In 17th century Sancreed one parish priest, the Rev. John Smyth, caused considerable furore. In 1639 two of his parishioners , George Orchard and John Lanyon, both of the local gentry, brought a case against him in the Consistory Court. The Archdeacon of Cornwall appointed the incumbents of Phillack, Mullion, St Allen, Ludgvan, Madron and St Just in Penwith to hear evidence in Sancreed church.
Phil Williams / Sancreed church
The first accusations levelled against Smyth was that he had torn down a pew which his predecessor, the Rev. John Dodd, had put up in the chancel for the use of his wife and family. The interrogatory stated that the pew ‘was now in the buttery or dairy of your house, to the great grief and trouble of the minds of the parishioners there to see things dedicated to holy uses to be so profanely used or rather abused.’ Dodd’s wife, Avice, said that her husband had erected the pew about ten years before, ‘but, when Smyth came he refused to let her occupy it and nailed it up, but some schoolboys pulled it open, whereupon Mr Smyth demolished the whole.’
Smyth had been vicar of Sancreed for some eighteen months and had been the instrument whereby Dodd had been removed, having brought a law-suit against him on the grounds of simony. (Simony is the act of selling church offices and roles or sacred things. It is named after Simon Magus, who is described in the Acts of the Apostles as having offered two disciples of Jesus payment in exchange for their empowering him to impart the power of the Holy Spirit to anyone on whom he would place his hands.)
Simon Magus, Paul & Nero – Sibeaster, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The second accusation against Smyth was that he had built a large new pew in the passage way between the body of the church and the rood loft, thus obstructing the free transit of the parishioners from north to south. Thomas Gibbes of Sancreed, aged 66, remembered ‘all his time the alley between the rood loft and the pews in the body of the church and also many parishioners buried in the alley. The minister’s pew was on the east side of the rood loft looking westward toward the people until of late Mr Smyth built a new seat or pew in the alley which is thereby stopped up.’
The interior of Sancreed church today
More serious was the charge that Smyth demolished an altar which stood in the chancel, whereon the parishioners were accustomed to place their tithes ‘and to write such things as concern their parish business and whereon sometimes the consecrated bread and wine was set at the time of administering the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper’. During divine service Smyth thought fit to remark on his demolition of this altar, saying that he ‘never saw any sheep or oxen to be sacrificed upon that altar but have been in the company of asses, men and boys, two or three at a time.’Thomas Treuren deposed that Smyth removed the altar stone because it was an annoyance to him in the administration of the Holy Communion. His evidence was, however, blighted because he owed money to John Lanyon, the moneylender, one of the two parishioners who brought the suit against their vicar.
All these may well have been complaints brought against a priest who, in a conservative-minded parish, moved too quickly in introducing innovations. There, may, too, have been some local sympathy with the ousted predecessor. The remaining charges showed that the situation in the parish was even more disturbed. He was stated by Orchard and Lanyon to be ‘a great vexer, molster (sic) and troubler of the parishioners with unnecessary law-suits and that you now have or lately had 40, 30 or at least 20 law-suits in the ecclesiastical court against men of the parish and have said that you will so vex your parishioners with law-suits that they shall not be able to help one another and that you would make them all appear at London one after another and that you would be a little devil amongst them.’
Smyth had threatened to sue them all for the tithe of turves, and when told by Hugh Levelis that many leaseholders would not be allowed by the terms of their leases to cut turves, replied ‘then I will sue them because they shall forfeit their leases to their landlords.’
A further charge was that ‘in the time of divine service you have divers times departed out of the church of Sancreed in your surplice and worn your surplice into an ale-house’. One of the witnesses agreed that this was so, but only once or twice at prayer time ‘to reproach such as went to drink tobacco or ale (sic) and so came in again.’
Smyth was also said to have neglected to take children in his arms when baptising them ‘to the great grief of the parents and contrary to the rites and ceremonies of the Church of England’. All these accusation might be considered, in a certain sense, of a domestic nature. The last was designed to embroil Smyth even further – ‘that you did not read the King’s proclamation concerning the late treacherous seditions in the North and Scotland but caused your clerk to read it.’
The result of this action in the Consistory Court is unfortunately not known, but Smyth remained Vicar of Sancreed and 29 years later a similar series of charges was brought against him.
Part 2
The Rev John Smyth certainly caused a great deal of talk among his parishioners in the 1660s and his inability to conform with the usual standards of behaviours brought him considerable notoriety. In 1668, when he appeared for the second time before the Consistory Court, Mary Lanyon, widow, was the prosecutrix. Of her husband (John), soon after the burial service, Smyth was reported to have said‘the old hog is dead and thrown into a pit. He took a field from one, a lease from another, a cow from a third and a horse from a fourth and has left his estates to the lioness and her whelps to make her jointure great.’ There were many other accusations levelled against the vicar. John Lanyon (son of Mary) gave corroborative evidence saying that in 1665, when William Binder, one of the church wardens had asked Smyth how the presentments should be made at the Visitation, the vicar had used abusive language. Lanyon reproved him and was met with the rejoinder ‘Pish, thou mayest make what presentments thou wilt but when thou hast paid the fees of the Visitation thou mayest take thy presentments and wipe thy breech with them.’ A certain Humphrey Nicholas seems to have been a particular object of his dislike. Elizabeth Tonkyns, who had been in Smyth’s service for twelve months, deposed that he was very litigious and had threatened to sue Nicholas for treading off the church path which led through the glebe. At Easter 1666, Nicholas was unwell and sent his offering to the vicar, who declined to receive it, and on the Sunday Nicholas ‘went to the Lord’s table with the rest of the parishioners and kneeled down, hoping to partake of the blessed sacrament – but Mr Smyth administered the same to all the rest of the people there but refused to administer the same to this deponent in the presence of all the people there present to the deponent’s very great grief.’
