Part 5
[_Paraphrasis in Psalmos Davidis._ Salmurii, 1662.]
The Royal name and title abbreviated. "CAR. REX" (Carolus Rex) ensigned with a Royal Crown, and with the motto "DIEV ET MON DROIT."
[SANDERSON. _Complete History of the Life and Raigne of King Charles._ London, 1658.]
Crowned initials "C.C." adossés, within palm branches, commonly found on books bound for Charles II. by Samuel Mearne, the Royal Bookbinder.
[CRANZIUS. _Vandaliae and Saxoniae Alberti Cranzii Continuatio._ Wittebergae, 1586.]
Charles II. (born May 1630, died 6th February 1685) was the elder son of Charles I. In 1660 Charles ascended the throne of England, although his accession is sometimes counted from the date of the death of Charles I., 30th January 1649. In Scotland it is always so dated.
Samuel Mearne was appointed Royal Bookbinder to Charles II. in June 1660, and he bound the greater number of the King's books in a beautiful red morocco. On most of these bindings the King's initials within a palm spray appear, and sometimes the edges of the leaves of the books have designs painted upon them, only showing when the book is open. Charles II. also used several of the book-stamps that had been made for Charles I.
Mearne was one of the greatest bookbinders of any time, and apart from the splendid work he did for Charles II., he executed numbers of other bindings, many of which are inlaid and have the leather stained and painted. He invented what is known as the "Cottage" design, and his style and detail is often copied even at the present time.
CHARLOTTE OF MECKLENBURG, QUEEN CONSORT OF GEORGE III.
_Arms._--On two separate shields, side by side.
Dexter shield: Quarterly.
1st and 4th, France and England, quarterly.
2nd, Scotland.
3rd, Ireland. All as used by James I. (q.v.).
Sinister shield, the arms of Charlotte of Mecklenburg. Quartered.
1. Arg., a bull's head in pale sa. (crowned gu.), armed and ringed arg. _Mecklenburg._
2. Az., a griffin segreant or. _Wenden._
3. Vert, in chief az., a griffin segreant or. Principality of _Schwerin_.
4. Gu., a cross pattée arg. _Ratzeburg._
5. Gu., an arm armoured ppr., holding a ring or, issuing from a cloud. County of _Schwerin_.
6. Or, a bull's head sa., in bend sinister (crowned gu.), armed and ringed arg. _Rostock._
Over all, on an escutcheon of pretence, the arms of _Stargard_, per fess, gu. and or.
The two shields are ensigned with the Royal Crown of England.
This stamp is probably of foreign design, as it will be noted that the Royal coat-of-arms of England is as that used by Queen Anne before 1706, and not that used by George III., for whom it is intended.
[CEFFALONIE. _Monument élevé à la gloire de Pierre-le-Grand._ Paris, 1777.]
Charlotte Sophia (born 16th May 1744, died 17th November 1818) was the youngest daughter of Charles Louis, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
In 1761 the Princess married George III., King of England, and her married life was uneventful. As Queen she devoted herself entirely to domestic matters.
CHETWYND, WALTER
_Arms._--Quartered.
1. Az., a chevron between 3 mullets or. _Chetwynd._
2. Arg., 2 chevrons az. _Bagot._
3. Quarterly, arg. and az., on a bend gu., 3 fleurs-de-lys or. _Garshall._
4. Arg., 3 bars sa. _Raymond._
5. Gu., 10 billets or. _Salter._
6. Sa., 3 fishes naiant in pale or. _Verney._
7. Gu., a lion rampant erm. _Meriford._
8. Gu., 5 piles issuing from the sinister. _Henderson_ (?).
9. Sa., 3 pheons arg. _Egerton_ of Shropshire.
10. Paly wavy of 6, arg. and gu. _Gurnon._
11. Arg., a chevron between 3 oak leaves vert. _Haslerigg._
12. Az., a lion rampant or. _Hetherfield._
[DEMOCRITUS. _Anatomy of Melancholy._ Oxford, 1628.]
