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A85770 A display of heraldrie: manifesting a more easie access to the knowledge thereof then hath hitherto been published by any, through the benefit of method; / wherein it is now reduced by the study and industry of John Guillim ... Interlaced with much variety of history suitable to the severall occasions or subjects. Guillim, John, 1565-1621.; Nower, Francis, d. 1670. 1660 (1660) Wing G2219A; ESTC R177735 251,394 243

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praesentiū habere debent locum praecedentiam Atque quod promogenitus filius ac ceteri omnes filij eorum uxores filiae ejusdem _____ haeredum suorum praedictorum respectivè habeant capiant locum praecedentiam ante primogenitos filios ac alios filios et eorum uxores et filias omnium quorumcunque respective prae quibus patres hujusmodi filiorum progenitorū aliorum filiorum eorum uxores filiarum vigore praesentium habere debent locum praecedentiā VOLUMUS etiam per praesentes pro nobis haeredibus successoribus nostris de gratia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia mero motu nostris concedimus quod dictus _____ nominetur appelletur nuncupetur placitet implacitetur per nomen _____ Baronetti Et quod stilus additio Baronetti apponatur in fine nominis ejusdem _____ haeredum masculorum suorum praedictorū in omnibus Literis Patentibus Commissionibus brevibꝰ nostris atque omnibus alijs Chartis factis atque literis virtute praesentium ut vera legitima necessaria additio dignitatis Volumus etiam per praesentes pro nobis haeredibus et successoribus nostris ordinamus quod nomini dicti _____ et Haeredum masculorum suorum praedictorum in sermone Anglicano et omnibus scriptis Anglicanis praeponatur haec additio videlicet Anglice Sir Et similiter quod uxores ejusdem _____ et Haeredum masculorum suorum praedictorum habeant utantur et gaudeant hac appellatione videlicet Anglice Lady Madam Dame respective secundum usum loquēdi Habendum tenendum utendum et gaudendum eadem statum gradum dignitatem stilum titulum nomen locum et praecedentiam cum omnibus et singulis Privilegijs et caeteris praemissis praefat _____ et ha redibꝰ masculis de corpore suo exeuntibus imperpetuum Volentes et per Praesentes concedentes pro Nobis Haeredibus et Successoribus Nostris quod praedictus _____ et haeredes sui masculi praedicti nomen statum gradum stilum dignitatem titulum locum et praecedentiam praedictam cum omnibus et singulis Privilegiis et caeteris praemissis successive gerant habeant et eorum quilibet gerat et habeat quodque idem _____ Et Haeredes sui Masculi praedicti successivè Baronetti in omnibus teneantur Et ut Baronetti tractentur reputentur Et eorum quilibet teneatur tractetur reputetur Et ulterius de uberiori gratiâ nostrâ speciali ac ex certa scientia mero motu nostris Cōcessimus ac per praesentes pro nobis haeredibꝰ successoribꝰ nostris concedimus praefato _____ Et Haeredibus suis masculis praedictis quod numerus Baronettorū hujus Regni Angliae nunquā posthac excedet in toto in aliquo uno tempore numerum ducentorum Baronettorū quod dicti Baronetti eorum Haeredes masculi praedicti respectivè de tempore in tempus in perpetuū habebunt tenebūt gaudebunt locos praecedētias suas inter se videlicet quilibet eorum secundum prioritatem senioritatē Creationis suae Baronetti praedicti quotquot autem creati sunt vel creabūtur Baronetti per literas nostras Patentes gerentes Datas uno eodem die haeredes sui praedicti gaudebunt locis praecedentijs suis inter se secundū prioritatem quae cuilibet eorum dabitur per alias literas nostras patentes in ea parte primo conficiendas sine impedimento non aliter nec alio modo Et insuper de abundantiori gratiâ nostrâ speciali ac ex certa scientia mero motu nostris concessimꝰ ac per praesentes pro nobis haeredibꝰ successoribꝰ nostris concedimus praefato _____ haeredibus suis masculis praedictis quod nec Nos nec Haeredes vel Successores Nostri de caetero in posterum erigemꝰ ordinabimꝰ constituemꝰ aut creabimꝰ infrà hoc Regnum nostrum Angliae aliquem alium gradum ordinem nomen titulum dignitatem sive statum sub vel infra gradum dignitatem sive statum Baronum hujus Regni nostri Angliae qui erit vel esse possit superior vel aequalis gradui dignitati Baronettorum praedictorū sed quod tam dictus _____ Haeredes sui Masculi praedicti quam uxores filij uxores filiorum filiae ejusdem _____ haeredum masculorū suorum praedictorū de caetero in perpetuū liberè quietè