Smyth was said to be an extortioner, forcing a parishioner to ‘pay 2s 6d yearly for a cow and a calf pasturing in Sancreed whereas by parish custom he ought only to pay 3d a year.’ He was said to be a frequent visitor at ale-houses – in Penzance one evening he ‘drank to the height of mirth and lay there in the same house all that night’. He was said to scorn civil authority and in one sermon to have asked ‘what are these petty Justices and petty commissioners and dunghill officers to me when I am in my place?’
There was a suggestion that Smyth encouraged the flouting of authority. On one occasion he had taken his text from Proverbs, ‘Stolen waters are sweet’, and taking occasion to distinguish what was stolen waters, declared that extortion and wronging the poor was stolen waters – saying ‘if this be not stolen waters I wonder to the devil what is stolen waters?‘ And in the same sermon declared that it was lawful and that there was very good reason why the poor people should steal, saying ‘and from whom should they steal? Why from such rich people as are so uncharitable that they will not give to the poor.’When the hope was expressed that he would not preach such a sermon again, he declared that ‘it is better to steal than to starve.’
Proverbs 9-17
Many of these accusations were, no doubt, somewhat frivolous, eccentricities which had been remembered, sometimes out of context, in order to make the list of charges as formidable as possible. One charge however, was most particular – the conversion of the parish almshouses. Edward Chergwyn deposed that ‘for the last three or four years Mr Smyth hath taken possession of the public almshouses of the parish of Sancreed which for forty years and more has been employed to the use of the ancient poor people of the parish’and Reginald Madderne, the local tailor, said in his evidence, ‘he has converted the almshouses adjoining the churchyard into a house for his sheep.’ Richard Olivey went further: ‘Mr Smyth seized the almshouses, turned out some poor people and made it a sheep house, pulled off the roof and used the timber for his stable‘, Olivey completed the charges: ‘he is reputed to be of debauched life and conversation and addicted to lasciviousness and much given to obscene and wanton talking’. On his visits to the nearby church of Paul, ‘sometimes to preach, he puts his horse at the ale-house there and doth oftentimes go there himself when he goes to fetch his horse at his departure.’
John Olivey, who was constable of the parish in 1666 asserted that ‘he found Mr Smyth very backward in paying his rates and often would give this deponent ill words when he came to demand them.’During the same year Olivey called on the vicar, armed with a warrant under the seals of the deputy lieutenants, warning the able-bodied men of the parish to appear before Colonel Godolphin‘to bear arms imposed on the parishioners of Sancreed about the beginning of the late dangerous times of war between England and Holland.’ One of the parishioners, by name Ladner, was warned to carry the arms contributed by the vicar. Smyth told the constable ‘in a very passionate and rigorous manner’ that Ladner was not fit to serve the King, ‘neither shall he serve the King.’
What, one wonders, were the vicar’s replies to these accusations. Unfortunately they are not available, but it is not difficult to appreciate the difficulties of his position. Smyth was a vicar of an isolated country parish for over 30 years during a period of war and civil disturbance, when preferment was gained by those with soft tongues and easy ways. Smyth had neither. he quarrelled with the most influential of his parishioners and cracked bawdy jokes (in Cornish) with his serving – maids; he frequented taverns and abused the local magistrates. Little wonder then that this eccentric and somewhat earthy cleric fell foul of his ‘respectable’ parishioners.
This was part of an article written by H.L Douch curator of the Royal Institution of Cornwall for the ‘West Briton’ – Published Jul 30th & Aug 13th 1962
It is worth noting that John Lanyon (senior) was church warden at Sancreed.
From Cornwall OPC Database-
17 Jan 1675 Mary Smyth, wife of John Smyth vicar, buried at Sancreed
Two possible entries for John’s burial:
29 Apr 1681 John Smyth Vicar of Paule buryed at Sancreed in Woollen (Hoblyn’s Transcripts)
19 Apr 1692 John Smyth (pencil note – vicar) buried at sancreed – (Hoblyn’s Transcripts)
It does seem beyond coincidence that both the vicar of Sancreed and Paul were both called John Smyth!
Following on from the post ‘What’s in a name?’ William Lamparter’s papers contained the following notes on heraldry and the Lanyon Arms.
The coat of arms over the door at Lanyon Gwinear
Gu. on waves of the sea. Az. A square castle in perspective with a tower at each corner or a falcon ppr. rising. Crest. On a mount vert. A castle with four towers or a falcon rising as above.
Coats of arms are composed of the shield, helmet, wreath, crest, mantle and motto.
The shield or escutcheon, the most important part of a knight’s defensive equipment is the object upon which the armorial devices or charges are displayed. The Lanyon shield is red with a castle and falcon as charges. Gules (red) alludes to blood and generally signifies that the bearers have shed blood in defence of their country.
A castle as a charge denotes power and safety. Castles were given as charges to those who had distinguished themselves in the taking of castles or other fortified places. They are considered honourable rewards.
The sea waves under the castle denote high fortune and dignity.
The falcon as a charge was given to those who were eager for plunder.
The gold as the principal metal in the ‘arms’ signifies generosity and elevation of mind.
Helmets are placed over arms, and show the rank of the persons to whom they belong. The closed helmet seen in profile is appropriated to esquires and gentlemen.
The wreath was composed of two rolls of twisted silk or leather – the colours consisting of the principal metal and the principal colour. The wreath encircled the helmet and supported the crest.
Crests were borne upon helmets to distinguish military leaders and knights engaged in battle. Thus many ancient families entitled to bear coat armour are without crests.
The mantle was attached to the helmet and hung down over the armour to protect it from weather.
