| College of Arms |
 |
| Type |
Corporate body |
| Founded |
1484 (London) |
| Founder |
Richard III of England |
| Headquarters |
Queen Victoria Street
London, United
Kingdom |
| Area served |
England, Wales and
Northern Ireland |
| Key people |
Earl Marshal |
| Services |
Recording, granting and regulation of heraldry, armorial
bearings and pedigrees |
| Website |
College of Arms |
The College of Arms, or Heralds' College, in London is one of the
few remaining government heraldic authorities in Europe. It was founded in 1484 by King
Richard III, and is an office regulating heraldry and granting new armorial bearings. As its name suggests, it is a corporate body consisting of the professional heralds who are
delegated heraldic authority by the Queen for England,
Wales and Northern Ireland. (Scotland is not included, as that country has its own heraldic authority: Lord Lyon King of Arms and his office.) The
college also grants arms to citizens of other Commonwealth countries that do not
have their own heraldic authorities. (Canada and South
Africa have their own heraldic authorities, the Canadian Heraldic
Authority and the Bureau of Heraldry, respectively.)
In addition to designing and granting new arms, the College fields many requests from people attempting to demonstrate descent
from an armigerous (arms-bearing) person; a person descended in the male line (or through heraldic heiresses) from such an ancestor may be reissued that ancestor's arms (with differencing marks if necessary
to distinguish from senior-line cousins). To that end, the college is involved in genealogy
and the many pedigrees (family trees) in their records, although not open to the public, have
official status. Anyone may register a pedigree with the college, where they are carefully internally audited and require official proofs before being altered.
Heralds were originally messengers; and to this day the officers of the College of Arms occasionally step back into that role
by publicly reading Royal proclamations, notably at the accession of a new sovereign.
They also have a part in planning for and guiding participants through state ceremonies, such as coronations, the introduction of new peers into the
House of Lords, and the ceremonies of orders of chivalry. For these public appearances, the officers of
the college wear costume representing their place in the Royal Household, either simple
red livery or the herald's traditional colourful outfit of a tabard emblazoned with his master's
arms (in this case the royal arms). On these occasions they are
sometimes preceded by state trumpeters (with whom they should not be confused).
The College of Arms occupies a building on Queen Victoria Street in the City of
London, not far to the south of St. Paul's Cathedral. The site was granted to
the college when it was re-incorporated by Philip and Mary I in 1555, and the present 17th
century building dates from after the Great Fire of London in
1666.
The College of Arms is featured in the 1969 James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service where James Bond visits his friend and mentor
Sir Hillary Bray who permits Bond to impersonate him so he can spy on Blofeld's base Piz
Gloria and Bray tells him information on Blofeld's genealogical claim Count Balthazzar de Bleuchamp, and he even shows
Bond his own distinctive coat of arms with the family motto: the world is not enough (this was used for the title of the 19th
Bond film The World Is Not Enough).
The officers
The full armorial achievement of the College of Arms taken from
Lant's Roll of about
1595
The Earl Marshal, an hereditary office held by the Duke of Norfolk, oversees the College, though he is not a member of that body; arms may not be granted
without his consent. Furthermore, the Earl Marshal may, in theory, hear cases and controversies relating to the use of arms in
the Court of Chivalry, although the court has not sat since 1954. In practice, the Earl Marshal usually leaves affairs to the professional heralds of the College.
There are, historically, three levels of officers of arms: Kings of Arms,
Heralds, and Pursuivants. The officers of arms occupy posts
bearing traditional titles with royal connotations:
- Kings of Arms:
- Heralds, whose titles are references to places or peerage titles historically associated
with the monarchy:
- Pursuivants, whose titles invoke various heraldic badges associated with the
monarchy:
The various officers of arms have their own private practices in heraldry and genealogy, and receive only nominal salaries as
officers of the College. These salaries were set centuries ago and reflect the living costs of the day. They were fixed at higher
levels by James I but reduced by William IV in the 1830s. The salaries of the officers of
arms are listed below, which is not taxable income:
- £49.07 per annum for Garter Principal King of Arms,
- £20.25 per annum for the provincial Kings of Arms,
- £17.80 per annum for the Heralds,
- and £13.95 per annum for the Pursuivants.
They serve on rotation as the "officer in waiting" to handle walk-in business at the college's premises.
Beyond these "Heralds in Ordinary", "Heralds Extraordinary" can be appointed to take part in special ceremonial occasions or
to assist the Earl Marshal personally; they are not members of the college. Among the extraordinary heralds have been—
One special case is that of New Zealand Herald Extraordinary, who,
although not a member of the college, is a permanent post created to oversee heraldry in New
Zealand; he works together with the college to grant new arms for people and bodies in that country (where he himself
lives and works).
