C1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original

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C1764_Viscount_Montaque_Coat_of_Arms_Right_Honourable_Anthony_Browne_original_01_rbmrC1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original
C1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original
C1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original

C1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original
Rare Antique Heraldic Achievement c1764. An Original Heraldic Achievement from Baronageium Genealogicum by Joseph Edmondson c1764. Right Honourable Anthony Browne Viscount Montaque. Sir Anthony Browne, KG c. 1500 – 6 May 1548 of Battle Abbey and Cowdray Park, both in Sussex, England, was a Member of Parliament and a courtier who served as Master of the Horse to King Henry VIII. He was the son and heir of Sir Anthony Browne (died 1506) “the Elder”, Standard Bearer of England and Governor of Queenborough Castle in Kent, by his wife Lucy Neville, the widow of Sir Thomas Fitzwilliam of Aldwark and a daughter of John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu. [2] The younger Anthony was therefore a younger half-brother of William Fitzwilliam, 1st Earl of Southampton. Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu, KB, PC (29 November 1528 – 19 October 1592). Was an English peer during the Tudor period. A Copper plate engraving on laid paper accurately hand coloured in water colour in accordance with the Heraldic. Codes as recorded at The College of Arms London, the official repository for coats of arms and pedigrees. The laid paper has some age tone commensurate with age. Actual Print: Width 10.75 x Height 18. Background: Joseph Edmondson (died 1786), was an English herald and genealogist whose principal. Work is the Baronagium Genealogicum or the Pedigrees of the English Peers, Deduced from the Earliest Times. Originally Compiled by Sir William Segar, and Continued to the Present Time, 5 volumes, published in London, 1764. The plates of arms are very well executed, drawn by Edmondson with some of them engraved by Francesco Bartolozzi. Many of the large quartered coats were presentation plates, contributed by the peers at their own expense. A copy of the work in the British Museum has many valuable manuscript additions by Francis Hargrave. The word achievement in Heraldry does not mean that something has been accomplished. It is in fact the name given to a completed display of a coat of arms. The achievement is firstly composed of the. Shield which, the most important part of the design, has the charge painted upon it. A Genuine antique print over 250 years old from Rare Maps and Prints.
C1764 Viscount Montaque Coat of Arms Right Honourable Anthony Browne original