habeant teneant gaudeāt dignitates locos praecedentias suas praedictas prae omnibꝰ qui erunt de talibus gradibꝰ statibus dignitatibꝰ vel ordinibus in posterum ut praefertur creandi respectivè secundum veram intentionem praesentiū absque impedimento nostro haeredum vel successorum nostrorū vel aliorum quorumcunque Et ulterius per praesentes declaramus significamus beneplācitum voluntatem nostram in hac parte fore esse Et sic nobiscum statuimus decrevimus quod si postquā nos praedict numerum ducentorum Baronettorū hujus Regni Angliae compleverimus perfecerimus Contigerit aliquem vel aliquos eorundē Baronettorum ab hac vitâ discedere absque haerede masculo de corpore vel corporibus hujusmodi Baronetti vel Baronettorum procreato quod tunc nos non creabimꝰ vel praeficiemꝰ aliquam aliam personam vel personas in Baronettum vel Baronettos Regni Nostri Angliae sed quod numerus dictorum Ducentorum Baronettorum ea ratione de tempore in tempus diminuetur in minorem numerū cedet redigetur Denique volumus ac per praesentes pro nobis haeredibꝰ successoribꝰ nostris de gratia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia mero motu nostris concedimus praefato _____ Haeredibꝰ suis masculis praedictis quod hae literae nostrae Patentes erunt in omnibꝰ per omnia firmae validae bonae sufficientes effectuales in lege tam contra nos haeredes successores nostros quam contra omnes alios quoscunque secundum veram intentionem earundem tam in omnibus curiis nostris quam alibi ubicunque Non obstante aliqua lege consuetudine praescriptione usu ordinatione sive constitutione quacunque ante hac aeditâ habitâ usitatâ ordinatâ sive provisâ vel in posterū aedendâ habendâ usitandâ ordinandâ vel providendâ Et non obstante aliqua alia re causâ vel materia quacunque Volumus etiam c. Absque fine in Hanaperio c. Eo quod expressa mentio c. In cujus rei c. Teste c. Anno 9. JACOBI Regis 1611. 1. SIR Nicholas Bacon of Re-grave in the County of Suffolke Knight created Baronet May 22. 1611. Beareth Gules on a chief Argent two Mullets pierced Sable Note that the following 17. were all created on the same day with Sir Nicholas Bacon 2 Sir Richard Molineux of Sephtston in Com Lancaster Knight created Baronet teste ut
Fishes as that they cannot live long out of their proper element which is the Water Besides fishes doe serve men for no other use but for food and some sorts of them for medicine whereof it commeth that we have not so many names of fishes mentioned in the Scriptures as of other Animals For these reasons Fishes were not produc● before Adam that he might give them names answerable to their natures Neverthelesse God gave him Dominion over them aswell as over the rest when he sayd Dominamini piscibus maris c. Hereof it commeth that man hath lesse familiarity and acquaintance with Fishes than with many other Animals as Horses Dogges small birds of many kinds which we daily use either to serve our necessities or for our delights Fishes are borne after a diverse manner Manner for their bearing viz. directly upright inbowed extended indorsed Respecting each other Surmounting one another Fretted and Trianguled c. All Fishes saith Leigh that are borne feeding shall be termed Rule 1 in blazon devouring because they doe swallow whole without mastication or chewing and you must tell whereon they feede All Fishes raised directly upright and having Finnes shall be termed in blazon Hauriant ab hauriendo signifying to draw or suck ●cause Fishes do oftentimes put their Rule 2 heads in such sort above the wa● 〈◊〉 ●fresh themselves with the coole and temperate Ayre but especia● 〈…〉 waters do so rage and boyle in the depth of the Seas against som●●ous storme that they cannot endure the unwonted heat thereof ●es being borne Transverse the Rule 3 Escocheon must in blazon be termed Naiam of the word Nato 〈◊〉 swimme for in such manner doe they beare themselves in the waters when they swimme Concerning both the variety and the innumerable multitude of Fishes Pliny is of a prettey fantasticall conceit affirming that the seeds and universall Elements of the World are so sundry wayes commixed one with another partly by the blowing of the winds and partly by the rowling and agitation of the Sea that it may be truly said according to the vulgar opinion That whatsoever is ingendred or bred in any part of the world besides the same is to be found in the Sea besides many things more in it which no where else are to be seene A Fish if you will beleeve Farnesius