Grants and descent of arms
The entrance of the College of Arms building in London. At the top, the
Royal Arms can be seen. Below the name is the
shield of the College itself. The banner bears the arms of
William George Hunt, the officer in waiting on the day the picture was taken.
The Kings of Arms grant coats of arms by letters patent. Before they can even consider
the granting of arms, an application must be made to the Earl Marshal, and a fee paid.
The Kings of Arms are authorised in their patents of appointment to grant (with the consent of the Earl Marshal) to "eminent
men", a phrase which first appeared in the patent of appointment of Stephen Leake as Clarenceux King of Arms in 1741. Originally,
the test applied was one of wealth or social status, because any man entitled to bear a coat of arms was expected to be a
gentleman. By 1530, the heralds applied a property qualification, requiring successful
candidates for a grant of arms to have an income from land of £10 per annum, or movable wealth of £300. But since the heralds
receive fees for granting arms, they have always had an incentive to be generous rather than restrictive in their interpretation
of who should be allowed a grant. In 1616, Ralphe Brooke, York Herald, tricked Garter King of Arms, Segar, into granting a coat
of arms to the common hangman for a fee of 22 shillings.
In 1673, the authority of the Earl Marshal, which the heralds had challenged, was
established in its modern form by a royal declaration which stated, among other things, that no patents of arms should be granted
without his consent. This established the system, which is still operated, whereby royal authority to approve candidates for
grants of arms is exercised by the Earl Marshal, and royal authority to grant the arms themselves is exercised by the Kings of
Arms from the College of Arms. The application to the Earl Marshal (the Duke of Norfolk) is in the form of a petition, called a
"Memorial", in the name of the prospective grantee. The wording of the Memorial is important because it is closely followed (for
example, as to the description of the grantee of arms by profession, place of residence, etc) in any subsequent Letters Patent
containing the grant of arms.
There are no fixed criteria as to whether a modern application for a grant of arms should be allowed. If a herald is
approached and does not consider that the application has merit, he may tactfully suggest to the applicant that he or she should
not proceed. If it does proceed, its success or otherwise will depend on the approval of the Earl Marshal, who may apply his own
standards. Peter Gwynn-Jones, Garter King of Arms, has recently written that "In
practice, eligibility depends upon holding a civil or military commission, a sound university degree or professional
qualification, or having achieved some measure of distinction in a field beneficial to society as a whole." (Gwynn-Jones, 1998; p
121)
If the Earl Marshal finds the application in the "Memorial" satisfactory, he will grant a Warrant authorising the Kings of
Arms to proceed with the designing of arms. One of the heralds then works with the applicant to devise arms pleasing to him as
well as heraldically correct. Once a final form is reached, the Kings of Arms grant letters patent (colourfully illuminated and
decorated) authorising the use of arms blazoned therein to the grantee and his heirs.
They, or a differenced version of them using marks of cadency, will be inherited by
all of the legitimate children of an individual and such children and their descendants may bear the arms (or a
differenced version of them) from the moment of birth: they do not (as with other inheritance) have to wait for the death of the
previous generation. Nor is there any requirement for the College of Arms to approve the use of the arms in each generation: the
original grant of arms is the only authority required. Although daughters and sons inherit the right to bear arms for themselves
personally, the right passes only through the male line: hence, a son transmits the arms to his children, but a daughter, while
bearing them for herself, does not transmit them to her children. A partial exception to this rule is the case of a woman who has
no brothers, or whose brothers have no issue; such a woman is called an heraldic heiress and may
transmit the arms to her children as a quartering with their father's arms, and so
consequently to their descendants.
The costs involved are quite substantial. The applicant does not buy a coat of arms: the arms themselves are freely given, but
fees must be paid to the heralds and artists involved as professionals, and to support the buildings and other running costs of
the College. Aside from the heralds' traditional nominal salaries, given above, the College of Arms is not financed by the
taxpayer.
Name changes
The College of Arms is also responsible for recording the changes of names, should the person concerned wish to publicise the
fact. In order to change one's name, one must apply for the relevant deed poll to
be entered on the College's registers and published in the London Gazette. (The deed poll
is not entered on the registers, but is still published, if the name change does not amend the surname.)
Alternatively, when a Royal Licence is granted for a transfer of arms, the change of the surname of the transferee to that of
the transferor may be permitted by the Licence itself, with no need of a deed poll.
See also
References
- Gwynn-Jones, P. Ll. (1998) The Art of Heraldry : origins, symbols, designs, London : Parkgate, ISBN
1-85585-560-7
External links
Coordinates:
51°30′43.65″N, 00°05′55.67″W
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