dictionary of Suffolk Crests heraldic crests of Suffolk families Suffolk Records Society Vol 40 Woodbridge Suffolk Records Society Wagner 1952 pp 50 51Bibliography editCampbell Louise Steer Francis 1988 A Catalogue of Manuscripts in the College of Arms Collections Volume 1 London College of Arms ISBN 0 9506980 1 6 Collins S M 1942 Papworth and his Ordinary Antiquaries Journal 22 3 16 doi 10 1017 s0003581500003668 S2CID 161716978 Fox Paul A 2006 Fourteenth century ordinaries of arms Part 1 Thomas Jenyns Book and its precursors Coat of Arms 3rd ser 2 97 102 Fox Paul A 2009 Fourteenth century ordinaries of arms Part 2 William Jenyns Ordinary Coat of Arms 3rd ser 5 55 64 Wagner Anthony Richard 1950 A Catalogue of English Medieval Rolls of Arms Aspilogia Vol 1 Oxford Society of Antiquaries Wagner Anthony Richard 1957 Rolls of Arms Henry III Aspilogia Vol 2 Oxford Society of Antiquaries Wagner Anthony 1952 The Records and Collections of the College of Arms London Burke s Peerage Woodcock Thomas Robinson John Martin 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211658 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ordinary of arms amp oldid 1163556490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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