The royal arms should be the same design as the royal standard.
Longjumping_Care989 on
Hold on:
1) The territories in modern France were never part of the Kingdom of England. This misunderstands the position in the feudal system (for want of a better word). These were the parts of the Kingdom of France which regognised the Personal Union with England or in which the King of England was able to enforce that claim to be the King of France. At a more granular level, those are the Duchy of Normandy and the Pale of Calais.
2) The French territories miss the Duchy of Gascony, whcih remained another territory of the English King in 1444.
3) Wales not an English territory until 1542. It was the Principality of Wales and a collection of Marcher Lordships.
4) The Pale of Dublin was a part of the Lordship of Ireland, and not a part of the Kingdom of England. It also misses a large collection of Anglo-Irish Earldoms which were largely subordinate to the Kingdom of England in the 1440s
Curiously I’m pretty sure the Isle of Man *was* a territory of the Kingdom of England in 1444 though not today.
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
3 Kommentare
Was it ever called queendom?
The royal arms should be the same design as the royal standard.
Hold on:
1) The territories in modern France were never part of the Kingdom of England. This misunderstands the position in the feudal system (for want of a better word). These were the parts of the Kingdom of France which regognised the Personal Union with England or in which the King of England was able to enforce that claim to be the King of France. At a more granular level, those are the Duchy of Normandy and the Pale of Calais.
2) The French territories miss the Duchy of Gascony, whcih remained another territory of the English King in 1444.
3) Wales not an English territory until 1542. It was the Principality of Wales and a collection of Marcher Lordships.
4) The Pale of Dublin was a part of the Lordship of Ireland, and not a part of the Kingdom of England. It also misses a large collection of Anglo-Irish Earldoms which were largely subordinate to the Kingdom of England in the 1440s
Curiously I’m pretty sure the Isle of Man *was* a territory of the Kingdom of England in 1444 though not today.