Page:A Complete Guide to Heraldry.djvu/551

Rh {| —John de Holand, Duke of Exeter, son of preceding. Arms as preceding. (From his seal.) —Henry de Holand, Duke of Exeter, son of preceding. Arms as preceding. (From his seal, 1455.) —Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, second son of Edward I.: Arms of England, a label of three points argent. —Thomas de Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk (d. 1400). (From a drawing of his seal, MS. Cott., Julius, C. vii., f. 166.) Arms, see page 465. —John de Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk (d. 1432): Arms as Fig. 711. (From his Garter plate.) —John de Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk (d. 1461): Arms as Fig. 711. (From his seal.) —Edward the Black Prince: Quarterly, 1 and 4 France (ancient); 2 and 3 England, and a label of three points argent. (From his tomb.) —Richard, Prince of Wales (afterwards Richard II.), son of preceding: Arms as preceding. (From his seal, 1377.) —Edmund of Langley, Duke of York, fifth son of King Edward III.: France (ancient) and England quarterly, a label of three points argent, each point charged with three torteaux. (From his seal, 1391.) His son, Edward, Earl of Cambridge, until he succeeded his father, i.e. before 1462, bore the same with an additional difference of a bordure of Spain (Fig. 316). Vincent attributes to him, however, a label as Fig. 719, which possibly he bore after his father's death.
 * }