Catalogue description College of Arms Website

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Details of LC 14
Reference: LC 14
Title: College of Arms Website
Description:

This series contains dated gathered versions (or 'snapshots') of the College of Arms website. [Please note: These records may be accessed via the UK Government Web Archive].

Date: From 2000
Arrangement:

Please see information at Divisional level

Held by: The National Archives, Kew
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

College of Arms, 1484-

Physical description: archived website(s)
Access conditions: Open
Immediate source of acquisition:

Gathered from original website.

Accruals: Future website versions may be anticipated.
Administrative / biographical background:

The College of Arms is the official repository of the coats of arms and pedigrees of English, Welsh, Northern Irish and Commonwealth families and their descendants. Its records also include official copies of the records of Ulster King of Arms the originals of which remain in Dublin. The College of Arms, although a branch of the Royal household, is self-supporting.

Coats of arms have been and still are granted by Letters Patent from the senior heralds, the Kings of Arms. A right to arms can only be established by the registration in the official records of the College of Arms of a pedigree showing direct male line descent from an ancestor already appearing therein as entitled to arms, or by making application through the College of Arms for a grant of arms. Grants are made to corporations as well as to individuals.

In mediaeval times, there were heralds in the service both of the monarch and of certain great noblemen. From 1420 the Royal heralds had a common seal and acted in some ways like a corporation. In 1484 they were granted a charter of incorporation by Richard III, and given a house in Coldharbour in Upper Thames Street, London to keep their records in. When Henry VII defeated Richard and took the crown in 1485 he wrested Coldharbour from the heralds and gave it to his mother. They received the charter under which they now operate from Queen Mary and her husband Philip of Spain in 1555, together with the site of the present College of Arms on which then stood Derby Place. This building was the College of Arms until it burnt down in the Great Fire of London in 1666. The present College building dates from the 1670s.

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