i● called piscis à pascendo Quia ad rem nullam nisi ad pastum natus est he ●bred onely to eate and to be eaten Derivation Of Fishes some have hard and crusty coverings others have a softer out-side and those latter are also of two s●rts some having onely skin and other scales Scaled Fishes by their fins are both adorned and greatly assisted also in their swimming but Congers Eeles Lampreies and such like may seem in respect of the smalnesse of their fins to have received them of nature rather for ornament Fishes Scaled what than for use in swimming especially because these lye most in the bottome of the waters and therefore lesse need their fins Of these severall kinds I will briefly give some few examples wherein I rather purpose to lay open their diverse formes of Bearing in Coat-Armour than meddle with their unlimitable particular kinds as in example SECT III. CHAP. XXIII Scales of Fishes not continuate THE Hardnesse of Scaly fish whereof we have before spoken is not Continuate but Plated fitting for Motion but there is another sort of hard covering whieh is continuate Of which sort some are crusted other some are shelled as Examples shall shew The clawes of the fore-feet of this sort of fish are called forcipata brachia Cancrorum of forceps which signifieth a paire of Tongs or Pincers or such like alluding to their quality which is to pinch and hold fast whatsoever they do seize upon Which institution doubtless was grounded upon great reason to shew the steadfast amity and constant fidelity that ought to be between brethren and companions of one society and brother-hood for take one of these fishes and divide the shels and endeavour to sort them with I will not say hundreds but millions of other shels of fishes of the same kind and you shall never match them throughout therefore do they resemble the in dissoluble friendship that ought to be in fraternities and societies because there can be according to Cicero Offic. 1. Nulla firma Amicitia nisi inter aequales The consideration whereof if I be not deceived moved the first Founders of this Order to sort them in the coller of this order by couples for that all others do disagree with them Secundum magis vel minus and none do concur together with them in all points but onely those that nature hath conformed and made agreeable to each other in all points SECT III. CHAP. XXIV A Transition from things unreasonable VVEE have long insisted in the bearings of Animals or Living Creatures Vnreasonable distinguishing them according to their Kinds sorting them into several Rankes placing them under Sundrie Heads exemplifying their manifold Vse and Formes of Bearing in Coat-Armour to the end that they might give better life and warrant to such Rules and Observations as concerning them are formerly given The last place I have here reserved to the most Noble creature and first in estimation I meane Man Man the Noblest of Gods creatures whom God hath indued with a reasonable Soule and for whose sake he created all other things subjecting them to his Soveraigntie that they should serve Man and Man should serve God Thou hast given him saith David Soveraigntie over all the Workes of thy handes and hast put all things in subjection under his feete all Sheepe and Oxen ond all Beasts of the Field the Foules of the Aire and Fishes of the Sea c. For God made Man in his owne Image not onely in giving him an Vnderstanding soule and an Holy will but also a Soveraigne jurisdiction over these inferiour creatures even as Kings are the Image of God in a more peculiar manner because God hath given them Soveraigntie over Men Neither is the Beautie of the Body it selfe lightly to be regarded whose admirable Proportions and uses made Galen an Heathen to acknowledge the Infinite Wisedom of an Eternall Creator And that Godly King to breake out into termes of Admiration saying Thine eyes did see my substance yet being unperfect and in thy booke were all my members written which day by day were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Inasmuch as we are now come to treate of man the most excellent of all Gods creatures and for whose sake all things else were created Let us take a considerate view of the order of the Creation and we shall finde many forcible motives to stirre us up to the glorifying of our gracious God that hath so graciously and abundantly provided for our sustentation and maintainance before we were yet created that so we may be provoked with more circumspection and regard to
