Ouch!
Those horses are rough on us
sprigs.
Laurel
I have now found the coat-of-arms of the
Bews family which I hope will be of interest to your Australian
contributor from whom we have heard nothing since we embarked on our
detailed research into the Sinclair/Bews connection which has taken us
from Orkney to Cornwall to Calvados in France.
The coat of arms is
described as
follows:
"On
a chapeau crimson, turned up,
erm.,
a pegasus, rearing, of bay colour,
mane
and tail, sa., wings,or, in mouth a
sprig
of laurel,ppr."
which literally means: "on a crimson
hat with turned up ermine there is a rearing bay horse
with
a black mane and tail, with golden wings and a sprig of laurel in its
mouth"
Perhaps someone, who is better versed in heraldry than I
am, will be able to make something out of the above information.
There is no similarity with any of the many Sinclair coats-of-arms
which are given in the "St Clairs of the Isles".
Niven
Sinclair
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