Walter Chetwynd (born circ. 1620, died 1693) was a son of Walter Chetwynd of Ingestre, in Staffordshire. He was Member of Parliament for Stafford, and for Staffordshire, and Sheriff in 1680.
Chetwynd was a Fellow of the Royal Society, and an Antiquary, particularly as concerned the County of Staffordshire. He was a friend of Dr. Robert Plot, who wrote _The Natural History of Staffordshire_ in 1686, and assisted him in many ways. His collections of drawings and manuscripts were nearly all lost in a fire at Ingestre in 1882.
CHITTING, HENRY
_Arms._--Quarterly; arg. and az., on a bend gu., 3 quatrefoils of the first. _Chitting._
_Crest._--A talbot's head erased arg.
_Helmet._--That of an Esquire.
_Motto._--FIDELITATE ET SAGACITATE.
_Initials._--H. C. (Henry Chitting).
[_Collection of rolls of the reigns of many kings._ Stowe, 601.]
Henry Chitting (born 1580 (?), died 1638) was a herald and genealogist. In 1618 he became Chester Herald, and conducted several of the heraldic visitations of English counties. Chitting wrote a valuable work on the _Extinct Baronage of England_, and others of less general importance.
CHOLMONDELEY, GEORGE, THIRD EARL CHOLMONDELEY
_Arms._--Gu., in chief 2 helmets in profile arg., and in base a garb or. _Cholmondeley._
_Coronet._--That of an Earl.
[FAERNI. _Fabulae._ London, 1743.]
George Cholmondeley (born 2nd January 1702, died 10th June 1770) was the son of George, second Earl Cholmondeley, and succeeded his father in the Earldom in 1733. He was Member of Parliament for East Looe, and afterwards for Windsor, and Governor of Chester Castle. In 1725 Viscount Malpas, the courtesy title used by George Cholmondeley, was made a Knight of the Order of the Bath, and he subsequently held the offices of Master of the Robes, Master of the Horse, and was Lord Lieutenant of North Wales and of Montgomery. In 1736 he became Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and in 1743 Lord Privy Seal. He held the rank of Lieutenant-General in the army.
CHURCHILL, GEORGE SPENCER, FIFTH DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH
_Arms._--Impaled.
Dexter: Quarterly.
1st and 4th sa., a lion rampant arg., on a canton of the last a cross gu. _Churchill._
2nd and 3rd quarterly, arg. and gu., in the second and third quarters a fret or; over all on a bend sa., 3 escallops of the first. _Spencer._
Sinister: Or, a bend sa.; over all a lion rampant gu. _Abernethy_ (?).
_Coronet._--That of a Duke.
_Motto._--FIEL PERO DESDICHADO.
The whole arms are borne upon an Imperial eagle, the heraldic indication of the rank of a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, a dignity given to John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough. The eagle is ensigned with a closed crown, the circlet of which bears the strawberry leaves and pearls of an English Marquis.
[FERRAROTTO. _Della preeminenza dell' officio di Stradicò della nobile città di Messina._ Venetiis, 1593.]
_Variety._--Used as Marquis of Blandford before 1817. _Spencer._
_Arms._--Quarterly.
1st and 4th quarterly, arg. and gu., on the second and third quarters a fret or; over all on a bend sa., 3 escallops of the first. _Spencer._
2nd and 3rd sa., a lion rampant arg., on a canton of the last a cross gu. _Churchill._
_Coronet._--That of a Marquis.
_Motto._--DIEU DEFEND LE DROIT.
The whole arms are borne upon an Imperial eagle as before, but in this case the whole is ensigned with a Royal orb between the two horns of a crescent arg., issuing from a Marquis's coronet.
[COLONNA. _Discours du Songe de Poliphile._ Paris, 1654.]
George Spencer, afterwards Spencer-Churchill (born 6th March 1766, died 5th March 1840), was the son of George, fourth Duke of Marlborough. He was educated at Eton and Oxford, and served as Member of Parliament for Oxfordshire and for Tregony, and was a Lord of the Treasury. He married Susan, daughter of the Earl of Galloway.