being so much concern'd in the subsequent Catalogue of those Baronets who were invested with that Dignity and Title by the Royal Munificence of our late Monarchs I did believe that there was an Obligation incumbent upon me to offer up this Register to your Patronage and that inforc'd from these two Reasons First The Antiquity and Noblenesse of your Extraction did invite it Secondly You being the premier Baronet that leads up the Van of those worthy persons that have been formerly dignified with that honorary Title did appeare almost to exact this Dedication which I hope will by you be as benignly received as it is really consecrated to your Name By Sir Your most humble Servant RICHARD BLOME AN ACCOUNT OR REGISTER Of the NAMES and ARMES of all the BARONETS of ENGLAND IT will not be necessary to say much of this Dignity because herewith we imprint a precedent of their Patent as also Instructions by King James their Founder to the Commissioners by him appointed for taking notice of the qualifications of the persons so advanc'd which were at the first precisely observ'd the said King promised not to encrease the number above two hundred which he exceeded by foure onely ending at Sir Thomas Playters the 204 th Of which before that Kings death and since there are remov'd to a higher dignity or extinct for want of Issue-male 46. or 47. most of which I have taken notice of by the way There are some few eight or ten whereof two Dutchmen at the latter end whose Coats I thought better omitted then to have inserted upon uncertain grounds the printed Catalogue being defective as to their place of Habitation or County which in some I have supplyed And the Heralds at Oxford not keeping so punctuall an account of them in the hurry of a Civill War as formerly Fr. Nower By the KING The INSTRUCTIONS within mentioned to be observed by Our COMMISSIONERS within named FOrasmuch as We have been pleased to authorize you to Treat and conclude with a certain number of Knights and Esquires as they shall present themselves unto you with such offers of assistance for the service of Ireland and under such Conditions as are conteined in these Presents wherein We do repose great trust and confidence in your discretions and integrities knowing well that in such cases there are so many circumstances incident as require a choice care and consideration We do hereby require you to take such course as may make known abroad both Our purpose and the Authority given unto you That by the more publique notice thereof those persons who are disposed to advance so good a worke may in time understand where and to whom to addresse themselves for the same For which purpose We require you to appoint some certain place and times for their Access which We think fittest to be at the Council Chamber at Whitehall upon Wednesdays and Fridays in the afternoon where you shall make known to them as they come that those who desire to be admitted into the dignity of Baronets must maintain the number of 30. foot Souldiers in Ireland for three years after the rate of eight pence sterling Money of England by the day And the wages of one whole year to be paid into Our Receipt upon the passing of the Patent Provided alwayes that you proceed with none except it shall appear unto you upon good proof that they are men for quality state of living and good reputation worthy of the same And that they are at the least descended of a Grandfather by the Fathers side that bare Armes And have also of certain yearly revenue in Lands of inheritance in possession one Thousand pounds per Annum de claro Or lands of the old Rent as good in accompt as one Thousand pounds per Annum of improved Rents Or at the least two parts in three parts to be divided of Lands to the said values in possession and the other third part in reversion expectant upon one life onely holding by Dower or in Joynture And for the Order to be observed in ranking those that shall receive the dignity of a Baronet although it is to be wished that those Knights which have now place before other Knights in respect of the time of their Creation may be ranked before others Caeteris paribus yet because this is a Dignity which shall be Hereditary wherein divers circumstances are more considerable then such a Marke as is but Temporarie that is to say of being now a Knight in time before another Our pleasure is you shall not be so precise in placing those that shall receive this