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Arms and FitzWarin
Arms of Fulk V FitzWarin, St George's Roll of Arms, 1285: Quarterly per fess indented argent and gules

Arms and Quarterly
Arms: Quarterly or and gules, four lions rampant armed and langued azure counterchanged.
" The Arms given him in Anglia Sacra, p. 673, are not sufficiently explicit ; they should be thus blasoned: Quarterly gules and ermine on the 1st and 4th a goat's head erased argent.
Arms: Quarterly, 1st and 4th azure semée of fleur-de-lys or ( France Ancient ); 2nd and 3rd gules, three lions passant guardant or ( England ); overall a label of three points argent.
The formal description, or blazon, of the Arms is: Quarterly Gules and barry wavy Argent and Azure a Fesse of the second charged with a Ram statant proper between in chief a Garb and a Thunderbolt and in base four Apples and a Branch of Hops all Or ; For the Crest On a Wreath Argent and Gules: A Lion statant Gules resting the dexter fore paw on a shovel and a Pick-axe in saltire proper: And for Supporters, on either side A Tasmanian Tiger proper, with the motto " Ubertas et Fidelitas "
Coat of Arms of the Seymour Dukes of Somerset: Quarterly: 1st and 4th Or, on a pile gules between six fleurs de lys azure three Lions in heraldry | lions of England ; 2nd and 3rd, Gules, two wings conjoined in lure or ( Seymour ) The paternal arms of Seymour concede the positions of greatest honour, the 1st & 4th Quartering ( heraldry ) | quarters, to a version of the Armorial of Plantagenet | arms of Plantagenet
In 1938, Franco adopted a variant of the Coat of Arms reinstating some elements originally used by the House of Trastámara such as Saint John's eagle and the yoke and bundle, as follows: Quarterly, 1 and 4. quarterly Castile and León, 2 and 3. per pale Aragon and Navarra, enté en point of Granada.
The heraldic blazon is: Quarterly: 1st and 4th grand quarters, the Royal Arms of Charles II ( viz.
Arms of William Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon ( 1475 – 1511 ): Quarterly 1st & 4th, Courtenay ; 2nd & 3rd Redvers, as sculpted on south porch of St Peter's Church, Tiverton, Devon, impaling the arms of King Edward IV, the father of his wife Princess Katherine
* Arms: Quarterly 1st and 4th argent, a chevron erminois between three boatswain's whistles purple, 2nd and 3rd grand-quarter quarterly, 1st and 4th or, a cross engrailed gules, 2nd and 3rd argent, a chevron engrailed sable, three mullets sable.
Arms: Quarterly ( 1 ) Or an Eagle displayed Sable crowned and armed of the first charged with a crescent trefly Argent ending in crosses ( 2 ) Barry of eight Or and Sable charged with crancelin Vert ( 3 ) Per pale Gules and Argent ( 4 ) Or a maiden eagle displayed Sable the human part Argent crowned and armed of the first ( Enty in point chapé ) in base Azure a Hunting Horn stringed Or ( Overall ) An Escutcheon per fess Or and Gules
Arms of Despencer: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Argent ; 2nd & 3rd: Gules, a fret or, over all a ribbon sable
Arms: Quarterly, Azure and Gules on a Pale Argent three Lymphads Sable, between in the first quarter four Mullets in cross Gules, fimbriated Argent, in the second a Fleece ; in the third a Garb, and in the last two Mining Hammers in Saltire, all Or.
* Arms of William Courtenay, 10th Earl of Devon ( d. 1859 ), impaling the arms of his wife Hariet Leslie: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Pepys, Baronets of Juniper Hill ; 2nd & 3rd: Leslie, Earls of Rothes.
Arms of Despencer: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Argent ; 2nd & 3rd: Gules, a fret or, over all a ribbon sable
File: Viscount Linley. svg | Arms of David Armstrong-Jones, Viscount Linley: Quarterly 1st & 4th, the arms of his father The Earl of Snowdon with a label vert, 2nd & 3rd the arms of his mother The Princess Margaret whose label argent is charged with roses and a thistle
Arms of Poyntz: Quarterly 1st & 4th, barry of eight or and gules ( Poyntz ); 2nd & 3rd, quarterly per fess indented argent and azure ( Acton ).
* Matthew-Walker, Robert, " Arms of Steel, Heart of Gold ", International Piano Quarterly, No. 11 ( Spring 2000 ).

