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359
Description: Rectangular; double fillet moulded edging; top centre, shield-shaped block with a rectangle containing the crest of the Fowles - an Arm in armour holding a Battle axe issuant from a Ducal Coronet, above the initials, WF; top left and right, two shields of the arms of the Fowle family - (Gules) a lion passant guardant between three roses (Or); across the lower half of the fireback are three solid triangular prisms of iron.
Notes: The stamps relate to William Fowle (1568-1634), ironmaster of Riverhall furnace. The stamps also appear on grave slabs in Wadhurst and Frant churches and on an unprovenanced graveslab in Maidstone Museum. The iron prisms were included, perhaps, to retain heat and to prevent the fireback from cracking.
Inscription: WF
Arms: William Fowle, of Frant and Wadhurst
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular (shape)
- fillet (edging)
- carved stamps
- heraldic
- armorial
- text
Manufactured: in the early-17th century probably at Riverhall Furnace, Wadhurst in the Weald area of England.
Current location: in private hands, Lamberhurst, Kent, England.
- Attached to series:
- Fowle series
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360
Description: Arched rectangular shape; ovolo edging; Stuart royal arms of England (quarterly, 1st and 4th, France and England, 2nd Scotland and 3rd Ireland) with garter, crown, motto and supporters; initials either side of lion’s head; date either side of unicorn’s head.
Notes: The slightly awkward positioning of the date suggests it was added later.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Inscription: I R [Iacobus Rex] 16 04 / DEV ET MON DROIT
Arms: English Stuart royal - James I
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- cavetto (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- individual numbers
- armorial
- royal
- text
Manufactured: in 1604 possibly in the Weald area of England.
Current location: Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, Kent, England.
Museum number: 791456 (part of the National Trust museum group)
- Attached to series:
- Jacobean royal armorial firebacks
- Stuart royal armorial firebacks
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361
Description: Quasi-rectangular; twisted rope edging on top and sides; cavetto-moulded-edged rectangle top centre, enclosing date between initials; 17 shields of Ayloffe impaling Sulyard in three rows (5-6-6); Ayloffe: sable, a lion rampant Or, collared gules, between three crosses formy of the second; Sulyard: argent, a chevron gules between three pheons inverted sable.
Notes: William Ayloffe (c1535-1584) of Bretons, Hornchurch, Essex, Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench, married (c1560) Jane, dau. of Sir Eustace Sulyard, of Runwell, Essex. The initials 'CT' are likely to be those of Charles Tyler, a founder whose working life and that of his family have strong parallels with the occurrence of these firebacks.
Inscription: C.1.6 2.0.T
Arms: Ayloffe impaling Sulyard (William Ayloffe of Bretons, Hornchurch)
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular (shape)
- rope (edging)
- carved stamps
- individual letters
- individual numbers
- armorial
- text
Manufactured: in 1620 possibly at Hawkhurst Furnace in the Weald area of England.
Current location: Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, Kent, England.
Museum number: 791898 (part of the National Trust museum group)
- Attached to series:
- Ayloffe series
- Personal armorial firebacks
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1302
Description: Triangular arched shape; double fillet edging with scrolls above the top corners; in front of mantling, a shield bearing two lions passant guardant with an indistinct canton; above it a helm and crest of a probable ostrich; initials, the D reversed, to left and right of upper mantling.
Notes: The arms have not been identified
Inscription: D T
Arms: Not known
- Decoration tags:
- triangular arched (shape)
- double fillet (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- individual letters
- heraldic
- armorial
- text
Manufactured: in the 17th century in England.
Current location: Francis Barber Architectural Salvage, Kelmscott, Gloucestershire, England.
- Attached to series:
- Personal armorial firebacks
- Loop edged firebacks
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366
Description: Rectangular; astragal edging; shield motto and crest of the family of Lawrence.
Notes: Blazon: Ermine, on a cross raguly gules an eastern crown or, on a chief azure two swords in saltire proper pomels and hilts gold between as many leopards' heads argent; crest: out of an eastern crown or, a cubit arm entwined by a wreath of laurel and holding a dagger, all proper. These arms apply to neither the baronetcy nor the two baronies awarded to members of the Lawrence family, the mottoes of which also differ.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Inscription: IN GOD IS MY TRUST
Arms: Lawrence
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular (shape)
- astragal (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- armorial
- text
Manufactured: in the late-19th to early-20th century in England.
Current location: not known.
