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  1. 4 days ago · Each college and permanent private hall has its own arms, although in some cases these were assumed rather than granted by the College of Arms.

  2. 5 days ago · Pulpit Cloth: In ante-chapel—of purple velvet with fringes and tassels, embroidered with two knots with the initials I. H., the date 1611 and the arms of the college. Seating: Behind altar—bench with shaped arms, turned posts and arcaded front rail, 17th-century.

  3. 1 day ago · The UK Government has recently unveiled a fresh artistic rendering of the Royal Coat of Arms, commemorating the reign of King Charles III. Heraldic artist Timothy Noad, who has worked on royal designs for over 35 years, created this new version. Though the core elements of the arms, such as the lion representing England and the unicorn ...

  4. 5 days ago · Clarenceux, meaning the inhabitants of Clarence, that is the domains of the Earls of Clare, is first known in connection with a king of arms c. 1334 in the person of Andrew 'Clarencell (orum) rex heraldus'.

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  5. 5 days ago · Although King Charles VI had in 1407 led the way in creating a college of arms, over the next two centuries his heralds lost influence. Unlike their Scottish and English counterparts, they had no power to grant arms, and they gradually faded into insignificance.

  6. 5 days ago · Within a few years heraldry spread throughout all Western Christendom. The first English king who indisputably bore arms was the Crusader Richard I (the Lion-Heart; 1157–99). The three gold lions of England have been used by every English royal house since his time.

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  8. 4 days ago · In the buttery are preserved three silk banners of the college trumpet dated 1666 or 1667; they bear the college arms.

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