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Diamond-shaped funeral hatchments first came into vogue in the early 17th century, but are rarely used today. They are objects of considerable artistic merit, besides being of great interest and important to students of heraldry, genealogy and local history. This is the first volume of this valuable and attractive series in which those hatchments still surviving in Britain are recorded for the first time.… (altro)
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Dedica
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Incipit
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Hatchments are a familiar sight to all those who visit our parish churches.
General introduction.
In 1910, the Northampton and Oakham Architectural Society published an article, The Hatchments of Northamptonshire, by Christopher Markham, F.S.A.
Introduction (Northamptonshire).
Within the boundaries of Warwickshire there are approximately one hundred and fifty-five hatchments and, if this total is not large in comparison with those of some other countries, it does include many interesting and varied examples.
Introduction (Warwickshire).
In his Heraldry of Worcestershire (1873), Grazebrook lists more than sixteen hundred armigerous families.
Introduction (Worcestershire).
Citazioni
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Perhaps for Captain William Dampier who d.s.p. 1715. (Tentative identification based on no authority other than family tradition). (In the possession of Mrs Bennett, Worcester)
Diamond-shaped funeral hatchments first came into vogue in the early 17th century, but are rarely used today. They are objects of considerable artistic merit, besides being of great interest and important to students of heraldry, genealogy and local history. This is the first volume of this valuable and attractive series in which those hatchments still surviving in Britain are recorded for the first time.