rouge dragon การใช้
- Sandford was appointed Rouge Dragon Pursuivant in the College of Arms on 6 June 1661.
- On 19 October 1926 he was appointed to the College of Arms as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant.
- He was appointed Rouge Dragon Pursuivant 17 January 1690 and created officer of arms of the College of Arms.
- In 1813 he entered the College of Arms as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant, and became York Herald in 1820.
- Cheesman's coat of arms was granted by the College of Arms shortly after his appointment as Rouge Dragon.
- He would hold this post of Rouge Dragon until December 1962, when he was promoted to the office of On Her Majesty s Secret Service ".
- The titles of participants are gloriously preposterous _ Silver Stick in Waiting, Mistress of the Robes, Rouge Dragon Pursuivant, Maltravers Herald Extraordinary and Lady of the Bedchamber.
- As Earl Marshal, Howard controlled appointments to the College of Arms; in 1638 he appointed Crowne Rouge Dragon Pursuivant, one of the four junior officers of arms.
- Another son, Benjamin Pingo ( 1749 94 ), was Rouge Dragon Pursuivant ( 1780-1786 ) and York Herald ( 1786-1794 ) in the College of Arms.
- Being conscientiously attached to James II, he obtained leave in 1689 to resign his office of Lancaster Herald to Gregory King, Rouge Dragon pursuivant, who paid him ?20 for his office.
- It was not until 2005, that Brooke-Little finally handed complete control of the journal to two young officers of arms, Bluemantle Pursuivant Peter O'Donoghue and Rouge Dragon Pursuivant Clive Cheesman.
- Dalton was created Norroy King of Arms on 6 September 1557, and in February 1558 Dalton and Rouge Dragon Pursuivant went north to attend the Earl of Westmorland on an expedition against the Scottish army.
- Led in by the Rouge Croix Pursuivant ( P . W . Kerr ) and the Rouge Dragon Pursuivant ( E . N . Geijer ); they were escorted to their seats in the choir.
- The committee was asking if Dr . Conrad Swan, then Rouge Dragon Pursuivant ( and a Canadian who was planning to be in Ottawa on other business ), might be able to appear before the committee.
- The name Hilary Bray was that of an old-Etonian with whom Fleming worked at the stock broking firm Rowe & Pitman, whilst Sable Basilisk was based on " Rouge Dragon " in the College of Arms.
- Matheson writes " I did not see the final wording of our request but I have wondered since whether it may have been indelicately worded . . . . To the considerable consternation of our committee, a curt reply was received by cable from Sir Anthony Wagner on Monday, 5 October denying permission to Rouge Dragon to appear.
- Rouge Dragon was the title of heraldic researcher Robin de la Lanne-Mirrlees who asked Fleming not to use the title in the book; in a play on words, Fleming used Mirrlees's address, a flat in Basil St and combined it with a dragon-like creature, a basilisk, to come up with the name.