Dignity but that an Esquire of great Antiquity and extraordinary living may be ranked in this choise before some Knights And so of Knights a man of greater living more Remarkable for his house years or calling in the Common-wealth may be now preferred in this Degree before one that was made a Knight before him Next because there is nothing of Honour or of value which is known to be sought or desired be the Motives never so good but may receive scandall from some who wanting the same good affection to the publique or being in other considerations incapable can be contented out of envy to those that are so preferred to cast aspersions and imputations upon them As if they came by this dignity for any other consideration but that which concerneth this so publique and memorable a worke You shall take order That the party who shall receive this dignity may take his Oath that neither he nor any for him hath directly or indirectly given any more for attaining the degree or any precedence in it then that which is necessary for the maintenance of the number of Souldiers in such sort as aforesaid saving the charges of passing his Patent And because We are not ignorant that in the distribution of all Honours most men will be desirous to attain to so high a place as they may in the Judgement whereof being matter of dignity there cannot be too great caution used to avoid the interruption that private partialities may breed in so worthy a Competition Forasmuch as it is well known that it can concern no other person so much to prevent all such inconveniences as it must do Our selfe from whom all Honour and Dignity either Temporary or Hereditary hath his onely root and beginning You shall publish and declare to all whom it may concern That for the better warrant of your own Actions in this matter of Precedency wherein We finde you so desirous to avoid all just exceptions We are determined upon view of all those Patents which shall be subscribed by you before the same passe Our great Seal to take the especiall care upon Vs to order and rank every man in his due place And therein always to use the particular counsel and advice that you Our Commissioners shall give Vs of whose integrity and circumspection We have so good experience and are so well perswaded as We
supra Azure a Crosse Moline Or. 3 Sir Thomas Maunsel of Mergan in the County of Glamorgan Knight Argent a Cheuron between 3 Maunches Sable 4 George Shirley of Staunton in Com. Leicest Esquire Or Paly of 6. Argent and Azure a Canton Ermine 5 Sir John Stradling of St. Donates in the County of Glamorgan Knight Paly of 6. Argent and Azure on a Bend Gules three Cinquefoyls Or. 6 Sir Francis Leak of Sutton in Com. Derby Knight since a Baron Argent on a Saltire engrailed Sable nine Annulets Or. 7 Thomas Pelham of Laughton in Com. Sussex Esquire Azure 3 Pelicans Argent vulning themselves proper 8 Sir Richard Houghton of Houghton Tower in Com. Lancaster Sable three bars Argent 9 Sir Henry Hobart of Intewood in Com. Norfolk Knight Sable an Estoil of eight Rayes Or between two Flanches Ermine 10 Sir George Booth of Dunham Massey in Com. Chester Knight Argent 3 Boars heads erected and erased Sable tusked Or. 11 Sir John Peyton of Iselham in Com. Cambridge Knight Sable a Crosse engrailed Or in the first quarter a Mullet Argent 12 Lionel Talmache of Helmingham in Com. Suffolk Esquire Argent a Fret Sable 13 Sir Gervase Clifton of Clifton in Com. Nottingh Knight Sable semy de Cinquefoyls a Lyon Rampant Argent 14 Sir Thomas Gerrard of Bryn in Com. Lancaster Knight Argent a Saltire Gules 15 Sir Walter Aston of Tixhall in Com. Stafford Knight since a Baron of Scotland Argent a Fesse in chief three Lozenges Sable 16 Philip Knevet of Bucknam in Com. Norfolk Esquire Argent a Bend Sable within a border engrailed of the same 17 Sir John Saint John of Lydiard Tregoz in Com. Wilts Argent on a Chiefe Gules two Mullets Or. 18 John Shelly of Michelgrove in Com. Sussex Esquire Sable a Fesse engrailed between 3 Periwinckle shels or Welks Or. June 9. 1611. 9. Jacobi 19 SIr John Savage of Rock-savage in Com. Chester Knight created Baronet June 29. 