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 APPIN — AQTJITAJNE. 113 APPIN. See "STEWART OF APPIN"," titular Baron, er. 1713 b$ the titular James III. APSLEY. i.e. "LORD APSLEY, BARON OF APSLEY, oo. Susses," n: 24 Jan. 1 771. See '• Bathuhst " — under Henry, 2nd Earl, who sue. in 1775. A P ULD ERCO MBE. i.e. "BARON AVORSLEY OF APULDERCOMBE in the Isle of Wight." Sec " YabBobopgh," Earl of, cr. 1837. AQUILA, see AIGLE. Ai.iiriTAINEC). 1362, July 19, EDw.utD (Plantagenet), Phince OF Wales, fte., s. and h. ap. of Ed. Ill, was by ehiirter( b ) of this date eft PRINCE OF AQUITAINE, and a* "Pmn'ce of A(jnTAiNK AND Wales was sum. to Pari. 24 Feb. (1367-8) 42 Ed. Ill ; 8 Jan. (1369-70) 44 Ed. Ill; and 6 Oct. (1372) 46 Ed. Ill ; though (in his last writ) as PniNCH of Wales, (only) on 23 Dec. (1375) 49 Ed. III. He d, v.p. S June 1370. Richard (afterwards Richard II) his s. and h. does not appear to have inherited the the dignity of Aquitaine, being styled, the only time he was sum. to Pari. 1 Dee. (1376) 50 Ed. HI, Piunce of Wales, Dcke of Coknivai.l and EaW. of Chester* See " 'WALKS," Princes of. 1389-90, March 2, John ( Plant.ioe.sjjt), DOTES OF Lancaster, Sic. ("Jo/cn of Ouunl") 4tU a, of Ed. Ill, having shortly before resigned the style of " Kino or Seeau account of them in Dr. Ormerod's " Strigulensia," p. 107. In the pedigree of Parker of Llanllowell, co. Monmouth, recorded in the Herald's Visitation of that county in 1683, Walter Parker (s. of Thomas P.) is said to have inherited Llanllowell in right of his mother " Margery, da. and h. of John Tomlyn, alias Huntley." The arms ipiarterod with those of Parker are (1) Huntley, (2) Herbert, and (3) "Arg., on n cross, Gu., 5 mullets, Or " (Qy. Ap Adam ? hut therein attributed to St. .Mark Qf Semarke ?) These quarterings somewhat favour the hypothesis of the descent of Ap Adam from the house of Herbert. C) It appears from "The Glory of Regality," by Arthur Taylor, F.S.A (London, 1820), p. 104, &c, that, among the Principal State Officers of France, who act at the the Coronation, " of the lay Peers, the Duke of Burgundy carries the Crown ; the DOKe of AQUiTArNE, on Guienne, the first banner ; the Duke of Normandy, the second," & c . ; "and here," adds Mr. Taylor, " I take occasion to notice two attendants on QTUjSngluh coronations who have been transplanted from those of France. It is usual f ur two Gentlemen of the Court to walk in the procession as Dl'KKS or I*oitsUNDY and Guienne, habited in the ancient dress of the Ducal Peers of France • • . in representation, as is stated in a book of the age of Hen. VII, ' of tin Kin ft MM Duchesses of Gycn and Normandie.' Of the first appearance of these characters iu out coronations I have not found ajJJ account, but it may be conjectured that thej were introduced after the conquests of I'M. Ill, and for the purpose of perpetuating tte clauns of our Norman and Angevine Princes." c j m ^™ patent, engraved in facsimile by James Iiaaire, was published by the Record