The motto is a word or short sentence inserted in a scroll which is generally beneath the shield.
The Lanyon motto is:- Vive ut Vivas (Live, that you may live.)
Sir Charles Lanyon’s coat of arms with motto, hemet, crest, wreath and shield.
In the 1990s a new ‘shield’ was designed and created for David Lanyon by Dennis Endean Ivall from Truro.
New shield design
The design engraved
Seal of the signet ring of HHL held by WRL (1998)
Bill Lanyon kindly sent me this news clipping and a drawing of the coat of arms. The newspaper story was by ‘Veritas’ the nom de plume of Jane Veale Mitchell and I believe the drawing is also by her.
On the 3 Dec 1973 William (Bill) Lamparter wrote to Peter Pool, the editor of the Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall inquiring if they would be interested in publishing an article which he had ‘very nearly completed’ on the origin and development of the Lanyon surname and Lanyon coat of arms. Peter Pool responded that the next journal due for publication in Summer 1974 was ‘virtually full’ and they would probably defer it until the following year. By November 1975 Bill wrote to Peter ‘I am embarrassed and chagrined to have to write to tell you that my Lanyon article is still not complete…’
By 1978 Bill was still collating information for his article! I don’t know if it was ever actually published but I have taken the ‘article’ he wrote, the amendments, notes and additional information and produced this article so that the information is not lost. His references were incomplete, I’ve noted which were blank and submitted my own contribution in brackets.
Observations concerning the origin and history of the Lanyon surname and coat of arms in England and in the United States of America 1215-1974
By William Lamparter
The earliest extant record of the Lanyon coat of arms so far identified is the painting made following the first visitation into Cornwall by the King’s Heralds in 1530. It is blazoned, Gules, a square castle in perspective with four towers argent, a falcon, proper, belled, beaked and legged azure, rising from a mount vert in the courtyard of the field. It has been noted that this record or entry was not a grant of arms but, rather, the Heralds’ record of arms presumably already used by the Lanyon family. (1)
Inevitably, one might suppose that the origin of a coat of arms might in some manner be linked with the family name. If so, probably the precise connection between the Lanyon surname and their arms, if any, will never be known. It will be useful, however, to set forth the various theories of the name origin and, from that display, to derive certain data which might be useful for continuing research, for drawing conclusions or which will, finally, lay to rest various fanciful conjectures as to the origin of both.
It has been said that the Lanyon coat of arms is a purely Tudor creation (2) exhibiting none of the characteristics of earlier and feudal creations or grants of arms. Certainly, the blazon is more elaborate and imaginative than arms typically in use in England during the sixteenth or earlier centuries. Yet there is an old tradition concerning the coat of arms which bears repeating.
On 3 June 1350 at Westminster the earl of Lancaster issued to John de Lynyen a ‘pardon for the good service in Gascony in the company of Henry, earl of Lancaster’ (3). It was theorized by Miss Mitchell (4) that the Lanyon coat of arms in some manner depicts the feat or role performed circa 1350 in Gascony for which John, this early Lanyon, was granted pardon from some earlier misdeed. No fact supports this conjecture, however attractive it is, but the conjectural association of the Lanyon surname as having been derived from the lanner, or falcon, coupled with the appearance of the falcon rising from the mount in the coat of arms does nothing to diminish the tradition concerning the arms’ origin. In ‘Traditions and Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall’ by William Bottrell (1873) an old tale is recorded of an elderly Lanyon, living in Lamorna, whose house, while sparsely furnished, retained some memorials of former ancestors, including a ‘huge pair of jack boots which belonged to some renowned ancestor.’ One would like to think that the boots had been worn by John de Lynyen in Gascony, perhaps while performing his ‘good service’, which might have been commemorated on the Lanyon coat of arms. Very probably we shall never know.
It was of course Hals (5) who brought up the matter of the Lanyon surname having been derived from the lanner; the species of falcon presumably portrayed on the coat of arms. Neither etymologically nor in any other way, however, does there seem to be the slightest shred of evidence to support that theory. Three other possible derivations of the name which have been proposed have merit. The first, although not necessarily the oldest, appears (among other places) in ‘The First Book of the Parish Registers of Madron in the County of Cornwall’ by George Bown Millet (6) wherein it is proposed that the association of the Knights Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem with the parish of Madron may have in some way provided the names origin. This theory offers that the surname, Lanyon, may be derived from a compounding of two distinct Cornish words, the first, lan, meaning a monastic enclosure (7) or a ‘level spot, an enclosure, a sacred enclosure, a monastery, a church.’ (8) And Lan as a surname John. (9) {Lan-john….John’s enclosure.}
A second possible derivation of the Lanyon surname is as intriguing. It was William Hals who, in the middle of the eighteenth century wrote:
‘Lanyon, in this parish (Gwinear), a seat of the Lanyons, the first propagators of this family in Cornwall, came, with many other French gentlemen, into England with Isabella, wife of King Edward II, and settled themselves in those parts; amongst which Lanyon’s posterity have ever since flourished in gentle degree in Cornwall; and for further proof of this matter, that originally they came from the town of Lanyon, situate upon a sea-haven, or harbour, in France, they still give the arms of that town for their paternal coat of armour, viz. in a field Sable, a castle Argent standing on waves of the sea Azure, over the same a falcon hovering with bells. The present possessor Tobias Lanyon, Gent, that married Pineck (sic); his father Reynolds.’ (10)
Isabella of France Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The theory or conjecture is, of course, an attractive one, but Hals, or his helpers, if he had any, had not discovered that the Lanyons were in Cornwall by 1215 (11), whereas Queen Isabella came to England only in 1307, a few months after Edward II’s accession to the throne. Yet the matter does not end there. Indeed, there is a small city in Brittany (Department Cotes du Nord) called Lannion. Further, there is an old and distinguished family of that name in Brittany which has been said to have ‘….tire son nom de la ville de Lannion. Elle a toujours été considérée dans cette province comme une des plus distinguées parmi la meillure Noblesse.’(12) This family, carefully documented up to the end of the eighteenth century, was descended from the barons of Avaugour (13) who were, in fact, the enormously powerful and preeminent house of Penthievre whose descendants, after their despoilation by Pierre de Dreux, assumed the name Avaugour. (14)
To continue this point however, it will have been noted that Hals, as quoted by Davies Gilbert, states that the Lanyon coat of arms is identical to that of the Breton city of Lannion (15). So far as can be ascertained, there is no basis in fact for his statement. The coat of arms of the city of Lannion is blazoned as Noir, a lamb couchant, holding a pennant etc. One wonders where Hals derived his information. Assuredly, the 1530 Lanyon coat of arms does not owe its parentage to those of the city of Lannion although the Cornish family of similar name may.