In 1817, on the death of his father, he succeeded to the Dukedom of Marlborough, and in the same year he assumed by Royal Licence the surname and arms of Churchill in addition to his patronymic of Spencer. This was done in memory of the first Duke of Marlborough, who left no male heir, but whose second daughter Anne had married Charles Spencer, third Earl of Sunderland, and their son Charles, fifth Earl of Sunderland, succeeded his aunt Henrietta, _suo jure_ Duchess of Marlborough, in the Dukedom in 1733. While Marquis of Blandford the Duke collected a magnificent library at his house, White Knights, near Reading, but extravagance in living compelled him to part with it by auction in 1819.
COCHRANE, JOHN, FOURTH EARL OF DUNDONALD
_Arms._--Impaled.
Dexter: Arg., a chevron gu., between 3 boars' heads erased arg. _Cochrane._
Sinister: Az., 3 mullets arg., within a double tressure flory counterflory or. _Murray._
_Coronet._--That of an Earl.
[SETTLE. _Virtute Sacellum._ London, 1720.]
John Cochrane (born 1660 (?), died 5th June 1720) was the second son of John, second Earl of Dundonald, and succeeded his brother William in the Earldom in 1705. In 1706 he married Anne, daughter of Charles Murray, Earl of Dunmore. Lord Dundonald was a Representative Peer of Scotland and Colonel of the 4th Regiment of Horse Guards.
COCKS, JOHN, BARON SOMERS
_Crest._--On a mount vert, a stag lodged reguardant arg., attired sa., and gorged with a chaplet of laurel leaves vert. _Cocks._
_Coronet._--That of a Baron.
[_Common Prayer._ London, 1669.]
John Somers Cocks (born 6th May 1760, died circ. 1841) was the son of Charles Cocks, Baron Somers, and was educated at Oxford. He was successively Member of Parliament for West Looe, for Grampound, and for Reigate. In 1806 he succeeded to his father's barony, and in 1821 was created Earl Somers. Lord Somers married as his second wife, Jane, daughter of his Uncle James, and widow of the Rev. George Waddington.
COKE, THOMAS, FIRST EARL OF LEICESTER
_Arms._--Impaled.
Dexter: Per pale, gu. and az., 3 eagles displayed or. _Coke._
Sinister: Sa., an eagle displayed erm. _Tufton._
_Crest._--On a chapeau az., turned up erm., an ostrich arg., holding in its mouth a horseshoe or.
_Helmet._--That of an Esquire.
_Motto._--PRUDENS QUI PATIENS.
[MORGUES. _Diverses Pièces pour la Defense de la Royne Mère du Roy Louys XIII._ Paris, 1637.]
Thomas Coke (born circ. 1699, died 20th April 1759) was the eldest son of Edward Coke of Holkham in Norfolk. In 1725 Mr. Coke was made a Knight of the Order of the Bath, and in 1728 he was created Baron Lovel. In 1733 Lord Lovel was Postmaster-General, and in 1744 he was given a step in the Peerage and created Viscount Coke and Earl of Leicester. In 1718 Lord Leicester married Lady Mary Tufton, daughter of Thomas, Earl of Thanet. He left no heir, but the Earldom of Leicester was revived in 1837 in the person of one of his collateral descendants.
THE COMMONWEALTH OF ENGLAND
_Arms._--On two separate shields side by side.
Dexter shield: Arg., a cross gu., being the arms of St. George of England.
Sinister shield: Az., a harp or, stringed arg., being the Harp of Ireland.
_Motto._--GOD WITH VS.
_Legend._--THE COMMONWEALTH OF ENGLAND.
[_Proclamations of the Lord Protector_, G. 5194.]
The Commonwealth was established in England in 1649, and Oliver Cromwell made Protector. In 1649 Charles, Prince of Wales, was crowned King at Scone, and in the next year at Carlisle. In 1658, on the death of Cromwell, the people of England felt that the Commonwealth had lasted long enough, and in 1660 Charles II. returned among general rejoicings. From a bookbinding point of view the period of the Commonwealth was one of little interest, but on the Restoration, Samuel Mearne raised the standard of English bookbinding to a very high level.
