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BADGES
469

no Tudor descent. Save a very tentative remark hazarded by Woodward, no explanation has as yet been suggested for the sun-burst. My own strong conviction, based on the fact that this particular badge was principally used by Henry VII., who was

Fig. 682.—Badge of the Duke of Suffolk.
Fig. 682.—Badge of the Duke of Suffolk.

Fig. 682.—Badge of the Duke of Suffolk.

always known as Henry of Windsor, is that it is nothing more than an attempt to pictorially represent the name "Windsor" by depicting "winds" of "or." The badge is also attributed to Edward III., and he, like Henry VII., made his principal residence at Windsor. Edward IV. also used the white lion of March (whence is derived the shield of Ludlow: "Azure, a lion couchant guardant, between three roses argent," Ludlow being one of the fortified towns in the Welsh Marches), and the black bull which, though often termed "of Clarence," is generally associated with the Duchy of Cornwall. Richard III., as Duke of Gloucester, used a white boar.

Fig. 683.—Badge of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk.
Fig. 683.—Badge of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk.

Fig. 683.—Badge of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk.

The Earl of Northumberland used a silver crescent; the Earl of Douglas, a red hart; the Earl of Pembroke, a golden pack-horse with collar and traces; Lord Hastings bore as badge a black bull's head erased, gorged with a coronet; Lord Stanley, a golden griffin's leg, erased; Lord Howard, a white lion charged on the shoulder with a blue crescent; Sir Richard Dunstable adopted a white cock as a badge; Sir John Savage, a silver unicorn's head erased; Sir Simon Montford, a golden lily; Sir William Gresham, a green grasshopper.

Fig. 684.—Stafford Knot.
Fig. 684.—Stafford Knot.

Fig. 684.—Stafford Knot.

Fig. 685.—Wake or Ormonde Knot.
Fig. 685.—Wake or Ormonde Knot.

Fig. 685.—Wake or Ormonde Knot.

Fig. 686.—Bourchier Knot.
Fig. 686.—Bourchier Knot.

Fig. 686.—Bourchier Knot.

Fig. 687.—Heneage Knot.
Fig. 687.—Heneage Knot.

Fig. 687.—Heneage Knot.

Two curious badges are to be seen in Figs. 682 and 683. The former is an ape's clog argent, chained or, and was used by William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk (d. 1450). Fig. 683, "a salet silver" (MS. Coll. of Arms, 2nd M. 16), is the badge of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk (d. 1524). Various families used knots of different design, of which the best known is the Stafford knot (Fig. 684). The wholesale and improper appropriation of this badge with a territorial application has unfortunately caused it to be very generally referred to as a "Staffordshire" knot, and that it was the personal badge of the Lords Stafford is too often overlooked. Other badge knots are the Wake or Ormonde knot (Fig. 685), the Bourchier knot (Fig. 686), and the Heneage knot (Fig. 687).