Lannion coat of arms
The tradition of a French, or more specifically, Breton or Norman family origin will not die easily among contemporaneous Lanyon descendants if, indeed, it is firmly and finally established that the Lanyons of Cornwall had an indigenous origin. Just as so many Lanyon-descended households in England and in America embrace one or several reminders of their inhabitants’ Cornish origin – a photograph of the Lanyon cromlech, one or another version of the coat of armour, a photograph perhaps of Lanyon in Madron or Gwinear – as many households cling closely to the romantic but so far undocumented tradition of a French descent. Typical yet surely not unique, is a letter dated 10March 1911 (16) from John Lanyon (17) to Harry Theodore Sherwood Smith I. The letter was written in reply to an earlier one from Mr Smith to Mr Lanyon enquiring whether the latter was in any way connected with the Lanyons of Cornwall, explaining, apparently, that Smith’s wife had been born a Lanyon. (18)
‘The Lanyons originally all came from one stock, and they are an old French family. At the time of the conquest, Jean Lanyon was supposed to have been one of the Knights of William of Normandy afterwards known as William I of England. Some of his descendants settled in the South of England and other members of the family came over to England at various times after. I am directly descended from the Frence (sic) branch.’
A third possible derivation of the Lanyon surname is purely Cornish. In ‘A Guide to Cornish Place-names, with a List of Words Contained in Them’ Robert Morton Nance proposed that the name might have been derived from compounding two Cornish words, Lin – meaning pool or pond and eien – meaning cold, while adding that why the pool should be particularly cold is unknown (19). As might be expected Nance did his homework well: a look into Borlase’s Cornish vocabulary (20) reveals the existence of these words, however, it was Nance who apparently first identified the compounding and, indeed, there still remain traces of a pond at Lanyon in Madron – probably in the seventeenth century, and possibly earlier, it was a source of water-power for the mill, now in ruins, down towards Bosullow. John Tregarthen in his novel ‘John Penrose’ written about life at Lanyon in the nineteenth century mentions the pond in a topical and amusing way (21). If Morton Nance’s interpretation is accepted, one must assume an indigenous and non-Breton origin for the surname.
A brief review of a few of the early documents relating to the Lanyon family will provide a certain insight into the origin and evolution of the surname. In considering the evidence of these documents and in reflecting upon the origin and meaning of the surname, it is important to consider always that while contemporary orthography tends toward Lanyon, and pronunciation toward Lan-Yawn, even within memory, Lanine, pronounced La-Nine, was neither unknown nor uncommon, although the latter usage, it must be granted, was rather more typically Cornish than English or American.
In the earliest document known which treats of the family dated 1215 (22) appear Agnes, who was the wife of Roger de Leniein, then a widow, and her son, John de Linien. Roger’s name later in the same document, is written Lenien. This transaction had to do with the family property variously spelled as Lennein and Lenien. Nowhere in these names does the later ‘Y’ appear.
Nearly thirty years later, in a foot of fines, John de Linyeine again appears, with an alternative nomenclature. (23) Here the first letter or vowel or the second syllable has mutated to ‘Y’.
There are other examples. In 1350, over one hundred years later, another John has his surname written Lynyen (24) a cluster of ‘Ys’. Toward the end of the fourteenth century, Bishop Brantyngham granted a licence to celebrate mass ‘….in Capellis Beate Marie, do Laneyn, necron Sanctarum Brigide et Morvethe infra Parochiam suam situatis;….’ (25) Surely the pronunciation would have been La-Nine or possibly La-Nin-en.
A century later, the surname was being spelled Lanyeyn, as appears in a letter of attorney dated 23 October 1462. (26) Quite possibly this spelling derived from a trisyllabic pronunciation, as La-nye-in.
It was in fact, not until the nineteenth century that the commonly accepted spelling of the surname in Cornwall became Lanyon. In America the name is not known in any other form.
This, then, in summary, is what is known concerning the possible derivation of the Lanyon surname and, briefly, the origin of their coat of arms. Much of it is theory, indeed speculation, all of it is subject to further research and particularly the conjectural Breton origin. We may now turn to matters of fact.
Historical research moves itself out of the area of speculation by documentation and physical fact. We need to look at how, where, and in what ways the Lanyon coat of arms was employed by those who inherited it.
