. Sussex archaeological collections relating to the history and antiquities of the county. as Jonly after several visits that I noticed them, nor could II then have drawn them in detail without the help of a jpowerful field-glass, provided by Mr. W. Kirk. They are much weather-worn, and appear to be of the Isame age as the rest of the tower. They represent: 1, a pomegranate; 2, a quatrefoil; 3,a Tudor rose; 4, another pomegranate. In Willements iRoyal Heraldry (1821) the rose and pomegranate!appear in the arms of Katherine of Arragon, with this !note: UA badge of this Queen, formed by a union


. Sussex archaeological collections relating to the history and antiquities of the county. as Jonly after several visits that I noticed them, nor could II then have drawn them in detail without the help of a jpowerful field-glass, provided by Mr. W. Kirk. They are much weather-worn, and appear to be of the Isame age as the rest of the tower. They represent: 1, a pomegranate; 2, a quatrefoil; 3,a Tudor rose; 4, another pomegranate. In Willements iRoyal Heraldry (1821) the rose and pomegranate!appear in the arms of Katherine of Arragon, with this !note: UA badge of this Queen, formed by a union ofthe Pomegranate with the Tudor Rose; this has been||copied from a volume of music which belonged to Henrythe Eighth, in Mus. Brit. Bib. Regis. 8-9, VII. The supposition usually accepted is that the tower isthe remnant of a plan by John Thorpe, an architect ofeminence in the reigns of Elizabeth and James L, and;that the plan was carried out in a mansion founded andcompleted by Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst. Thedate of Thorpes birth is unknown, but he flourished-between 1570— i i ii


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Keywords: ., bookauthorsussexarchaeologicals, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910