A
Directory of Arms!
When I started collecting Wars of the Roses figures to play
Nevermind the Billhooks, I decided I would
1) explore local lords and make sure they were represented
in my armies
2) free hand all my standards
As it happens, in order to do 1, I have had to do 2, as few
of these local lords are represented in the printed flag market!
I have done quite well with exploring local lords, see
previous blog entries, and with my good friend Alex, have visited their homes
and final resting places. We discovered one, de Barre, within walking distance
of my house and strolling around what remains of his house, a moat, gave me a real
sense of history and the passage of time and how we are but fleeting blots on
an ever-changing landscape etcetc
Moreover, it gave me the idea of crafting a campaign in the
area where I live during the 1469-71 era, such a campaign might include the
battles of Nibley Green 1470 and Tewkesbury 1471 or may be purely hypothetical.
To this end I have located an on-line map from 1610 showing the area to be
mostly forest and unlikely to have changed much since 1471and I bought a
reconstructed city map of Bristol dated 1480
Meanwhile, as my collection grows, I thought it might be an
idea to create a Directory of Arms containing pics of all my standards with
maybe a short bio of each lord and a description of their probable livery
Sir William “Waste All” Berkely The Second Baron Berkely
Berkely inherited a
massive estate. It was said that he could walk from Sharpness to Windsor and
“never commit trespass.” A thoroughly unpleasant man who ambushed his neighbour
Viscount L’Isle, Thomas Talbot, at Nibley Green, described as more of an
assassination than a battle Berkely outnumbered his opponent by a thousand men
to maybe three hundred.
At Bosworth, he supported both sides, typically hedging his
bets by providing men for one side and money for the other. On the ascension of
Henry Tudor to the throne, Berkely gave up tracts of land to his king in
exchange for titles. He lost so much of the ancestral lands through poor
management, gambling and in exchange for titles that one of his descendants
nicknamed him “Waste All!”
Berkely -Arms Gules a chevron between 10 crosses
formy Argent
Badge- a unicorn
statant gules, armed and crined Or
I created this company guidon based on his badge
Livery is recorded as
white and red- after Bosworth, he adopted green and yellow when he became Earl
of Nottingham
The City of Bristol
Always an important
port, the ship and castle has been Bristol’s arms since at least the Thirteenth
century. This fine fellow wears the gules and or livery of the city. Each major
city raised a contingent for its defence in times of war and a body of men from
the City of Bristow fought at Tewkesbury. Bristol was a vital source of guns
for Margret of Anjou prior to Tewkesbury. The city’s loyalty changed several
times throughout the conflict.
Sir John de Barre of Barrs Court
This is the heraldic
banner of my most local lord! The son of a brigand knight de Barre was initially
considered a supporter of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, from whom he
also received an annual payment of £ 20. From 1459 Sir John turned to the House
of Lancaster and fought for Henry VI at the Battle of Northampton in 1460. After
Edward IV's coronation in 1461, orders were issued to arrest Sir John, but this
did not succeed.
In the following years Sir John Barre must have come to
terms with the ruling House of York and received pardon, since he fought for
Edward IV in 1471 at the battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury in the later course
of the Wars of the Roses.
Arms Gules 3 bars compony Argent and Sable a lable Or
de Barres battle standard as described by Coveney
Arms Sable 2 shin bones Argent in saltire dexter uppermost
Interestingly this was later adopted by a descendant -Sir Isaac Newton
You can read more about our quest to find the livery colours of de Barre in this blog post https://wilgut.blogspot.com/2021/09/normal-0-false-false-false-en-gb-x-none.html
Sir Walter Devereux, first Baron
Ferrers of Chartley (c. 1432–1485), landowner and soldier, was of Herefordshire
stock his father was a retainer of Richard, duke of York, and he himself became
Edward IV's councillor.
A doughty warrior and staunch Yorkist,
Devereux was at every major battle from Ludford Bridge to Bosworth where he was
killed
A Deveraux company guidon bearing the device of a “French wives
hood”. Deveraux, like many other Lords several badges including a horseshoe and
ermine fusils
Edward Plantagenet Earl of March
Edwards Sun in
Splendor on a battle standard of Blue and Murrey. Edward is said to have taken
the Sun in Splendor as his badge after the battle of Mortimers Cross. It’s one
of many badges associated with Edward and not the only one bearing a sun.
Most lords would have at least two standards, a Heraldic
banner bearing the Lords Arms, and a Battle standard, usually displaying his
badge and his livery colours. Warwick is
supposed to have had eighteen or more!
A guidon or pennant bearing Edwards Livery and his Rose en
Soliel, a badge associated with him from childhood as the “White Rose of Rouen”-
long before Roses were linked with this conflict or either of the two warring
houses. Edward also used the Mortimer falcon in a fetterlock and the white lion
as badges
When
Edward became king he assumed the Royal Arms, a very familiar standard that we
now recognise as the Royal Arms of England as first used by Henry V.
