This is a picture of a French naval force supposedly on its way to attack the coast of Sussex in the 1330s. How many arms can we identify?
Note the Oriflamme flying from a lance forward of the main-mast. I suspect that this, like the shield with the two fishes beneath it, is an error. As far as I know the Oriflamme was never deployed unless the French King was present, and despite the trumpeters' trumpet banners he was not aboard. The arms with the two fish are supposedly those of the Duke of Bar, but his had a blue field.
The arms on the shield to the left of "Bar" (France modern a - very narrow - bend gules) must be intended to be those of the Duke of Bourbon. But I don't think he was present either.
Which raises another issue: why France Modern? The Dukes of Bourbon used these arms only from 1410 to 1488, the century following the descent on the Sussex coast. One would expect to see these:
Is this picture perhaps a 15th century one of a 14th century invasion, painted by someone with a shaky knowledge of heraldry?
A 14th Century French Naval Force
- Chris Green
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A 14th Century French Naval Force
Chris Green
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
- Chris Green
- Posts: 3626
- Joined: 10 Jul 2012, 13:06
- Location: Karlstad, Sweden
Re: A 14th Century French Naval Force
Arms that should be prominent, if this is indeed intended to be one of the attacks on the Sussex coast in the 1330s, are those of Grimaldi, either Carlos or Rainier: Fusily Argent and Gules. These two admirals, whose successors were to capture Monaco, were both commanders of French invasion forces at that period. But as mercenaries they may have been considered too common to appear in this painting.
Chris Green
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
- Arthur Radburn
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Re: A 14th Century French Naval Force
The banner above the crow's nest of the main ship also displays France Modern. Second from the left in the row of shields along the prow of the ship looks like Normandy (Gules two lions passant gardant in pale Or). And fourth from the left in the row on the shield in the lower right corner could be Brittany (Ermine).
Perhaps it is a 15th-century painting. Or perhaps the event depicted was not actually the invasion in the 1330s but some later event, which has been misidentified.
Perhaps it is a 15th-century painting. Or perhaps the event depicted was not actually the invasion in the 1330s but some later event, which has been misidentified.
Regards
Arthur Radburn
Arthur Radburn
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