- Thomas Hawley
Thomas Hawley (died
22 August 1557 ) was a long-servingofficer of arms at theCollege of Arms inLondon . He began his career of royal service as a groom porter to Queen Margaret ofScotland from her marriage in 1503 until 1508. Although he may have been madeRose Blanche Pursuivant in the reign ofKing Henry VII , his first permanent heraldic appointment came in 1509.Heraldic career
King Henry VIII appointed Hawley to be Rouge Croix Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary by
letters patent dated26 August 1509 . It was in this capacity that he journeyed with the Earl of Surrey on the campaign of 1513 againstKing James IV of Scotland . Hawley was captured and detained as a prisoner before theBattle of Flodden , but released before the fighting actually started. On1 November 1514 he was createdCarlisle Herald in recognition of his diplomatic services in Scotland. The king also granted him an annuity of 20 marks.As Carlisle, Hawley also performed the ceremonial and other duties of an officer of arms. In 1530 he was appointed the deputy to
Thomas Benolt ,Clarenceux King of Arms . In this capacity, he undertook aheraldic visitation of London churches on Benolt's behalf. He was charged "to reforme all false armorye & Armes devysed without auctoritie" (Wagner, Heralds and Heraldry, 9). His record of the occasion is the earliest existing account of a heraldic visitation. After several more diplomatic trips to Scotland, Hawley was madeNorroy King of Arms by patent dated15 June 1534 . Hawley continued a long-running dispute withGarter Principal King of Arms over the privileges of their offices. On19 May 1536 Hawley was appointed Clarenceux King of Arms. Visitation commissions were issued to Hawley in 1541, 1552, and 1555, but it is not certain if these were acted on.Hawley died at his house in the
Barbican, London on22 August 1557 . He was buried two days later in an elaborate ceremony atSt Giles Cripplegate . He is not known to have married; his will appointedWilliam Harvey , Norroy King of Arms, as his executor, also leaving him the substantial library that Hawley had inherited from his predecessor as Clarenceux, Thomas Benolt.ee also
*
Heraldry
*Officer of arms External links
* [http://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk The College of Arms]
* [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/britain/heralds.htm Heraldica list of officers of Arms]References
*Walter H Godfrey and Sir Anthony Wagner, "The College of Arms, Queen Victoria Street: being the sixteenth and final monograph of the London Survey Committee". (London, 1963).
*J.B. Paul, "Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, (1900), 98, 119, 123, 325, 337, 373.
*Anthony Wagner. "The Records and Collections of the College of Arms". (London, 1952), 10, 14, 24, 62, 68.
*Anthony Wagner. "Heralds and Heraldry in the Middle Ages". (London, 1956), 9–10, 98, 102, 118–119, 139–143, 150–175.
*Sir Anthony Wagner. "Heralds of England: a History of the Office and College of Arms". (London, 1967), 120–185.
*L. Campbell and Francis Steer. "A Catalogue of Manuscripts in the College of Arms Collections". (London, 1988), 5–7, 17–19, 484.
*Mark Noble. "A History of the College of Arms". (London, 1805), 119, 122, 128, 130, 143, 151–153.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.