Sometime prior to 27 February 1554, John Rashleigh of Fowey, Esq., married Alice (27) daughter of William Lanyon of Lanyon, Esq., by his wife Thomasin, daughter of Thomas Tregian. The Rashleigh history is well enough known and needs no recitation within the scope of this paper. Perhaps the Rashleighs of Fowey, an increasingly successful mercantile family, later of Menabilly, were particularly pleased with their alliance with this old family of Cornish gentry; the manner in which they celebrated it on the tomb of John Rashleigh, senior, and upon the monumental brass of Alice Rashleigh, would indicate so. Alice Rashleigh died 20 August 1591 and her remains were interred in the nave of St Fimbarrus Church, Fowey. A brass effigy and inscription plate are embedded in part of the stone flooring of the church, but a shield above the effigy is missing. One would give much to see it (28). Like much else, it is gone, forever. Nearby, however, seemingly intact, remains the monument and tomb of her husband, John Rashleigh, whereon appears the Rashleigh coat of arms, Quarterly Sable, a cross Or between a Cornish chough Argent, beaked and legged Gules, 1st quarter; in the second quarter a text ’T’ of the third; 3rd and 4th, a crescent of the last, on the cross in chief a rose impaling those of the Lanyon family (29). This is the unique monumental example of how the Lanyon arms should be displayed, at least when compared with the 1530 drawing in the College of Arms (30). On the tomb the Lanyon arms are shown in perspective, as originally recorded, and not symbolically, as is the usual instance.
Alice Rashleigh – Drawn by Dunkin, Edwin Hadlow Wise, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
There are other examples of the Lanyon coat of arms extant in Cornwall. Many more are blazoned in the histories. Most of them are incorrect.
Coat of arms over the porch at Lanyon Gwinear
The coat of arms over the porch at Lanyon Gwinear – 1668 date no longer visible
The coat of arms over the porch at Lanyon in Gwinear is, however, heraldically impeccable. Well maintained, it is dated 1668. It does, notwithstanding, differ materially from the Lanyon arms first recorded in 1530, one hundred and thirty-eight years earlier. The castle is not in perspective but, rather square; the mount has disappeared; the castle rests on waves of the sea; the falcon wears no bells. By 1668, a younger branch of the Lanyons were well-established at Gwinear. It appears that Edward, fifth son (31) of Richard Lanyon of Lanyon. Esq., by Margaret, daughter and heiress of Thomas Treskillard, was living at Gwinear in the late sixteenth century. His children were being baptised in the parish in the 1590s. In fact, it might be stated that the Lanyons, after the mid 1500s, did not regard Lanyon in Madron as their principal residence. They owned much property elsewhere in the county, acquired by inheritance or by purchase. Lanyon in Madron may have been uncomfortable; it is, still, windswept, bereft of trees and, no matter how attractive in certain seasons it must have been cold in the 1500s. Judging from the Gwinear parish registers, it was Richard, father of Edward, who moved his principal residence from Lanyon, Madron to Lanyon, Gwinear. He and his wife were buried there, in 1592 and 1579 respectively (32).
The Lanyon house at Gwinear
Richard, interestingly enough, seems to have attempted to make adequate provision for all his children, so far as can be judged. John, the eldest son and heir, continued at the Madron estate, as was his right. William the fourth son was granted the Tregaminion (33) property, in westernmost Cornwall, by his father and eldest brother. Edward the fifth son was situated at Lanyon, Gwinear, where his descendants remained until circa 1785 (34) when the estate was sold. By 1668 Richard the father had been deceased by seventy-six years. His descendants in the eldest line, (John, Francis, Richard and John) disappear finally in St Ervan at Treginegar (35), another of the Lanyon properties. The cadet branch at Gwinear, meanwhile, flourished. Whether this manor house there was constructed in 1668, the date above the coat of arms placed over the principal doorway, or whether the house was considerably older, the date representing merely the year of reconstruction, needs to be established. At any rate, it appears that Tobias Lanyon of Lanyon in Gwinear, Richard’s great grandson, had his coat of arms erected above the entrance to his manor house, either upon construction of the building or upon its renovation following the period of the Commonwealth, when it is said, many houses of the area were rebuilt.
As early as 1602, Richard Carew wrote in reference to the Hundred of Kerrier, that:
‘Divers other gentlemen dwell in this hundred; as Lanyne, the husband of Kekewitch; his father married Militon, and beareth, s. a castle, a. standing in waves b. over the same a falcon hovering with bells o.’(36)
Richard Carew – National Trust, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The Lanyon coat of arms over the principal entryway at Lanyon was placed there in 1668, sixty-eight years after Carew wrote, yet it accords precisely with the arms described by that historian. Carew was writing, of course about the Lanyons who lived in Breage parish, gentry which achieved financial and political success outside their county as merchants, politicians and courtiers in Plymouth and London, quite possibly, however this blazon was employed generally by the younger branches of the Lanyon family. There is no evidence that the ‘waves of the sea’ were ever incorporated in the coat of arms of the senior branch.
In St Bartholomew’s church in Lostwithiel, is a handsome monument to the Doctors Lanyon, even yet of distinguished memory in the area. This memorial incorporates, at its base, the Lanyon coat of arms, quartering Trelissick and Militon. The Lanyon arms, however, differ notably from the coat of arms erected over the porch at Lanyon, Gwinear. The waves of the sea disappear; the castle is more or less in perspective; the mount rises from the castle courtyard and the falcon rises from this mount. In fact, as will have been noted, these arms are virtually identical to those shown in the 1530 drawing. One wonders why, with the evidence of the Gwinear Lanyon arms readily available over the doorway at nearby Lanyon, those responsible for the creation of the church memorial would have reverted to arms used at least 319 years previously, and clearly not those of the Gwinear branch. The coat of arms quarters the arms of the Militons of Pengersick castle, thus probably reflecting a traditionally accepted descent from that family. Unfortunately, however, at least for the sake of monumental accuracy, the Gwinear Lanyons were not descended from the marriage between John Lanyon of Lanyon and Philippa daughter and coheiress of William Militon of Pengersick and the Gwinear branch was not entitled to quarter the Militon arms. The quartering of the Trelissick arms on the shield of the monument is, however, entirely correct, since all branches of the Madron Lanyon so far identified descend from the marriage of Richard Lanyon of Lanyon with Isabell daughter of David Trelissick.
