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Relief above the entrance of former Hotel Victoria in Royal Tunbridge Wells, showing the coat of arms of the father of Queen Victoria, Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent and Strathearn (1767-1820) German Wappen über dem Eingang des früheren Hotels Victoria in Royal Tunbridge Wells mit dem Wappen des Vaters von Königin Victoria von Großbritannien ...
English: The Coat of arms of Royal Tunbridge Wells from 1889 to 1972. Date: 11 November 2018: ... This coat of arms was created with Inkscape, or with something else.
The coat of arms until 1972. Royal Tunbridge Wells. Location within Kent. Population: 59,947 (2016) [1] ... Royal Tunbridge Wells is a town in Kent, England, ...
Note: The school uses as its logo an escutcheon with some features of the coat of arms Bennett Memorial Diocesan, Tunbridge Wells, granted 19 December 1952 Escutcheon: Vert, a brock passant proper; on a chief argent, three gilly-flowers stalked and leaved also proper. Motto: Semper Tenax [52] (Ever holding fast)
Lieutenant-General Sir John James Hamilton, 1st Baronet (4 August 1755 – 24 December 1835) was a British officer of the Honourable East India Company, the British Army and during the Napoleonic Wars the Portuguese Army who saw action across the world from India to the West Indies and was honoured for his service by both the British and Portuguese royal families.
The Estate's Coat of Arms The Estate is situated between the market town of Tonbridge and the spa town of Royal Tunbridge Wells , at the heart of an area of countryside between the neighbouring villages of Penshurst , Chiddingstone and Hever .
The heraldic blazon for the coat of arms of the Marquesses of Abergavenny is: Gules, a saltire argent charged with a rose of the field (barbed and seeded proper). [6] These are the ancient arms of Neville differenced by a rose, the symbol of a 7th son, in reference to Sir Edward Neville, 1st Baron Bergavenny (d.1476), 7th son of Ralph Neville ...
The Pantiles is a Georgian colonnade in the town of Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. Formerly known as "The Walks" and the (Royal) "Parade", it leads from the well that gave the town its name. The area, developed following the discovery of a chalybeate spring in 1606, has become a popular tourist-attraction.