Arms and per
In 1922 John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquess of Bute, had sold the entire site and it was bought by the Cardiff Arms Park Company Limited for GB £ 30, 000, it was then leased to the Cardiff Athletic Club ( cricket and rugby sections ) for 99 years at a cost of £ 200 per annum.
Arms attributed to William de Braose ( d. 1230 ) by Matthew Paris: Party per pale indented gules and azure.
She also received nearly 50 percent ownership of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, giving her an income of roughly $ 1, 000 per day, none of which was taxable until 1913.
" This coat was adopted by Order-in-Council 268 July 19, 1895, as the Arms and Great Seal of the Province per the authority inferred from Section 136 of the British North America Act.
Under a contract with the U. S. Army, Colt Arms built the Model 1895 ten-barrel variant of the Gatling Gun, capable of firing 800-900. 30 Army rounds per minute, and used with great effect at the Battle of San Juan Hill.
Arms of the Roper family & 18th Baron Dacre: per fesse azure & or, a pale counterchanged & 3 buck's heads erased of the 2nd.
Arms of the Boscawen family, Earls and Viscounts Falmouth: Ermine, a rose gules barbed and seeded proper ; crest, per Debrett's Peerage, 1968: A falcon close proper ; supporters: Two sea lions erect on their tails argent gutte de larmes
Composed of three fields parted per pale, it featured a shield, a hand holding a weigh and the Ciołek Coat of Arms, a personal coat of arms of the monarch.
The City and District of St Albans retains and reserves all rights in respect of the Arms, and has consented to their use in the stated articles per OTRS ticket 2007030610008758 under the fair use provision.
The widely cited Small Arms Survey 2007 by Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva Switzerland claims there are some 3 million firearms in Finland, or 56 per 100 civilians.
Arms of the Boscawen family, Earls and Viscounts Falmouth: Ermine, a rose gules barbed and seeded proper ; crest, per Debrett's Peerage, 1968: A falcon close proper ; supporters: Two sea lions erect on their tails argent gutte de larmes
Under this agreement the LB & SCR, would share the line from Bulverhythe to Hastings and transfer to the SER its rights to build a line to Ashford but at the same time itretained the right to use the Bricklayers ' Arms branch and construct its own goods depot on the site for a rent of one shilling (£ 0. 05 ) per year.
Berney Arms sees 19 trains per week to either Great Yarmouth or Norwich.
Arms of William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, drawn by Matthew Paris: Party per pale or and vert, a lions in heraldry | lion rampant gules.
He was also the first of Gama's armada to arrive in Lisbon, on July 10, 1499 where King Manuel I of Portugal bestowed to him a pension of 50, 000 reis per year, 30, 000 in interest for his lands and his descendants and a new Coat of Arms.
After her marriage to Lee Arms, a publicity agent for Goldwyn, in 1918, her film output decreased to about one per year.
Primarily through Pedersen's contacts in the Ordnance Department, the Irwin-Pedersen Arms Company received a contract to manufacture over 100, 000 M1 Carbines to be produced at the rate of 1, 000 per day after the Grand Rapids factory was tooled up and in full production.
The plan is to convert 3 conventional infantry battalions to motorised infantry that is 1 per Combined Arms Divisions.
Arms: Or ( or depending on the branch of the family, party per pale, sable and or ); in bend sinister, a vinestock couped ( or planted, again depending upon the branch of the family ), with three clusters and three leaves proper, all counterchanged.

Arms and fess
It has sometimes been said that in some reference works flory-counter-flory ( and flory ) is treated like a line of partition, even though strictly speaking it is not-though it has been used for centuries that way in the royal arms of Scotland blazoning the double tressure ( Public Register of Arms, Lyon Court, Edinburgh ) and used by the College of arms in blazoning coats like that of Sutherland of Dunstanburgh Castle ( Gules, a chevron flory-counterflory between in chief three mullets and in base a lymphad all or ) and is used by the South African Bureau of Heraldry blazoning the coat of Huis Tankotie of the University of Pretoria ( Per fess, flory counter-flory, Argent and Azure, in base within the flower an annulet Sable ; a bordure counterchanged ) and Emmanuel-Opleidingsentrum in the South African Bureau of Heraldry's online database.
Arms adopted by Robert FitzWalter ( d. 1235 ) c. 1200 at the start of the age of heraldry: Or, a fess gules between two chevrons of the last.
Arms of Daubeney: Gules, 4 fusils conjoined in fess argent.
Blazon of Arms: Per fess, in chief Chequy Or and Vert, in base Gules, the latter charged with a lion rampant Argent, on a canton of the fourth, a rose of the third, barbed of the second.
In heraldic terms, the shield is described as " Arms: Argent, three piles wavy gules, on a fess vert three acorns or.
File: Sahir de Quincy Coat of Arms. jpg | Arms of Saer de Quincy, 1st Earl of Winchester: Argent, a fess azure, a label of seven points gules

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