COOTE, CHARLES
_Arms._--Arg., a chevron between 3 coots sa. _Coote._
_Crest._--A coot ppr.
_Motto._--VINCIT VERITAS.
[BOULAINVILLIERS. _Parliaments of France._ London, 1739.]
Charles Coote (born circ. 1761, died 19th November 1835) was the son of a London bookseller, John Coote, and was educated at St. Paul's School and at Oxford, where he distinguished himself by his diligence and literary tastes. He took his D.C.L. degree in 1789. Dr. Coote wrote several historical works of much importance, and in 1789 he was admitted to the College of Advocates, but he never appears to have taken much to law. His son H. C. Coote was an author of much note and a high authority on the subject of the Romans in Britain.
COTTON, SIR ROBERT, BART.
_Arms._--Quartered.
1. Az., an eagle displayed arg. _Cotton._
2. Sa., a fess dancetté between 3 mullets arg. _Wesenham._
3. Or, a saltire gu., a chief of the first. _Bruce._
4. Three piles gu., meeting in point. _Wishart_; over all on an escutcheon or, a lion rampant sa., within a double tressure flory counterflory of the second. _Buchanan._
5. Or, a lion rampant sa., a chief gu. _Beauchamp_ (?).
6. Az., a cross flory between 4 martlets or. _King Edward the Confessor._
[_Breviary of the Diocese of Salisbury._ Parisiis, 1499.]
_Variety_, with four quarterings only.
[PAPEBURG. _Comment._ Basileae, 1551.]
[Sir W. Worsley, Hovingham Hall, York.]
Robert Bruce Cotton (born 22nd January 1570, died 6th May 1631) was the eldest son of Thomas Cotton of Connington, Huntingdon. At an early age he began to collect manuscripts, especially English ones, and the dissolution of the monasteries in the earlier half of the sixteenth century afforded him excellent opportunity of acquiring invaluable examples. So valuable was Cotton's collections, much of it containing official documents, that twice it was sequestrated by the Government; some of it, however, was restored to him. He was made a Baronet in 1611, having previously received the honour of Knighthood. The part of the collection of manuscripts which had been retained by the Government of the day was eventually restored to his son Sir Thomas Cotton.
A grandson of Sir Robert, Sir John Cotton, desired to present the collection to the Nation, together with Cotton House, with various conditions as to name and safe custody, and after tedious negotiations the collection became National property and was deposited in Essex House, Strand; in 1730 it was moved to Ashburnham House, in Little Dean's Yard, Westminster, then the property of the Government, where also the old Royal manuscripts were kept. In 1731 a fire occurred at Ashburnham House, and a large number of manuscripts were burnt and many others badly injured. The remainder were then stored in a dormitory at Westminster School, and here they remained until they were transferred to the British Museum in 1757.
The Cottonian collection of manuscripts is now kept in the Manuscript Department at the British Museum; but there are numbers of printed books as well that are widely distributed. A member of the Cotton Family is always a Family Trustee of the British Museum. Sir Robert Cotton wrote a large number of tracts, mainly political. The Cottonian MSS. are curiously arranged under the names of the Roman Emperors.
COVENTRY, WILLIAM, FIFTH EARL OF COVENTRY
_Arms._--Sa., a fess erm., between 3 crescents sa.
_Crest._--A garb or, lying fesswise, thereon a cock gu., comb, wattles, and legs of the first.
_Coronet._--That of an Earl.
_Helmet._--That of a Peer.
[SETTLE. _Honori Sacellum._ London, 1712.]
William Coventry (born c. 1688, died 18th March 1750) was the son of Walter Coventry of London, the lineal representative of Walter Coventry, brother of the first Earl of Coventry, in which line, by special limitation, the Earldom was allowed to rest. Mr. Coventry was Member of Parliament for Bridport, and succeeded to the Earldom of Coventry in 1719. He was Lord Lieutenant and Custos Rotulorum of the county of Worcester, a Member of the Privy Council, and Clerk Comptroller of the Green Cloth.