The monument was erected sometime following the death of Richard Lanyon, M.D. on 10 September 1850. He and his father, another Dr Richard Lanyon who died on 19 April 1848 were memorialised on this monument, commissioned by their heir, Rodolphus Edward Lanyon. The tablet is signed at the left-facing base “Edgecombe” and at the corresponding right-facing base “Truro”. It would appear however that by the mid-eighteen hundreds the surviving members of the Gwinear Lanyon family had lost the precise details of their descent heraldically or otherwise.
Sacred to the memory of Richard Lanyon, Esq., Surgeon, &C. He was descended from the ancient families of Lanyon in Madron and Gwinear, and having passed a long life in the active discharge of the most philanthropic and Christian duties, and filled the highest offices in the corporation of this town, died on the 19th of April, 1848; æt. 82. As he lived, so he died,–a Christian. Also of his son Richard Lanyon, M.D., F.A.S., &c., who for many years successfully practised his profession in his native town, where he was well known for his antiquarian researches, and his literary and scientific attainments ; he also zealously and usefully filled the highest offices in the corporation, and died humbly relying on the merits of his Redeemer, Sept. 10th, 1852; æt.53. This monument is erected by Radolphus Edward Lanyon, as a tribute to their worth, and a mark of his gratitude.(Not part of the original article.)
It must be noted that these Lanyon families may have developed the simpler castle design because of the difficulty of reproducing the castle on the coat of arms in perspective. In close-up work, as for example, in the execution of seals, the rendering of the perspective castle is difficult and the newer ‘en plein’ version may have come into use or have been adopted. That evolution no matter how likely, does not explain away ‘the waves of the sea, azure.’ One wonders whether the ‘waves’ were not adapted as a difference by the cadet branches with a reference to the geographical proximity of St Michael’s Mount in Cornwall or, more remotely, to Mont St Michel in Brittany (now Normandy) in a gesture to a faintly recalled tradition relating to the Lanyons’ Breton descent. That is rather fanciful; very probably we shall never know.
In subsequent years, other interpretations of the Lanyon coat of arms appeared. Bequeathed to me, together with a helpful manuscript collection by Dr E A Bullmore, is a wax and seal impression of the coat of arms of John Jenkinson Lanyon, progenitor of the wrongly called Irish Lanyons. Impressed in red sealing wax, it was sent by Miss Mitchell to Dr Bullmore in 1927 and it is identified by her as John Jenkinson Lanyon’s fob seal of Lanyon arms (18th century). The seal quite closely resembles the arms over the Lanyon porch at Gwinear (except for the shape of the shield) with respect to waves of the sea, castle and falcon. The crest is a falcon rising and there is no motto. A traditional younger branch Lanyon coat of arms. We do not yet know the parentage of John Jenkinson Lanyon, progenitor of a distinguished Lanyon branch but if Miss Mitchell’s statement is to be taken at face value, John Jenkinson Lanyon had in his possession presumably by inheritance, a perfectly valid seal of the Lanyon coat of arms. Even though the traditional descent of this branch of the Lanyons has not yet been documented, the presumptive evidence of their descent from the Cornish Lanyons was apparently sufficient for the Ulster King at Arms to grant Sir Charles Lanyon, John’s son, a derivative Lanyon coat of arms (37). Fox-Davies (38) blazons it ‘Gules, on waves of the sea azure, a castle of two towers, on the battlements thereof a falcon rising all proper, on a chief or, a pallet between two gyrons of the field. Crest – on a mount vert, a falcon rising proper, belled and jessed or. Motto – ‘Vive ut Vivas’.
Sir Charles Lanyon’s coat of arms
John Jenkinson Lanyon married Catherine Anne, daughter of Charles Smith Mortimer, Esq. of Eastbourne, Sussex and Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Russell of Eastbourne. The Mortimer coat of arms is reflected in the grant to Sir Charles Lanyon: ‘….on a chief or, a pallet between two gyrons of the field.’
Other, however, and variant Lanyon coats of arms are extant in Cornwall and in America. Some years ago I looked upon these variants with some degree of scepticism as having derived from a total lack of understanding or comprehension of the original coat of arms. Just as, however the Gwinear arms may have been altered for the reasons shown (a difference, a technological difficulty or both) the evolution of the Lanyon coat of arms may have been that: an evolution, based upon an error of interpretation, mistaken reportage, or faulty memory. We are, none the less, faced with the fact too in later days the ‘official’ historians did nothing to assist Lanyon (or perhaps any other armigerous descendants) in blazoning their arms. For example nothing could be more absurd than the Burkes’ 1844 blazon of the Lanyon arms as ‘Sa. a castle with four towers ar. a falcon, hovering, with bells ppr. Crest – on a mount vert. within a castle with four towers ar. a falcon standing on waves of the sea az. above volant, ppr.’(39). The crest itself is a remarkable product; one wonders about those waves of the sea azure sparkling above the mount vert with the Lanyon falcon standing thereon. In the 1878 blazon, the crest remained the same, but the arms are describes as ‘Gu.,on waves of the sea az. a square castle in perspective, with a tower at each corner or, in the courtyard of the field a falcon ppr. rising from the mount vert.’(40). The source given is the 1620 visitation however in the ‘Visitation of the County of Cornwall in the year 1620’ edited by Vivian and Drake, the Lanyon arms are blazoned as ‘Gu. on a square castle in perspective with a tower at each corner or, a falcon p’pr rising from a mound Vert in the courtyard of the field.’(41).
