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Arms of the Earls of Warwick, 4th creation
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Arms and Earls
The Siege of Caerlaverock in the XXVIII Edward I ( A. D. MCCC ) with the Arms of the Earls, Barons & Knights who were Present on the Occasion with a Translation, a History of the Castle and Memoirs of the Personages Commemorated by the Poet.
Arms of first Courtenay Earls of Devon: Or, three Roundel | torteaux a Label ( heraldry ) | label azure, as depicted ( without tinctures ) impaling Bohun on the monumental brass in Exeter Cathedral, Devon, of Peter Courtenay ( d. 1405 ) | Sir Peter Courtenay ( d. 1405 ), 5th son of Hugh Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon ( d. 1377 )
Arms of the later Earls of Devon, with the label azure further differenced by annulets or Roundel | plates
Arms and Warwick
After 1883 the original 1844 railway station on Warwick Road was partially rebuilt at the opposite end of Station Road at the rear of the King's Arms and Castle Hotel public house and used as a cafe.
Others include the Farriers Arms ( built 1872 ), Railway Tavern ( built 1867 ), Fishponds Tavern ( built 1904 ), Full Moon ( built 1850 ), Golden Lion ( built 1883 ), Cross Keys ( built 1853 ), Cross Hands ( built 1853 ), Old Tavern ( built 1899 ), Greyhound ( built 1883 ), Spotted Cow ( built 1883 ), Portcullis ( built 1853 ), the Warwick Arms ( built 1906 ), and the Oldbury Court ( built 1957 ).
In 1925, Arthur Henry Tyack, the then owner of the Warwick Arms hotel, bought 19 Jury Street in order to turn it into a hotel, and opened the Lord Leycester hotel in 1926.
Arms and 4th
The Arms Park was host to the British Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1958, and hosted four games in the 1991 Rugby World Cup, including the 3rd / 4th place play-off.
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.
" 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.
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
Victoria Eugenie's coat of arms as Queen of Spain were the former Lesser Royal Coat of Arms of Spain used by the House of Bourbon, impaled with the Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom ( in the English version ), overall an inescutcheon with the arms of her father Prince Henry of Battenberg ; quarterly 1st and 4th, Hesse ( modified ), 2nd and 3rd, Battenberg.
Henry FitzRoy's arms were as follows: 1st and 4th canton borders for Brittany, 2nd and 3rd canton borders for Somerset, centred by the English Royal Arms, surmounted by an escutcheon of Nottingham, with a bar attached to show royal bastardy.
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 of Despencer: Quarterly 1st & 4th: Argent ; 2nd & 3rd: Gules, a fret or, over all a ribbon sable
* 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
During the mid-1980s David Nicolson, 4th Baron Carnock was recognised by the Lord Lyon King of Arms as the chief of Clan Nicolson.
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