COVERT, WILLIAM
_Arms._--Quartered.
1. Gu., a fess ermine between 3 martlets or. _Covert._
2. Erm., 2 bars and a canton gu. _Boyes._
3. Gu., a fess between 3 lions' heads couped or. _St. Clair._
4. Arg., a chevron between 3 garbs gu. _Sheffield._
5. Or, 2 crescents, 1 and 1, gu., a canton erm. _Symonds._
6. Lozengy, arg. and gu., a fess sa. _Rockly._
7. Arg., a cross sa., with 2 crosses crosslet fitchée of the last in the upper cantons. _Balderstone._
8. Arg., on a chief gu., 3 lions rampant arg. _Yonge._
9. Or, a cross gu. _Bourke._
10. Arg., 5 fusils in bend, gu. _Bradeston._
11. Arg., on a chief gu., 3 crosses pattée fitchée of the first. _Dyall._
12. Arg., 3 garbs gu. _Comyn._
13. Lozengy, arg. and sa., each lozenge sa., charged with a martlet or. _Croft_ (?).
[BABINGTON'S _Works_. London, 1615.]
William Covert of Kent belonged to an old family, members of which were settled in Kent, Surrey, and Sussex since the sixteenth century.
John Covert, a member of the same family, had a command at the Siege of Boulogne in 1558.
COWPER, WILLIAM, FIRST EARL COWPER
_Arms._--Arg., 3 martlets gu., 2 and 1, on a chief engrailed of the last, as many annulets or. _Cowper._
_Note._--The annulets are wrongly shown on this stamp.
[SETTLE. _Fears and Dangers._ London, 1706.]
William Cowper (born c. 1655, died 10th October 1723) was the son of Sir William Cowper, Bart., M.P. for Hertford, and succeeded to his father's Baronetcy in 1706. He was educated at St. Albans, and entered the Middle Temple in 1681, and became a great lawyer and politician. In 1706 he was made Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and created Baron Cowper of Wingham. In 1707 he was Lord High Chancellor, and in 1718 was created Earl Cowper. Lord Cowper was a Fellow of the Royal Society, a Governor of the Charterhouse, and Lord Lieutenant of Hertfordshire.
CRACHERODE, CLAYTON MORDAUNT
_Arms._--Or, a saltire erm., between 4 lions' heads erased sa. _Cracherode._
_Crest._--A demi boar saliant reguardant or, wounded in the shoulder with an arrow ppr., which he holds in his mouth.
_Note._--Probably designed and the stamp cut by Roger Payne.
[SUETONIUS. _Opera._ Leovardiae, 1715.]
Clayton Mordaunt Cracherode (born 23rd June 1730, died 5th April 1799) was a son of an officer of Marines, Colonel Mordaunt Cracherode.
Clayton Cracherode was educated at Westminster and Christchurch, Oxford, and was a Fellow of the Royal Society, and of the Society of Antiquaries, and a Trustee of the British Museum. He was ordained shortly after leaving Oxford. On the death of his father, Mr. Cracherode became a rich man, and spent his fortune freely in collecting choice books, bindings, drawings, prints, coins, and gems, always getting the finest examples procurable.
Mr. Cracherode was an eccentric and shy recluse; he hardly ever left London, and his life is said to have been embittered by the fact that he was liable to act as King's Cup-bearer at a coronation, his manor at Great Wymondley being held on that Tenure. The collections made by Mr. Cracherode were all bequeathed to the British Museum except two books, a Bible left to the Bishop of Durham, and a Homer to Cyril Jackson, Dean of Christchurch, but both of these eventually were given to the Museum Library. Several of Mr. Cracherode's books were bound for him by Roger Payne, one of the greatest English bookbinders.
DERING, SIR EDWARD, BARONET
_Arms._--Or, a saltire sa. _Dering._
_Crest._--Out of an heraldic coronet a plume of 9 ostrich feathers, 4 and 5, arg.
