Section IX.—HERALDRY,
Andhow the appearance of it, real or imagined, under any shape, and upon vestments, was made available, after different ways, in our law-courts, ask for and shall have a passing notice.
At the end of the fourteenth century, there arose, between the noble houses of Scrope and Grosvenor, a difference about the legal right of bearing on their respective shields the bendoron a fieldazure; and the suit was carried to the Court of Honour which sat at Westminster, and commissioners were sent about the country for the purpose of gathering evidence.
Besides a numerous body of the nobility, several distinguished churchmen were examined; and their depositions are curious. John, Abbot of St. Agatha, in Richmondshire, said the arms (Azure, a bendor, the bearing of the Scrope family who contended against its assumption by the Grosvenors) were on a corporas case belonging to the church of his monastery, of which the Scropes were deemed the second founders.[448]John de Cloworthe, sub-prior of Wartre, exhibited before the commissioners an amice embroidered on red velvet with leopards and griffonsor, between which are sewn in silk, in three pieces, three escochens with the entire arms of Sir Richard Scrope therein, viz.—azurea bendor.[449]William, Prior of Lanercost, said they had in their church the same arms embroidered on the morse of a cope.[450]Sir Simon, parson of Wenslay (whose fine grave brass may be seen in the “Church of Our Fathers,”[451]) placed before the commissioners an albe with flaps, upon which were embroidered the arms of the Scropes entire, &c.[452]The Scropes were the patrons of that living. Thomas de Cotyngham, prior of the Abbey of St. Mary, York, said that they had vestments with the Scrope arms upon them.[453]Sir John de Manfeld, parson of the Church of St. Mary sur Rychille, in York, said that in the church were diverse vestments on which were sewn, in silk, the entire arms of Scrope.[454]Sir Bertram Mountboucher said that these arms of the Scropes were to be seen on vestments, &c., in the abbey and churches where Sir R. Scrope was born.[455]Not the least remarkable individual who bore evidence on the subject was the poet Chaucer, who was produced on behalf of Sir Richard Scrope. When asked whether the armsazure, a bendor, belonged, or ought to belong to the said Sir Richard? said yes, for he saw him so armed in France, &c., and that all his time he had seen the said arms in banners, glass, paintings and vestments, and commonly called the Arms of Scrope.[456]For the better understanding of all these evidences the reader should look atNo. 8307, p. 185, an amice with its old apparel still on it. The “flaps” of an alb are now called apparels; and an old one, with these ornaments upon it, both at the cuffs as well as before and behind, is in this collection,No. 8710, p. 268 of the Catalogue. The two fine old English apparels here,No. 8128, p. 146, show how shields with heraldry could be put along with Scriptural subjects in these embroideries. The monumental effigy of a priest—a Percy by birth—in Beverley Minster, exhibits how these apparels, on an amice, were sometimes wrought with armorial bearings. Of “corporas cases,” there are several here, and pointed out at pp.112,144,145, and194of the Catalogue.
[448]Scrope and Grosvenor Rolls, ed. Sir H. Nicolas, t. ii. p. 275.
[448]Scrope and Grosvenor Rolls, ed. Sir H. Nicolas, t. ii. p. 275.
[449]Ibid. p. 278.
[449]Ibid. p. 278.
[450]Ibid. p. 279.
[450]Ibid. p. 279.
[451]T. i. p. 325.
[451]T. i. p. 325.
[452]Scrope and Grosvenor Rolls, ed. Sir H. Nicolas, t. ii. p 330.
[452]Scrope and Grosvenor Rolls, ed. Sir H. Nicolas, t. ii. p 330.
[453]Ibid. p. 344.
[453]Ibid. p. 344.
[454]Ibid. p. 346.
[454]Ibid. p. 346.
[455]Ibid. p. 384.
[455]Ibid. p. 384.
[456]Ibid. p. 411.
[456]Ibid. p. 411.
Margaret, Countess of Salisbury, the last of the Plantagenets, and mother of Lord Montague and Cardinal Pole, was, like her son the peer, beheaded, and at the age of seventy, by their kinsman Henry VIII. This fact is recorded by Collier;[457]but Miss A. Strickland mentions it more at length in these words:—Cromwell produced in the House of Lords, May 10th, by way of evidence against the aged Countess of Salisbury, a vestment (a chasuble no doubt) of white silk that had been found in her wardrobe, embroidered in front with the arms of England, surrounded with a wreath of pansies and marigolds, and on the back the representation of the host with the five wounds of our Lord, and the name of Jesus written in the midst. The peers permitted the unprincipled minister to persuade them that this was a treasonable ensign, and as the Countess had corresponded with her absent son (Cardinal Pole) she was for no other crime attainted of high treason, and condemned to death without the privilege of being heard in her own defence.[458]The arms of England, amid the quarterings of some great families, are even now to be found upon vestments; a beautiful one was exhibited here,A.D.1862, and described in the Loan Catalogue, p. 266; another fine one is at present at Abergavenny. With regard to the representation of the “Host with the five wounds of our Lord,” &c. this is of very common occurrence in ecclesiastical embroidery; and in this very collection, on the back orphrey to the splendid chasuble, No.8704, p. 264 of this Catalogue, we find embroidered the crucifixion, and a shieldgules, with a chaliceorand a hostargentat top, done in Flanders full half a century before the “Pilgrimage of Grace” in our northern counties had adopted such a common device upon their banner when the people there arose up against Henry VIII.
[457]Eccles. Hist. t. v. p. 51, ed. Lathbury.
[457]Eccles. Hist. t. v. p. 51, ed. Lathbury.
[458]Queens of England, iii. p. 68.
[458]Queens of England, iii. p. 68.
To a Surrey, for winning the day at Flodden Field, King Henry VIII. gave the tressured lion of the royal arms of Scotland to be borne upon the Howard bend as arms of augmentation. In after years, the same Henry VIII. cut off a Surrey’s head because he bore, as his House had borne from the time of one of their forefathers, Thomas de Brotherton, Edward I.’s son, the arms of the Confessor, the use of which had been confirmed to it by Richard II. If, like Scrope, Surrey had bethought himself of vestments, even of the few we have with the royal arms uponthem, and assumed by other English noblemen, perhaps those liturgic embroideries might have stood him in some good stead to save his life. Had the poor aged Countess of Salisbury been heard, she might have shamed her kinsman the king not to take her life for using upon her church furniture emblems, then as now, employed upon such appliances throughout all Christendom.
For the genealogist, the lawyer, the herald, the historian, such of these old liturgical garments as, like the Syon cope, bear armorial shields embroidered upon them, will have a peculiar value, and a more than ordinary interest. Those emblazonries not only recall the names of men bound up for ever with this land’s history, but may again serve, as they once before have served, to furnish the lost link in a broken pedigree, or unravel an entangled point before a law tribunal.