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3 - Ancient Precedent or Tudor Fiction? Garter King of Arms and the Pronouncements of Thomas, Duke of Clarence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2017

Adrian Ailes
Affiliation:
principal records specialist in early modern records at The National Archives (UK).
Michael Jones
Affiliation:
Emeritus Professor of Medieval French History, University of Nottingham
Katie Stevenson
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in Late Mediaeval History, University of St Andrews
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Summary

IN 1530 GARTER KING OF ARMS AND CLARENCEUX KING OF ARMS, the two most senior heralds in England and Wales, were embroiled in a bitter controversy. The dispute had been sparked off by a commission granted by Henry VIII (1509–47) to Thomas Benolt, Clarenceux King of Arms (from 1511 to 1534), allowing him to go on visitation in his southern province (England south of the Tees) and forbidding interference in this task by any other herald. The purpose of such a visit was to register the arms and pedigrees of the nobility and gentry and, if necessary, reform heraldic abuses and grant new arms. Sir Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms (from 1505 to 1534), was indignant, believing that he too should be allowed to go on visitation and grant arms to whomsoever he pleased. As Garter King of Arms ‘of the English’ he believed his heraldic jurisdiction covered the whole country; technically he did not have a specific geographical province. To substantiate his arguments, Garter King of Arms constantly referred to documents that he claimed dated to the reign of Henry V (1413–22). In particular he quoted from several pronouncements reputedly issued between 1417 and 1421 by no less a person than Thomas, duke of Clarence and brother of the victor of Agincourt. But to what extent were these documents genuine and, if they were not, who did produce them and how old were they? Did they, in fact, owe more to Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms, than they did to Thomas, duke of Clarence?

Henry V's reign was clearly influential in the development of heralds and heraldry in England. This may have been prompted in part by the establishment of the French royal heralds in 1407 as a corporate body with their own home in Paris. On 22 April 1415, just before indentures of military service were entered into for his Agincourt campaign, Henry issued the earliest known statutes of the Order of the Garter. Some time between 22 May and 3 September 1417 he appointed William Bruges as the first Garter King of Arms. This may have taken place before late July when Henry, and very probably Bruges, set sail for his second invasion of France.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2009

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