File:StainedGlass 1562 WalsinghamImpalingDenny MereworthChurch Kent.png

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English: Mereworth Church, Kent, detail from East Window. Arms of Walsingham (quarterly of four) impaling Denny (quarterly of four), symbolising the marriage of William Walsingham (d.1534), of Scadbury Hall[5] in the parish of Chislehurst in Kent, and his wife Joyce Denny, a daughter of the courtier Sir Edmund Denny of Cheshunt in Hertfordshire, and a sister of the courtier Sir Anthony Denny, the principal Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to King Henry VIII. Parents of Sir w:Francis Walsingham(c. 1532 – 6 April 1590) principal secretary to Queen Elizabeth I of England from 20 December 1573 until his death and popularly remembered as her "spymaster". (Source: C. R. Councer, Heraldic Painted Glass in the Church of St. Lawrence, Mereworth, Archaeologia Cantiana, Vol.77, 1962, pp.48-62, esp. p.50 et seq[1]) Arms

Baron (dexter): quarterly of four

  • 1&4: Gules bezantée, a cross couped chequy argent and azure (Walsinghham of Scadbury Hall, Chislehurst, Kent);
  • 2: Sable, on a bend argent a bendlet wavy of the first in sinister chief a cross-crosslet fitchée of the second (Writtle, for Eleanor Writtle, wife of James Walsingham (1462-1540) of Scadbury, Sheriff of Kent in 1497, and daughter and heiress of Walter Writtle of Bobbingworth, Essex)
  • 3: Ermines, on a chief indented argent an annulet between two trefoils slipped sable (Bamme, for Margaret Bamme, wife of w:Thomas Walsingham (died 1457) of Scadbury, MP, who purchased Scadbury in 1424, and daughter and heiress of Henry Bamme of the City of London, a member of the Worshipful Company of Vintners).

Impaling femme (sinister):

  • 1&4: Gules, a saltire argent between twelve crosses pattee or (Denny)
  • 2:
  • 3: Azure, three trouts fretted in triangle argent, in chief a mullet of the second (Troutbeck of Dunham)
Date Stained glass 1562; photo 2014
Source Cropped from File:HeraldicEastWindow StLawrence'sChurch Mereworth Kent.jpg photo by J.Hannan-Briggs by
Author Photo by J.Hannan-Briggs

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current14:46, 3 May 2020Thumbnail for version as of 14:46, 3 May 2020637 × 664 (1.05 MB)Lobsterthermidor{{Information |description ={{en|1=Mereworth Church, Kent, detail from East Window. Arms of Walsingham (quarterly of four) impaling Denny (quarterly of four), symbolising the marriage of William Walsingham (d.1534), of Scadbury Hall[5] in the parish of Chislehurst in Kent, and his wife Joyce Denny, a daughter of the courtier Sir Edmund Denny of Cheshunt in Hertfordshire, and a sister of the courtier Sir Anthony Denny, the principal Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to King Henry VIII. Parents...

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