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I provide advice on many aspects of architectural colour

Here is one of my more unusual projects...

Patrick Baty Architectural Paint and

Colour

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The King’s Beasts

A Recent Project

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2009 The 500th

anniversaryof Henry VIII’s

accession to the throne

Patrick Baty was commissioned to

carry out research on the colour of King Henry’s

heraldic Beasts for Hampton Court

Palace

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Beasts in Heraldry

Mythical creatures were often adopted as a personal device or

emblem

From earliest times each English monarch

has used beasts to symbolise their

descent and familial allegiances

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Queen Jane Seymour

King Henry had a number of beasts

carved to celebrate his

marriage to Jane Seymour in 1536

These were found throughout the palace grounds

and twelve of them lined the Moat

Bridge

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Hampton Court Palace

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The remains of King Henry’s original beasts were destroyed in the

reign of King William III (1650-1702)

New ones were designed and carved in 1909-1910

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Hampton Court PalaceThe Moat Beasts were reinstated in 1911

They were not painted – but what if they were?

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Moat Beasts

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The existing beasts on the

Moat Bridge are currently unpainted

The Crowned Lion of England

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The Crowned Lion of England

He supports a shield bearing the impaled arms of Henry VIII and

Queen Jane

A golden lion has been the royal

beast of England since the early 12th

century

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Royal Arms 1405 – 1603used by King Henry VIII

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Queen Jane Seymour’s Arms

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Impaled Arms

King Henry’s arms Queen Jane’s arms

The husband’s and wife’s arms are joined

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Henry VIII’s Crowned Lion

I obtained much information from

hand-painted manuscripts of the 16th century

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The Seymour Panther

The golden “flames” indicate

his fragrant breath

He bears the Seymour wings

on his shield

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The Greyhound

A favourite Tudor beast

He bears the three lions of

England on his shield

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Henry VII’s Standard

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The Greyhound of Richmond with the red rose of Lancaster

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The Yale

A Beaufort beast

He has the body of an antelope, a lion’s tail and

horns which can swivel round to counter attack

from all quarters

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The Yale

The Duke of Somerset’s Yale

The arms are: France modern and England quarterly impaled

quarterly with

1) Howard; 2) Thomas of Brotherton; 3) Warenne and 4) Mowbray

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The Tudor Dragon

Used by Henry VIII’s

grandfather as a

token of his supposed descent

from Cadwalade

r

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King Cadwalader’s

Dragon

Semi-mythical king of

Gwynedd, North Wales

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The Queen’s Unicorn

This beast supports Queen

Jane’s six-quartered shield

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The Royal Dragon

This beast supports a

shield bearing France

modern and England quarterly

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The Queen’s Lion

This beast supports a shield bearing Queen Jane’s badge

Jane Seymour’s badge

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White Lions

...of March ...of Henry FitzRoy

...of Mowbray

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Black Bull of Clarence

He supports a shield bearing the Tudor

Rose, which symbolised the union of the houses of York

and Lancaster

Green and white were the Tudor livery

colours

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Black Bulls

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The Queen’s Panther

He bears the impaled arms of Henry VIII

and Queen Jane

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Heraldic Panther

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How the Moat Beasts might look if painted

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2009 promises to be a colourful year at

Hampton Court Palace

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Acknowledgements:

College of ArmsHistoric Royal PalacesSam Styles – SJS PhotosMuseo Thyssen-Bornemisza, MadridKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, Gemäldegalerie

(The Baty Griffin)http://bit.ly/15eDOa