By the Rev. E. E. Dorling. 119 
2. Seymour. 3. Beauchamp. 4. Fortibus—'Gules, on a chief 
argent a label of the field. 5. Malet—Aszwure, three escallops or. 6. 
Marshall—Per pale or and vert, a lion rampant gules. 7. Strongbow 
— —!0r, six lioncels rampant sable, 2, 2, 2. 8. Giffard—'Gu/es, 
three lions passant in pale argent. 9. Macmurgh—Sabie, three garbs 
argent. 10. Dela Mare—! Or, three bars dancetty gules. 11. Sturmy. 
12. Hussey—Barry of 6 ermine and gules. 13. MacWilliam. 14. 
Coker. Grey, quarterly of 16. 1. Grey. 2. Hastings—Or, a 
maunch gules. 3. Valence—Barry of 10 argent and azure, an orle 
of martlets gules. 4. Astley. 5. Ferrers of Chartley. 6. Ferrers 
of Groby—Guiles, seven mascles or, 3, 3, 1. 7. 1 Astley. 8. 
Blundeville—Azwre, three garbs or. 9. Lupus of Chester—Azure, 
a wolf’s head erased argent. 10. Widville. 11. Bonville. 12. 
Harington. 13. Brandon. 14. Rockele—'Zozengy ermine and 
azure. 15. Bruyn—Aswre, a cross moline or. 16. Pole—Azure, 
a fess between three leopard’s faces or. The phoenix crest of Seymour 
is blazoned a second time above the inscription, and two other crests, 
viz., a lion’s head affronty per pale argent and azure, and a unicorn 
statant ermine, maned and unguled or, before a sun in splendour of the 
last, appear on either side of the monument. Lastly, near the heads 
of the effigies of the earl and countess kneels a man in armour 
bearing on his left arm a shield of the Seymour augmentation. 
The last monument which I have to describe is that of Sir John 
-Mompesson and his third wife Catherine Paginton (or Packington). 
Sir John died in 1627, and his monument, which stands against 
the wall of the south choir aisle in the bay next to that of Bishop 
Mitford, bears a close resemblance in style and treatment to the 
Hertford monument. The figures of Sir John and Dame Catherine 
lie under an arch, on the summit of which is a coat bearing Mom- 
pessou quarterly of 6 impaling Paginton quarterly of 4, as follows :— 
-Mompesson, quarterly of 6. 1 and 6. Mompesson—Argent, a lion 
rampant sable, charged on the shoulder with a martlet or, in chief a 
mullet gules for difference. 2. Godwyn—Gules, a chevron ermine 
— 
1 Wrongly blazoned on the monument. 
LL. XXIX.—NO. LXXXVII. K 
