120 Notes on the Heraldry of Salisbury Cathedral. 



between three leopard's faces or. 3. Drew — Ermine, a lion passant 

 gules. 4. Watkins — Azure, a fess between three leopard's faces 

 je$sant-de-Hs or. 5. Sable, a tower argent, in chief three plates. 

 Paginton, quarterly of 4. 1. Paginton — Per chevron sable and 

 argent, in chief three mullets f ess-wise or, in base as many garbs gules. 

 2. Baldwin — Argent, six oak leaves in pairs, 2 and 1, the points 

 downwards vert, stalked sable. 3. Arden — Ermine, a fess chequy or 

 and azure, an annulet gules for difference. 4. Washbourne — Argent 

 on a fess between six martlets gules, three quatrefoils slipped of the 

 first. In the eastern spandrel of the arch is a shield hearing 

 Mompesson impaling Howard of Effingham — Gules, on a bend, 

 between six crosses erosslet fitchy argent, a mullet sable, the arms of 

 Sir Richard's first wife ; and in the western spandrel Mompesson 

 impales the coat of his second wife, Elizabeth Oglethorp, who bore 

 Argent, a chevron between three boar's heads couped sable. Round the 

 arch is a series of nine shields bearing the following arms : — 

 Beginning at the bottom on the east side are Mompesson im- 

 paling the coat of his fifth quarter; Watkins ; Drew; and Godwyn 

 respectively. At the top of the arch is Mompesson impaling 

 Paginton ; and beginning at the bottom on the west side we find 

 four shields of Paginton impaling Baldwin ; Washbourne ; Arden ; 

 and Baldwin again. 



The Hungerford chantry, familiarly known as " the cage," 

 removed from its original position in the nave in 1778, and 

 decorated in the best heraldic taste by the second Earl of Radnor, 

 stands on the middle bay of the south side of the presbytery, 

 opposite to the Audley chantry. It is now used as the family pew 

 of the Radnor family. I am unable, through lack of space, to say 

 more at present than that this chantry deserves the most careful 

 study, containing, as it does, a multitude of the armorial bearings 

 of a most important and ancient Wiltshire family. The Gorges 

 monument, already referred to, is also worthy of study on account 

 of the interesting series of foreign coats of arms which form part 

 of its decoration. 



I should like to mention a curious coat, which forms the third 

 quarter of the arms of Henry Hyde, carved on his monument on 