- Attached to series:
- Personal armorial firebacks
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1137
Description: Arched shape with ovolo-moulded edging; central shield with the English royal Tudor arms and an inescutcheon of a lion rampant, surrounded by a Garter with an incorrect inscription, the shield surmounted by a crown and supported on the dexter side by a dragon and on the sinister side by a greyhound; to the left of the crown, a crowned rose and the the right, a crowned portcullis; above the supporters the date 1614 is split by the shield; below, split by the Garter buckle, initials GB.
Notes: The arms are of Henry VII or Henry VIII, the inescutcheon probably representing a marriage to an heiress, but are anachronistic as the date was in the reign of James I (and VI). The initials GB are believed to relate to Gilles or Georges Boniver, who worked at the foundry at Theux, near Liège, and whose initials appear on several firebacks. The fireback is thought to be a 19th-century copy.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Inscription: 16 14 / HONI SOIT IL QVIMAL I PANSE / G B
Arms: English royal Tudor with an inescutcheon of a lion rampant
- Decoration tags:
- rounded arched (shape)
- ovolo (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- heraldic
- armorial
- royal
- text
Manufactured: in 1614 probably at Theux Furnace in the Franchimont area of Belgium.
Current location: M-Museum Leuven, 28-30 Leopold Vanderkelenstraat, Leuven, Brabant, Belgium.
(part of the Leuven Museum museum group)
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828
Description: Upon a rectangular base plinth with an inscribed rectangle, to each side, a wide foliate scroll; central cartouche behind an oval shield bearing three fleurs-de-lys over a horizontally textured ground, supported on each side by a draped male figure, the whole surmounted by a French royal crown; on top, an arch rising from horizontal moulding on each side.
Notes: Characteristic of designs illustrated by architects such as Daniel Marot; the texturing on the shield indicates the azure tincture.
Arms: French royal
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- complex individual (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- planklines
- armorial
- royal
Manufactured: in the late-17th to early-18th century in France.
Current location: in private hands, Lewes, East Sussex, England.
- Attached to series:
- Foreign armorial firebacks
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376
Description: Arched rectangular shape; fillet edge on top and sides. Shield, helm, crest and mantling of the Worshipful Company of Joiners and Ceilers.
Notes: Blazon: Gules a Chevron Argent between in chief two pairs of Compasses extended at the points and in base a sphere Or. On a chief of the second a pale Azure between two Roses of the field barbed and seeded proper, the pale charged with an Escallop of the second; Crest: a demi Savage proper wreathed about the head and waist with Leaves Vert holding in the dexter hand over the shoulder a Tilting Spear Or headed Argent; arms granted 1571.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Arms: Worshipful Company of Joiners and Ceilers
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- fillet (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- armorial
Manufactured: in the mid-17th century possibly in the Weald area of England.
Current location: Anne of Cleves House, Southover High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, England.
Museum number: LH000.938 (part of the Sussex Archaeological Society museum group)
- Attached to series:
- Livery company firebacks
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384
Description: Rectangular; twisted rope edge on top and sides; crowned Tudor royal shield between fleurs de lys arranged in a four-pointed star shape on left, in a three-pointed star shape on right, and three singly in a line below.
Notes: The crowned shield is seen on several firebacks, indicating that they were products of the same furnace.
Arms: Tudor royal arms of England
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular (shape)
- rope (edging)
- carved stamps
- heraldic
- armorial
Manufactured: in the mid-16th century in the Weald area of England.
Current location: Anne of Cleves House, Southover High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, England.
Museum number: 1944.24.034 (part of the Sussex Archaeological Society museum group)
Citation: Dawson, C., 1903, 'Sussex Iron Work and Pottery', Sussex Archaeological Collections, 46, pp. 1-54.
- Attached to series:
- Royal series
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387
Description: Arched rectangular shape; astragal edging. Shield, helm, crest and mantling of the Worshipful Company of Blacksmiths.
Notes: Blazon: Sable, a chevron Or between three hammers Argent handled and crowned with open crowns of the second; Crest: a phoenix in flames rising proper; arms granted in 1611. Formerly part of the J. H. Every collection.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Arms: Worshipful Company of Blacksmiths
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- astragal (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- planklines
- armorial
Manufactured: in the mid-17th century in the Weald area of England.
Current location: Anne of Cleves House, Southover High Street, Lewes, East Sussex, England.
Museum number: 1944.24.052 (part of the Sussex Archaeological Society museum group)
- Attached to series:
- Livery company firebacks