1611. Since Earl Rivers Argent six Lions Rampant Sable 20 Sir Francis Barington of Barington Hall in Com. Essex Knight Argent three Cheurons Gules a Label Azure 21 Henry Berkley of Wymonaham in Co Leicester Esquire Gules a Cheuron between ten Cinquefoyls Argent 22 William Wentworth of Wentworth-VVoodhouse in Com. Ebor. Esquire since Earl of Strafford Sable a Cheuron between 3 Leopards heads Or. 23 Richard Mulgrave of Hartly Castle in Com Westmerland Esquire Azure 6 Annulets Or. 24 Edward Seymour of Bury Castle in Com Devon Esquire Gules two Wings displayd or in lure Or. 25 Sir Moyle Finch of Eastwell in the County of Kent Knight since Earl of Winchelsey Argent a Cheuron between three Griffons passant Sable 26 Sir Anthony Cope of Hanwell in Com Oxford Knight Argent on a Cheuron Azure between 3 Roses Gules slipped Vert as many Flowers de lis Or. 27 Sir Thomas Mounson of Carlton in Com Lincoln Knight Or two Cheurons Gules 28 George Gresley of Drakelow in Com Derby Esq Varry Ermine and Gules 29 Paul Tracy of Stanway in Com Glocester Esquire Or two Bendlets Gules between them an Escallop Sable 30 Sir John Wentworth of Gosfield in Co Essex Knight Ext. Sable a Cheuron between 3 Leopards heads Or a Crescent 31 Sir Henry Bellasis of Newborough in Com Ebor. Knight after Baron and since Viscount Faulconbridg Argent a Cheuron Gules between 3 Flower de lis Azure 32 VVilliam Constable of Flamborough in Com Ebor. Esquire Quarterly Gules and Varry a bend Or. 33 Sir Thomas Leigh of Stoneley in Com Warwicke Knight since Baron of Stoneley 1643. Gules a Crosse engrailed in the first quarter a Lozenge Or. 34 Sir Edward Noel of Brook in Com Rutland Knight since Viscount Campden Or Fretty Gules a Canton Ermine 35 Sir Robert Cotton of Conington in Com Huntington Knight Azure an Eagle displayd Argent 36 Robert Cholmondleigh of Cholmondleigh in Com Chester Esquire After Viscount of Ireland and since Earl of Lemster Gules two Helmets in Chief and a Garb in base Proper 37 John Molineux of Tevershalt in Com Nottingham Esquire Azure a Crosse moline Or a border Argent 38 Sir Francis Wortley of Wortley in Com Yorke Knight Argent on a Bend Gules three Bezants between six Martlets of the second 39 Sir Geerge Savill Senior of Thornhill in Com Ebor. Knight Argent on a bend engrailed Sable 3 Owles Argent 40 William Kniveton of Mircaston in Com Derby Esquire Gules a Cheuron Vair Argent and Sable 41 Sir Philip VVoodhouse of VVilberly Hall in Com Norfolke Knight Sable a Cheuron between 3 Cinquefoyls Ermine Olim the Cheuron Or Guttee de sang 42 Sir VVilliam Pope of VVilcott in Com Oxon Knight now Earl of Down in Ireland Per pale Or and Azure on a Cheuron between 3 Griffons heads erased four Flower-de lis all counterchanged 43 Sir James Harington of Ridlington in Com Rutland Knight Sable a Fret Argent 44 Sir Henry Savile of Methely in Com Ebor. Knight Ext. Argent on a bend Sable 3 Owls of the first 45 Henry VVilloughby of Risley in Com Derby Esquire Or on two bars Gules 3 Waterbougets Argent Ext. 46 Lewis Tresham of Rushton in Com Northampton Esquire Per Saltire Sable and Or 6 Trefoyls of the last 47 Thomas Brudenell of Dean in Com Northampton Esq now Baron of Stoughton Northamp Argent a Cheuron Gules between 3 Morions or steel Caps proper 48 Sir George St Paul of Snarsford in Com Lincoln Knight Argent a Lion rampant Gules crowned Or. 49 Sir Philip Tirwhit of Stainfield in Com Lincoln Knight Gules 3 Lapwings Or. 50 Sir Roger Dalison of Loughton in Com Lincoln Knight Gules 3 Crescents Or a Canton Ermine 51 Sir Edward Carre of Sleford in Com Lincoln Knight Gules on a Cheuron Argent 3 Mullets of 6 points Sable 52 Sir Edward Hussey of Henington in Com Lincoln Knight Or a Cross Vert. 53 Le strange Mordant of Massinghamparva in Com Norfolk Esquire Argent a Cheuron engrailed between three Stars Sable 54 Thomas Bendish of Steeple-Bumsted in Com Essex Esquire Argent a Cheuron Sable between 3 Rams heads erased Azure Armed Or. 55 Sir John Wynne of Gwidder in Com Carnarvan Knight Vert 3 Eagles displayed in Fesse Or. 56 Sir William Throckmorton of Tortworth in Com Glocester Knight Gules on a Cheuron Argent 3 bars gemels Sable 57 Sir Richard Worsley of Apledercombe in the County of Southampton Knight Argent a Cheuron Sable between 3 Cornish Choughes Proper 58 Richard Fleetwood of Keckwich or Cakewish in the County of Stafford Esquire Per pale Nebulee Or and Azure 6 Martlets counterchanged 59 Thomas Spencer of Yarington in the County of Oxford Esquire Quarterly Argent and Gules Fretty Or on a Bend Sable 3 Escallops of the first a Crescent for a difference 60 Sir John Tufton of Hothfield in the County of Kent Knight since Earl of Thanet Sable an Eagle displayd Ermine a boder Argent 61 Sir Samuel Peyton of Knolton in Com Kent Knight Sable a Crosse engrailed Or in the first quarter a