Edward Prince of Wales
Edward’s badge is
here displayed on a red field with his motto “I serve” in German. I took this
design from the street banners of Tewkesbury and I confess that I know nothing
of its history or veracity. But I like it!
Sir Henry Holland 3rd Duke of Exeter
Arms Gules three lions passant Or a bordure Azure
charged with fleur-de-lys Or
A
nasty piece of work, even for his time, was Sir Henry, nasty and incompetent
like a pantomime villain. He seemed to conspire to always be on the losing side
of every battle he was in and was twice stripped naked and left for dead. He
died in a mysterious and somewhat comic way, falling or getting thrown off a
ship that he had taken passage on that was also carrying his arch enemy Edward
IV.
Exeter
had several badges, a corn stalk, a hart couchant argent crowned about the neck
and chained and a fiery cresset- a beacon as shown with his livery colours of
argent and “bloody
Willliam Lord Hastings
Hastings Heraldic
standard is a bit boring, Argent a maunch sable
This is a somewhat
fanciful creation for his battle standard showing his badge, the manticore, a
horned, human-faced, scorpion-tailed lion-like creature on a field of his
livery colours Murrey and Blue.
I chose a strong
contrast here, between a Burgundy mixed with dark red and a light grey washed
and glazed with pale blue ink.
Henry VI
The Royal Arms of
Henry VI differ from those of Edward IV in that the dexter side of the banner
carries the French fleur-de-lys alone, to emphasise that despite a life full of
failures , Henry was the first king of France and England.
Sir john Kemys Lord of Siston
Arms: vert, on a chevron argent, 3 pheons
sable, Kemys
Kemys is another
local Lord, Lord of Siston, who gained the manor through marriage to Margaret
Dennis. Siston was once part of the Berkely estate and a fief of Berkely
castle.
The manor was inherited by his son Roger who “went insane
and shortly thereafter died” the manor
then returned to the Dennis family
Crest - On a mount vert a unicorn azure sejant,
armed ,crined and unguled Or
I used the Kemys family crest as a badge to create this guidon. Local lords like Kemys and de Barre are unlikely to have issued livery for their men. More about Kemys here
https://wilgut.blogspot.com/2021/09/local-wars-of-roses-part-2.htmlSir John Langstrother
Sir John was the
Prior of the Order of the Bretheren of the Hospital of St John in Jerusalem. He was a Lancastrian who supported Warwick’s uprising
and the Readeption and was executed after Tewkesbury
His banner shows his Arms
Argent a chevron Gules between 3 escallops Sable beneath the cross of his order
chief Gules a cross Argent
Viscount L’Isle Sir Thomas Talbot
Tricked into a battle
where he was greatly outnumbered by the wily treacherous Baron Berkely, Talbot,
aged 19,was shot through the throat and hacked to death in the “last private
war” in England , the “battle” (read slaughter) of Nibley Green 1470. The best thing that can be said of this battle
is that it was the inspiration behind the creation of Nevermind the Billhooks!
Arms
quarterly 1 and 4 Gules a lion rampant a bordure engrailed Or 2 and 3 Gules a
lion passant guardant Argent crowned Or
Sir Phillip Mede
Mayor of Bristol three
times, merchant who owned many ships.Mede intrigued with baron Berkely and
raised in a single night a contingent of fighting men to support Berkeley at the
battle of Nibley Green. Mede married his daughter to Berkelys younger brother
who was immediately disowned by his older sibling for “marrying a commoner”
Arms Gules a
chevron Ermine three trefoils Argent
The Crest of Edward
the Confessor one of the Nine Worthies
The symbols of the “Nine Worthies” were used by the Lancastrians
to show the world that Henry VI was “King by Gods Decree” unlike the Hoys of
York that had no “such blessing, appointment or approval” from God
I used it because it
is rather striking and a bit cool
Sir Edmund Beaufort 4th Duke of Somerset
There is strong argument
for interpreting the Wars of the Roses as a fight for dominance between two wealthy
families, that of the Beauforts and the Nevilles.
Edmund was reportedly
a good general with a fine command of strategy and was Margret of Anjou’s chief
advisor in the 1471 campaign. It was Somerset’s masterly use of the fake deploy
at Sodbury that slowed Edward’s advance and so nearly bought the Lancastrian
host the time it needed to meet up with it’s Welsh allies.
He was known to have
a hot temper and reputedly killed Wenlock at Tewkesbury for not supporting his charge
against the Yorkist left flank
The Portcullis was a Beaufort badge and is here used as a
Battle standard on a field of his livery colours Argent and Azure
The
Beauforts were a wealthy family and so I
have given him a company of archer and a company of Bills all in livery. This is
the Battle Standard of his archers, a Yale, in fact the Beaufort Yale a
mythical, magical dancing goat!
John the Lord Wenlock
Wenlock, "the prince of turncoats", who changed sides repeatedly during the conflict and it was said of him that even when he was not actually changing sides, he was engaged in "fence sitting par excellence." He was destined for a career in the church and he was an astute politician. He died at Tewkesbury.
Wenlock had superb company guidon bearing a white dragon which I shall attempt as a project in the near future