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Thursday, February 28th, 1861

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2010

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Abstract

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Proceedings
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1861

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References

page note 340 * See Murray's Handbook for Southern Italy (1855), p. 99, and Napoli e sue Vicinanze, vol. i. p. 384.

page note 340 † Istoria di Napoli, ii. 539.

page 342 note * See Bridges' Northamptonshire, i. 370.

page note 344 * Collins's Peerage, ed. Brydges, iv. 194.

page note 344 † Respecting the arms &c. of the Marquess of Northampton, see Archæologia, Vol. XXXVI. p. 214.

page note 345 † Inscription in stained glass at Baddesley Clinton, Dugdale's Warwickshire, ii. 973. In Collins's Peerage, under “Arundel of Wardour,” she is stated to have been a daughter and co-heir of Humphrey Arundel, third son of Sir John Arundel, of Lanherne, Cornwall, her brothers the Bishop of Exeter and Sir Humphrey Arundel having died s. p. He adds that she married secondly Edward Stradling of St. Donat's, evidently an error. In the pedigree prefixed to the “Stradling Letters,” edited by the Rev. J. M. Traherne, P.S.A., the wife of Sir Edward Stradling (who died in 1535), is described as Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Arundel of Lanherne, and as having died in 1513. Dugdale gives under Knoll (Warwickshire, ii. 961), as in the south window of the Guild Chapel, an inscription for the souls of Nicholas Brome and Elizabeth his wife, and the following arms:—Quarterly: 1. Brome. 2. Shirley. 3. Braose. i. Four fishes hauriant; impaling quarterly, 1. Arundel; 2. Courtenay; 3. Tattershall; 4. Carminow. In the description of Lapworth Church (vol. ii. p. 791), he gives two coats in stained glass, one Arundel and Carminow quarterly, which latter he miscalls Scrope; the other the same coats quarterly impaling Brome. The impalement should probably bo reversed. The presence of the coat of Carminow shows, at any rate, that Elizabeth Arundel was descended from the marriage of John Arundel with Elizabeth (ob. 1363), d. and h. of Sir Oliver Carminow, Kt., which would apply to the Arundels of Lanherne.