Albany Herald
This article is about a Scottish officer of arms. For the Georgia newspaper, see The Albany Herald.
The heraldic badge of Albany Herald of Arms | |
Heraldic tradition | Gallo-British |
---|---|
Jurisdiction | Scotland |
Governing body | Court of the Lord Lyon |
Albany Herald of Arms is a Scottish herald of arms of the Court of the Lord Lyon.
The office was first mentioned in a diplomatic mission from Scotland to England in 1401. The office was probably instituted on the creation of Robert Stewart, son of King Robert II, as Duke of Albany, on 28 April 1398. Albany is an old name for the part of Scotland north of the River Forth, and is cognate with "Alba", the Scottish Gaelic for Scotland.
The badge of office is A saltire Argent enfiled of a coronet of four fleurs-de-lys (one and two halves visible) Or ensigned of the Crown of Scotland Proper.[1]
The office is currently vacant.
Office bearers
- In 1569: Alexander Oliphant[2]
- In 1588: Alexander Oliphant
- In 1604: Thomas Oliphant
- 1900s: Robert Spence Livingstone
- 1911: William Ray Macdonald
- 1923 - 1926: Sir George Sitwell Campbell-Swinton
- 1927 - 1935: Sir Thomas Wolseley Haig
- 1935 - 1945: Thomas Innes of Learney
- 1953 - 1961: Charles Ian Fraser
- 1961 - 1985: Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk
- 1985 - 2011: John Alexander Spens
See also
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/21/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.