Drawing of the Lanyon coat of arms (castle in perspective)
Seemingly this description compounds error upon error to the point of heraldic absurdity with the castle set at an angle (in perspective?) and repeated as the crest. Interestingly enough, the St Allen Lanyons seem to have adapted the Burke blazon of the Lanyon arms as theirs and in one of a series of striking stained-glass windows in St Allen parish church, dedicated to various members of that family, the Lanyon coat of arms is shown in what must be regarded by constructionists in a highly unusual manner. Who, however, is to say that even without official sanction that display is not quite valid as sanctioned by Burke, who however careless in his methods carried with him the authority of the establishment (42). Too, it will be recognised, the evolution of a coat of arms over several hundred years might be subject to the interpretation of the various artists who perhaps with little or no heraldic education and depending upon the perhaps faulty memories of the possessors of the arms, might have been unable to reproduce the nuances of complicated blazons on funerary or other monuments or memorials.
The St Allen Lanyons did well; one needs only to visit their houses, still well preserved, in order to judge. Too, in America, many of their descendants are among our more prosperous and finer citizens. It does not, however, necessarily follow that these Lanyon descendants were heraldic experts nor, indeed, that either they nor the artisans whom they employed were so skilled. One might proceed one step further and suggest the interpretation and evolution of arms as a matter of folk art. That expansion is beyond the scope of this paper.
Stained glass window with Lanyon coat of arms in a Lanyon house in Pittsburg Kansas
But to pursue, for the moment, the conception of heraldry as folk art, in May 1972 I was again in the St Allen church with a St Allen descended cousin and her husband both of whom are skilled amateur photographers. During that visit, and a subsequent one, they took many pictures of the Lanyon windows in the church. It was not until they visited my home a year and a half later, when they showed the photographs to me that I noticed an unusual and I believe unique alteration to the traditional Lanyon crest: the expected Falcon held in its beak a tiny cross or. Never before, nor since seen in Lanyon heraldry. One wonders now what family member, what artist, added this charge and why. Surely without sanction of the College of Arms and thus perhaps without collegiate validity. Yet as folk, or even personal art, a fascinating development in the evolution of the Lanyon coat of arms, at least borne by St Allen Lanyons. One acknowledges here the public lack of distinction between an inheritable coat armour and a non-inheritable coat of arms including a personal crest which qua crest, may vary from one possessor to the next.
Thanks to Mark Charter for permission to use pictures of the stained glass windows from St Allen church. (Bill is incorrect there is not a small cross in the falcon’s mouth.)
Study of the manuscripts of the late Charles Henderson, housed in the Royal Institution of Cornwall has been helpful. His sketches or tricks of the wax impressions of the Lanyon coat of arms used by the various Lanyons of west Cornwall reveal that there was no uniformity in their employment. It is quite apparent that each of the Lanyons entitled to the use of the arms employed or displayed the coat armour in a slightly different manner. One wonders whether these variations are attributable to the skill and imagination of the seal engraver, or to some wish by the possessor for his personal ‘difference’.
These are additional notes which were intended to be incorporated into the article.
Aide Memoire – 14 Jun 1978
On Tuesday afternoon, 9 March 1976, I called at the College of Arms, Queen Victoria Street, London and was received by P.Ll. Gwynn-Jones, M.A., Bluemantle Pursuivant. The purpose of my visit was two-fold: first, to reintroduce myself to the college of Arms where I had twice previously visited, circa 1949, with (now Sir) Anthony Wagner and, some years later, with Mr. Trappes-Lomax, now deceased; second, to enquire concerning the Lanyon family coat of arms incorporated in two stained glass memorial windows in the St Allen parish church in Cornwall.
Among my Lanyon papers is a typewritten copy of what appears to be a copy of a newspaper article relating to two of the Lanyon memorial windows in the St Allen church. The typescript is headed ‘The Lanyons from Henver and St Allen Church’ – from the Cornwall Advertiser. The principal subject of the paper is a window erected in the St Allen Church in 1889 by Simon Henry Lanyon {in memory of John & Peggy Lanyon (43)} and of his father, Simon, their fourth son. The article continues:
‘This is the second window in this church in memory of the Henver Lanyons. The first is to the memory of Henry and Isabella Lanyon, the said Henry being cousin and Isabella the sister of the above-mentioned John Lanyon and the parents of Miss Henrietta Lanyon, of Truro, a lady well known for her gifts to Truro Cathedral, especially the donor of the beautiful lectern bearing her name.’
Enough is known of these nineteenth century Lanyons and Henrietta’s lectern with its Latin inscription is still in Truro cathedral. The article, however, fails to mention that there are, in fact, two memorial windows in the St Allen church, one dedicated to Captain Henry Lanyon R.N., and the other to his wife Isabella Lanyon. The newspaper article implies an installation date earlier than 1889; the window dedicated to the husband reads ‘Henrici Lanyon R.N’ and ‘obit 8 Decembris 1862’, while that dedicated to the wife reads ‘et Isabella Lanyon’ and ‘obit 18 Maii 1852.’ The windows dedicated to Captain Lanyon and his wife flank the altar. One would like to think that they were installed simultaneously; if so, the date of their erection may be placed between 1863-1889.
Christ Saves Peter from Drowning – stained glass window in memory of Henry and Isabella Lanyon at St Allen Church – by kind permission of Mark Charter.
It is these two windows to which this paper is addressed and, more specifically, to the identical coat of arms of the Lanyon family incorporated in each window.
