File:Huddleston QuarterlyOfTwelve EastHarlingChurch Norfolk.svg

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Escutcheon, Huddlestone arms quarterly of 12. Detail from monument to Sir Thomas Lovell (1540-1604) and his wife Alice Huddilston / Huddleston (1538-1602) in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, East Harling, Norfolk. Inscribed:

Here lyeth buried Sir Thomas Lovell, Knighte, sonne and heire of Sir Thomas Lovell, Knighte, and Dame Alice his wife, daughter of Sir John Huddilston, Knighte. He died the 12th daye of December 1604 in the yeare of his age 64. And she died the first daye of September 1602 in the yeare of her age 64. They had yssue 5 sonnes and 3 daughters whereof 2 sonnes and 1 daughter died in there infancie. 3 sonnes viz Sir Franncys Lovell, Knighte, Charles Lovell and William Lovell, Esquires, outlived them. And 2 daughters were maryed in their lyfe time viz Katherine first to Sir Thomas Knyvet of Buckenham Castell, Knighte; secondly to Edwarde Springe and thirdly to Edward Downes, Esquires. And Elinor to Edward Waldegrave, sonne and heire apparent to Charles Waldegrave of Stann(ingley ?), Esquire

Sir John Huddleston (1517-57), of Sawston, Cambridgeshire, was thrice a Member of Parliament for Cambridgeshire. "The Huddleston family, of Yorkshire origin, had by the 15th century made its principal seat at Millom, Cumberland; it was Sir John Huddleston’s grandfather who added a Cambridgeshire connexion by acquiring 12 manors, including two at Sawston, by marriage with a co-heiress of w:John Neville, 1st Marquess of Montagu (c.1431-1471)" (Source: HUDDLESTON, Sir John (1517-57), of Sawston, Cambs. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509-1558, ed. S.T. Bindoff, 1982[1]).

    • Quarterly of 12: (Farrer, Church Heraldry of Norfolk, Vol.1, 1889, p.43[2])
Huddleston quarterly of 12
      • 1: Gules fretty argent (Huddlestone)
      • 2: Argent, a bend between two mullets sable (Peile) (per Farrer, who states that mullet in base is missing) (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.786 "Peel of Cheshire"))
      • 3: Gules, a saltire argent a label of three points compony argent and azure (Neville, with label of Beaufort)
      • 4: Argent, three fusils conjoined in fess gules (Montagu)
      • 5: Or, an eagle displayed vert beaked and membered gules (Monthermer)
      • 6: Arms of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent (Arms of Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward I of England, and a younger half-brother of Edward II): Royal arms of King Edward I (Plantagenet) differenced by a bordure argent
      • 7: Argent, a saltire engrailed gules (Tiptoft)
      • 8: Gules, a cross engrailed argent (Inglethorp) (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.528 "Inglethorp of Norfolk")
      • 9: Argent, on a canton gules a rose or (Bradeston) (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.113 "Lord Bradeston, summoned to Parliament 1322")
      • 10: Or, a lion rampant gules (Charleton, Baron Charlton of Powys, per Francis Blomefield, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk, Volume 1, p.223[3]) (Powys) (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.820 "Princes of Powys-Wenwynwyn", Wales). In 1309 John Charlton, 1st Baron Charlton married Hawys Gadarn, heiress of the Lordship of Powys from her father the last Prince of Powys Owen de la Pole. Charlton acquired Pole Castle (today's Welshpool) on his marriage, and from 1310 to 1315 he built the basis of the present Powis Castle.
      • 11: Azure, a fess between three leopard's faces or (de la Pole) with an annulet sable for difference.
      • 12: Argent, on a fess dancetée sable three bezants (Burgh ?) (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.146 "Burgh") In the Roll of Edward III "Sir John de Burgh" bore these arms; also in Ashmole Roll (Foster, Joseph, Some feudal coats of arms from heraldic rolls 1298-1418, illustrated with 830 zinco etchings from effigies, brasses and coats of arms, 1902, p.41[4])
Date Painting 1604
Source Cropped from File:Tomb of Sir Thomas Lovell and Dame Alice, Church of St Peter and St Paul, East Harling 3.jpg by "User:Colin / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0"
Author Unknown painter

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current16:00, 13 December 2021Thumbnail for version as of 16:00, 13 December 2021744 × 893 (2.2 MB)Lobsterthermidor (talk | contribs){{Information |Description=Escutcheon, Huddlestone arms quarterly of 12. Detail from monument to Sir Thomas Lovell (1540-1604) and his wife Alice Huddilston / Huddleston (1538-1602) in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, East Harling, Norfolk. **Quarterly of 12: (Farrer, Church Heraldry of Norfolk, Vol.1, 1889, p.43[https://archive.org/details/churchheraldryof01farr/page/n123/mode/2up?view=theater]) ***1: ''Gules fretty argent'' (Huddlestone) ***2: ''Argent, a bend sable in the upper siniste...

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