_Legend._--EDOARDVS DERING MILES ET BARONETTVS.
[_The Catholike Moderator._ London, 1623.]
Edward Dering (born 28th January 1598, died 22nd June 1644) was the son of Sir Anthony Dering of Surrenden. He was educated at Cambridge, and soon became a collector and lover of antiquities.
In 1619 Dering received the honour of Knighthood, and in 1627 became a Baronet. He represented Kent in the House of Commons, and interested himself much in religious matters. He eventually got into trouble with Parliament about some of his writings, and was imprisoned for a time in the Tower. He raised a regiment for the King at the commencement of the Civil War, and in consequence he suffered sequestration of his estates. He does not appear to have succeeded well as a soldier. Dering never recovered from the troubles incident upon his advocacy of the Royalist cause, and he died in comparative poverty. He has left several works and pamphlets, chiefly political or theological.
D'EWES, SIR SYMONDS, BARONET
_Arms._--Or, 3 quatrefoils pierced gu. _D'Ewes._
_Crest._--A wolf's head erased or, about the neck a collar vairé.
[D'EWES. _Journals of Parliaments temp. Eliz._ Harl. MS. 73.]
Symonds D'Ewes (born 18th December 1602, died 8th April 1650) was the son of Paul D'Ewes of Milden in Suffolk. He went to Cambridge, and was called to the Bar in 1623. His tastes were always of a literary and antiquarian character, and he was a friend of Sir Robert Cotton. In 1626 he received the honour of Knighthood, and on his father's death in 1631 he inherited considerable property.
D'Ewes was High Sheriff of Suffolk and Member of Parliament for Sudbury, and in 1641 he became a Baronet. He wrote many valuable historical and antiquarian works; his "Diaries" are now in the British Museum, as are several others of his manuscripts, forming part of the Harleian Collection.
DIGBY, SIR KENELM, KNIGHT
_Arms._--Quarterly.
1. Az., a fleur-de-lys arg. _Digby._
2. Arg., a chevron between 3 crosses crosslet fitchée. _Davenport._
3. Erm., on a bend sa., 3 goats' heads erased arg., armed or. _Mulsho._
4. Gu., semé of crosses crosslet arg., 3 leopards' heads jessant-de-lys, arg. _Neville._
On an escutcheon of pretence, the arms of Venetia Stanley.
Quarterly.
1st and 4th grand quarters arg., on a bend az., 3 bucks' heads cabossed or, a crescent for difference. _Stanley._
2nd grand quarter, quarterly.
1st and 4th or, a lion rampant az. _The Duke of Brabant._
2nd and 3rd gu., 3 lucies hauriant arg. _Lucy._
3rd grand quarter az., 5 fusils conjoined in fess or. _Percy._
_Crest._--An ostrich arg., with a horseshoe in his mouth ppr.
_Helmet._--That of an Esquire.
[ARISTOTLE. _Opera._ Lut. Parisiorum, 1619.]
_Variety._--Impaled.
Dexter: Quarterly.
1st and 4th, _Digby._ } } _Sir Kenelm Digby._ 2nd and 3rd, _Mulsho._ }
Sinister: Quarterly.
1st and 4th, _Stanley._ } 2nd and 3rd, _The Duke_ } _Venetia Stanley._ _of Brabant._ }
[BOCCALINI. _Delli Avvisi di Parnaso._ Venetia, 1619.]
_Variety._--Within a vesica.
Quarterly.
1. _Digby._ 3. _Mulsho._ } } _Sir Kenelm Digby._ 2. _Davenport._ 4. _Neville._ }
On an escutcheon of pretence.
Quarterly.
1. _Stanley._ 3. _Lucy._ } 2. _The Duke of_ 4. _Percy._ } _Venetia Stanley._ _Brabant._ }
_Legend._--INSIGNIA KENELMI DIGBY EQVITIS AVRATI.
[PLATO. _Opera._ Paris, 1578.]