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A Note Upon Six Stall Plates of Degraded Knights of the Garter

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Extract

Ashmole MS 1121 in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, contains details of six Stall Plates which it would appear were removed from St George's Chapel following Degradation from the Order of the Garter. Of these, three are those of Companions whose names do not appear in the generally accepted lists of those who were formally degraded.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1990

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References

1 For example Nicolas, N. H., History of the Orders of Knighthood of the British Empire, 4 vols. (London, 1842), 11Google Scholar , Additional Notes LI-LXXVI; G.E.C. Complete Peerage, II, Appendix B, 581; Holmes, G., The Order of the Garter Its Knights and Stall Plates 1348-1984 (1984)Google Scholar ; The Statutes of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (privately printed, 1972)Google Scholar.

2 Rouge Croix (confirmed 1660), Richmond Herald 1677, resigned 1704, died 1707. It is not known how this collection, for the plates must have been removed over a period of eighty years, came into Dethick's possession, nor is its subsequent fate known.

3 The Woodstock coat displaying France Modern appears upon the Stall Plate of Buck-ingham's father in St George's Chapel North 11. For the circumstances of its adoption see Sandford, F., Genealogical History of the Kings of England (London, 1683), 227 and 232Google Scholar . Wagner, A. R., Heralds of England (London, 1967), 69Google Scholar and Begent, P. J., A Noble Place Indeed. An Heraldic Tour of St. George's Chapel (n.p., 1983), 516Google Scholar.

4 Printed in Walden, H. de, Banners, Standards and Badges from a Tudor Manuscript in the College of Arms, De Walden Library (n.p., 1904), 26.Google Scholar

5 Ashmole MS 1133 fol. 20. The Warrant includes the names of the Duke of Northumber-land, the Marquess of Northampton, and Dudley, Sir Andrew. D.N.B., sub Henry Grey.Google Scholar

6 Walden, H. de, op. cit. (note 4), 270Google Scholar where the dexter supporter and the motto differs. Holmes, , op. cit. (note 1), 49Google Scholar.

7 Complete Peerage, iv, 78.

8 Blue Book; the second surviving register of the Order of the Garter to 1553-1620. St George's Chapel MS. (Information from Mrs G. Holmes, Archivist of St George's Chapel).

9 P.C.C. 10 Loftes. Prob. 11.44 (Box 3).

10 His namesake Thomas Lord Darcy of Darcy was degraded in 1537. No plate for him survives.

11 John Dudley the son of Edmund Dudley and his wife Elizabeth (Grey) suo jure Baroness Lisle of Kingston Lisle was created Viscount Lisle in 1542, Earl of Warwick in 1547 and Duke of Northumber-land in 1551.

12 Complete Peerage, IX, 722-6. St George's MS Garter Chest F.3. Note 5 above.

13 Complete Peerage, XII/2, 398-400.

14 Pat. Rolls 1. Ed VI pt VI m32. Cal. Pat. Rolls Ed VI, 1, 180.

15 Pat. Rolls 4. Ed VI pt I m14. Cal. Pat. Rolls Ed VI, in, 169. The office would appear to have been transferred directly from Dudley (Senior) to Parr for the Patent reads ‘which John Earl of Warwick lately exercised by the King's Patent now surrendered and cancelled’.

16 For the use of these arms see Grazebrook, H. Sydney, ‘The Barons of Dudley’, William Salt Archaeol. Soc, 9 (London, 1888), 9 and 71.Google Scholar

17 Both are in Stall N. 9. The lion also appears in the first quarter of th e arms appearing upon then-tombs in St Mary's Church, Warwick.

18 College of Arms MS M.13. fols. 153 and 154.

19 The apparent emphasis placed by Dudley (Senior) upon the Grey (of Groby) coat and it s associated quarters, althoug h in his Plate as North-umberland it is heraldically correct, may refer to a desire to support a doubtful claim to his mother's Barony of Lisle, for the lands associated with the title had been sold. See Complete Peerage, ix, 723 note (a).

20 This quarter relates to the Grey/Lisle descent. See Complete Peerage, VIII, 58-62.

21 Black Book; the first surviving register of the Order of the Garter 1552. St George's Chapel MS, 299-300. Anstis, J., The Register of the Most Noble Order of the Garter commonly called the Black Book, 2 vols. (London, 1724), 1, 438.Google Scholar

22 Anstis, , op. cit. (note 21), 1, 438–42Google Scholar and notes and 467-9.

23 BlackBook, 320-1. Anstis, , op. cit. (note 21), 1, 467–9.Google Scholar

24 See the annotation by Revd Beaven, A. B., Complete Peerage, II, App. B. 550.Google Scholar

25 Dugdale, W., The Baronage of England, 2 vols. (London, 1676), 11, 220.Google Scholar

26 Godwyn, Francis, Annales of England containing the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Queen Mary Translated and corrected by Morgan Godwyn (London, 1630), 249Google Scholar . This is the page number quoted by Dugdale. The reference does not appear upon the same page in the Latin editions of 1616 and 1628.

27 Stow, John, Annales or a General Chronicle of England (London, 1605), 1026.Google Scholar

28 Hayward, John, The Life and Reign of King Edward VI printedGoogle ScholarKennett, White, (ed.), A Complete History of England, 3 vols. (London, 1706), 11, 326Google Scholar . The first edition was published in 1630.

29 Not October 1552 as in Complete Peerage, 11, App. B. 581 nor September 1552 as in Garter Statutes.

30 Nichols, J. G., Literary Remains of Edward VI, 2 vols., Roxburghe Club, 75 (London, 1857), II, 410Google Scholar and n. I. Edward records only: 22 Apl 1552. ‘The Lord Paget was disgraded from the Order of the Garter for divers his offences and chiefly because he was no gentleman of blood neither of his father's nor mother's side.’

31 Ashmole, E., The Institution, Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (London, 1672), 285.Google Scholar

32 Anstis, , op. cit. (note 21), 441–2 and n. d.Google Scholar

33 For remarks upon deviations from the Statutes see Ashmole, , op. cit. (note 31), 267Google Scholar , Beltz, G. F., Memorials of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (London, 1841), CXXIX–CXXXIVGoogle Scholar , Nicolas, , op. cit. (note 1), 11, 369Google Scholar.

34 Black Book, 299-30 6 and 320-1. Anstis, , op. cit. (note 21), I, 438–48 and 467-9 and notes.Google Scholar

35 See note 21.

36 Anstis, , op. cit. (note 21), 1, 438–42 and notes. The date of the Installations of 1547 as 23 May given in Complete Peerage, 11, App. B. 550, Garter Statutes andGoogle ScholarHolmes, , op. cit. (note 1), is wrong. SeeGoogle ScholarAnstis, note op. cit., 441–2Google Scholar for the Heralds division of fees for 22 May and the surviving Stall Plate of Edward Earl of Derby S.9.

37 Round, J. H., ‘Notes on the Lord Great Chamberlain Case’, The Ancestor 4 (1903), 12.Google Scholar

38 Ibid., 9-14. Complete Peerage, IX, 723, n. (e).

39 Round, , op. cit. (note 37), 9.Google Scholar