Roll of arms explained

A roll of arms (or armorial) is a collection of coats of arms, usually consisting of rows of painted pictures of shields, each shield accompanied by the name of the person bearing the arms.

The oldest extant armorials date to the mid-13th century, and armorial manuscripts continued to be produced throughout the early modern period.German: [[Siebmachers Wappenbuch]] of 1605 was an early instance of a printed armorial. Medieval armorials usually include a few hundred coats of arms, in the late medieval period sometimes up to some 2,000. In the early modern period, the larger armorials develop into encyclopedic projects, with the Armorial général de France (1696), commissioned by Louis XIV of France, listing more than 125,000 coats of arms. In the modern period, the tradition develops into projects of heraldic dictionaries edited in multiple volumes, such as the Dictionary of British Arms in four volumes (1926 - 2009), or J. Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch in seven volumes (1854 - 1967).

Armorials can be "occasional", relating to a specific event such as a tournament; "institutional", associated with foundations, such as that of an order of chivalry, "regional", collecting the arms of the nobility of a given region, "illustrative", in the context of a specific narrative or chronicle, or "general", with the aim of an encyclopedic collection.[1] A roll of arms arranged systematically by design, with coats featuring the same principal elements (geometrical ordinaries and charges) grouped together as a tool to aid identification, is known as an ordinary of arms (or simply as an ordinary).

Notable examples

Medieval

Scottish

English

French

Holy Roman Empire

Spanish

Early Modern

Modern

A digital armorial of the arms, flags, banners, and other heraldic devices granted by the Canadian Heraldic Authority

References

Roll identification numbers

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. A New Dictionary of Heraldry, 1987
  2. https://www.douglashistory.co.uk/history/heraldry/balliol_roll.html
  3. [#L5|Laing, D (1878)]
  4. [British Library]
  5. Rolls of Arms Henry III: The Matthew Paris Shields (–59); Glover's Roll (–58) and Walford's Roll ; Additions and Corrections to A Catalogue of English Mediaeval Rolls of Arms. Edited by Thomas Daniel Tremlett Edited by Hugh Stanford London. Rolls of Arms Henry III. Published in 1958 in series "Aspilogia" by Boydell Press
  6. British Library Harley MS 6589, f.12,12b
  7. British Library, Cotton Roll, 8
  8. Web site: Heraldic Roll ('The Dering Roll') . en, la . British Library . digitized manuscript.
  9. FitzWilliam Museum, Cambridge MS297 (15th century copy)
  10. http://www.aspilogia.com/HE-Heralds_Roll/index.html Modern illustration of the Herald's Roll shields by R. S. Nourse (aspilogia.com)
  11. College of Arms, London, MS Vincent 164 ff. 1–21b
  12. Society of Antiquaries, London, MS517 (c.15th-century copy)
  13. Society of Antiquaries, London, MS 664, vol.1, ff. 19–25
    • The Lord Marshal's Roll[13]
  14. Queen's College, Oxford, MS 158, pp. 366–402 (copy c.1640)
  15. Harley MS 6589, f.9–9b
  16. College of Arms, London, MS M.14, ff. 168–75 (copy by Sir Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms, d. 1534)
  17. British Library, Cotton MS Caligula A XVIII, ff. 23b–30b (near contemporary vellum copy)
  18. Commentary by . See also: The Roll of Caerlaverock on Wikisource; Modern illustration of shields based on Scott-Giles, C.W., The Siege of Caerlaverock, Heraldry Society, 1960;Modern illustration (2001) of shields in period style by Michael Case "Maister Iago ab Adam"
  19. College of Arms, London MS M.14, ff. 269–272 (Copy by Sir Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms, d.1534)
  20. Published in Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica, vol. 4, p. 63
  21. Greenstreet 22; Papworth N
  22. Published in Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica, vol. 4, p. 389
  23. Web site: First Calais Roll . Textmanuscripts.com . 2013-07-15.
  24. MS. Ashmole 804, Bodleian Library, Oxford
  25. Web site: Powell's Roll . 2013-07-15 . Digital Bodleian . Bodleian Library, Oxford University.
  26. Payne, Ann 'The Salisbury Roll of Arms, c. 1463', published in England in the Fifteenth Century: Proceedings of the 1986 Harlaxton Symposium, ed. by Daniel Williams (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 1987), pp. 187-98
  27. Crane, Susan, Representations of Courtship and Marriage in the Salisbury Rolls, published in The Coat of Arms: Journal of the Heraldry Society, 3rd series, volume 6, part 1, 2010, pp.1-15 https://www.academia.edu/11132727/_Representations_of_Courtship_and_Marriage_in_the_Salisbury_Rolls_The_Coat_of_Arms_Journal_of_the_Heraldry_Society_3rd_ser._6_1_Spring_2010_1-15
  28. Web site: Manuscript leaf of a copy of the Salisbury Roll . Friends of the National Libraries .
  29. Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, fonds français no 18648 fo 32 – 39
  30. Bibliothèque Municipale, Besançon, Collection Chifflet, MS 186, pp. 145–154
  31. [Bibliothèque nationale de France]
  32. BNV Fr. 5230
  33. Web site: Stemmario Trivulziano . Edizioni Orsini de Marzo: Sankt Moritz Press . 2013-07-15.