Page:Devon and Cornwall Queries Vol 9 1917.djvu/116

 88 Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries. No. 14 (a). LiPPiNcoTT : Party per fess emhatthd gu. and sa. ; in base a " leopard-cat " passant gardant arg. Carew blazons the coat of Lippincott of Wibbery ptye p. /esse embattled g. and sa. three leopard cattes passt ar., but Holland blazons it Per fesse gtil. and sab. in chief two plates ; in base a catt pass, gardant. But in this shield the charges in chief ..(if any) have disappeared. This coat was brought in by the second wife of Humphrey Prouz, of Chagford (Mar. Licence 3 Aug., 1620, Exeter). Honor,* dau. of John Lippincott, of Wilberry, or Wibbery, in Alverdiscott, and widow of Richard Coplestone, of Woodland. She was buried 9 Apr., 164 1, at Chagford. No. 14 {b). Gogh, or Gough : Sa. a chev. between three mermaids, hair, glass, case and comb arg. Carew says, betiveen three mairemaydes arg. heyre glasse and case-combe or. Holland adds, " quartered by Lippincott." This coat was brought in by the marriage of Honor's great-grandfather, Philip Lippincott (ob, i June, 1567) to Alice, the dau. and co-h. of Richard Gough, of Kilhampton, or Kirkham, in Cornwall; but, instead of preceding, it should have succeeded 14 c. No. 14 (c). Lapflode, Lapford, or Laplode : Arg. a chevron bet. three goats' heads conped gu., horns or, as blazoned in the Armory of the Western Counties. This coat was brought in by the marriage of the above Philip Lippincott's father John (son of John and his wife, dau. of Wykes), to Jane, dau. of John Lapflode, Lapford, or Lapfllode, of Sid- bury, CO. Devon. No. 14 (d). GoFF, Gogh, Goove, Gough, Gove : Arg. a cross fusilly between four eagles displayed sa. (see Risdon). Brought in by the marriage of Honor's father, John Lippincott to Barbara, dau. of Digory Grenville f of Penhele, in Corn- wall, by Philippa his first wife, J dau. and heir of Goff (etc.), error in his Lippincott Ped. All the above particulars concerning Honor are confirmed by two marriage settlements possessed by the late Rev. T. W. Whale and copied for me by Dr. Prowse. t Son of Sir Roger Grenville, called ' the Great Housekeeper,' for his liberality. X In Preb. R. Grenville's Memoirs^ etc.. there appears to be an erroneous interchange of names between the children by the first wife Philippa, and those by the second wife Mary, dau. of Nicholas Cavell, of Cornwall, and widow of John Restorick.
 * Vivian, in his Prouz Ped., calls her dau. of Bellew, but rectifies the