ARMORIAL BEARINGS OF CHARLES
SCARISBRICK, ESQ.

Fig. 166.—Armorial bearings of Charles Scarisbrick, Esq.: Argent, a saltire engrailed parted and fretty, between two mullets of six points in pale all sable. Mantling sable and argent. Crest: on a wreath of these colours, between two trefoils slipped vert, a falcon close proper, belled and jessed, and charged on the breast with a mullet of six points or. Motto: "Patientia vincit omnia."
Source: Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopedia of Armory (New York: Arno Press, 1976), page 87.
Fig. 30.—Brass in the Scarisbrick Chapel of Ormskirk Church, co. Lancs., to a member of the Scarisbrick family of that name. Arms: Gules, three mullets in bend between two bendlets engrailed argent. (From a rubbing by Walter J. Kaye.)
The fifteenth and sixteenth centuries witnessed the greatest profusion in heraldic decoration in brasses, when the tabard and the heraldic mantle were evolved. A good example of the former remains in the parish church of Ormskirk, Lancashire, in the brass commemorating a member of the Scarisbrick family, c. 1500 (Fig. 30).
Source: Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopedia of Armory (New York: Arno Press, 1976), page 30.SCARISBRICK OF SCARISBRICK
Quarterly: 1st and 4th, gu., three mullets in
bend, between two bendlets engrailed arg., and for distinction, in the
centre chief point a crosslet or., for Scarisbrick; 2nd and 3rd, De
Biaudos.
Source: Burke's
Landed Gentry Advertiser (1906)
FHL: 1696606
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