The bird traditionally associated with Lanyon heraldry is a falcon proper. This is true whether the bird is shown on the shield, rising from a mount vert, as in the 1531 painting of the coat of arms at the College of Arms, or whether shown on the crest. The birds in the St Allen windows under consideration, however, are white and, indeed, more resemble doves than falcons. As well, their heads, from necks to tops, including beaks, are or, a combination not seen elsewhere in Lanyon heraldry. Finally, in these memorial windows, a curious and indecipherable object rests on the tops of the heads of these interesting birds.
‘a curious and indecipherable object rests on the tops of the heads of these interesting birds’
I submitted this problem of interpretation, as illustrated by the colour photographs taken in 1973 by Emily. B. Lueck to Mr Gwynn-Jones. He suggests that the design for the coats of arms which appear in the two windows was probably first shown to the artisans who executed the windows by means of a drawing by an artist who was perhaps unfamiliar with heraldry, or blazonry, and who had mistaken the traditional Lanyon falcon as a white dove, rising, with a nimbus of the same, superimposed by a cross, or. While admitting the possibility of artistic license, as well, Mr Gwynn-Jones points out that ‘the bird which the artist has possibly mistaken for a dove, as indicated by the white colour of the bird, has a nimbus or glory behind its head. However, the bird is also hooded which suggests that the nimbus is derived from an erroneous interpretation of the crest or feathers which were often placed on top of a falcon’s hood, with a curious result.’ Whatever the artist’s intention, each of the birds as shown in the St Allen church in both windows, on the shields as well as on the crests, must be described as ‘a bird, white, hooded or, with a nimbus, white, on which is superimposed a cross, or. (Bells, Beaked and Legged.)
The castle design on the St Allen shields is interesting as well, although not unique as are the birds. The dimensions of the castles shown on the two shields are nearly as monumental as those shown in the painting of the Lanyon arms taken during or shortly following the Herald’s Visitation of the County of Cornwall in 1530. The four towers are present, but the structure is not drawn ‘in perspective’, as Vivian describes, and the castle is drawn as a large, fortified structure of great height, crenelated, multi-fenestered (sic), the principal entry through a pointed archway. No ‘courtyard’ is shown, obviously, therefore, the ‘mount vert rising from the courtyard of the field’ is omitted, and the bird above the St Allen castle must be described as ‘volant‘, rather than, as in the original painting, ‘rising’ or, as sometimes, ‘hovering’. Too, and curiously, particularly when considering the potentials of stained glass, the traditional and vivid coloration of the received coat of arms, and its variants, are missing from the St Allen coat of arms which is executed chiefly in white, gold, and black. This is especially noteworthy when considered with respect to the other St Allen Lanyon windows, richly furnished with red, blue, gold and even black colorations and might well be an indication that the sketch from which the windows’ creators worked was executed in black and white rather than in colour or, even, blazoned.
The other Lanyon memorial window with its bright colours. Reproduced by kind permission of Mark Charter – Cornish Stained Glass
The origin of the Lanyon coat of arms has for years been a matter of conjecture, often fanciful. As will be seen elsewhere, it was the historian David Gilbert who, in 1838, stated that ‘…they {the Lanyons} originally…. came from the town of Lanyon, situate upon a sea haven, or harbour, in France {and} they still give the arms of that town for their paternal coat armour, viz. in a field Sable, a castle Argent, standing on waves of the sea Azure, over the same a falcon hovering with bells.’
This is a widely repeated theory. To date however there is no evidence to support the assertion. In discussing the possible origin of the Lanyon coat of arms with Mr Gwynn-Jones, however, he observes that it seems quite likely to him that the arms might have been an adaptation or a copy of some kind of corporate seal. His observation suggests a re-evaluation of Mr Gilbert’s assertion. More factually, however, is our knowledge that when the King’s Heralds recorded the arms of Lanyon of Lanyon in 1530, it was simply a recording of arms already in use and not a fresh grant.
There is also this note to be incorporated into the article:-
‘Lanyon, properly Lanion, from Lan-eithon, the furzy croft.’
References: Sadly the notes and references are incomplete, I have filled in blanks where they are known.
Lanyon MSS letter dated ? From JAVIM to Dr EA Bullmore.
This suggestion was first put forth to the author during his visit to Dr EA Bullmore in Falmouth Cornwall in Sep 1948.
Calendar of Patent Rolls PRO- Edward III, Vol VIII
{Left blank}
{Left blank}
{Left blank} (note- the digitised book is available on Cornwall OPC website – Madron parish – bottom of the page.)
A New Cornish-English Dictionary by R Morton-Nance
Cornish names by TFG Dexter. Longmans, Green. London 1926 p.33
Ibid p.33
The Parochial History of Cornwall by daviesGilbert. JB Nichols and Son. London 1838, Vol II p.142
{Left blank}
Dictionaire de la Noblesse. De La Chenaye-Desbois et Badier Vol XI, col. 456-60. Paris 1867, 3eme Ed.
{Left blank}
{Left blank}
Gilbert. Op.cit. vol II p 142.
Lanyon MSS, letter dated 10 March 1911 from John Lanyon to HT Smith, 115 Broadway, New York City.
John Lanyon was associated with Lanyon’s Detective Agency, 240 Broadway, New York City. There is no further trace of him.
Harry Theodore Sherwood Smith I, 1971-1940 was the author’s grandfather. He was married to Elizabeth Arthur Lanyon 1870-1954 in Brooklyn, King’s County, New York, on 22 September 1896.
Letter from R Morton Nance to Edward Augustus Bullmore M.D. original in possession of the author. Copy furnished to the Royal Institution of Cornwall.
Observations of the Antiquities Historical and Monumental of the County of Cornwall by William Borlase. Oxford. Printed by W Jackson, 1754
John Penrose by JC Tregarthen. John Murray first edition, London. 1923.
Curia Regis Rolls. Vol VII 1213-1315 Published by HM Stationary Office 1935. Trinity Term 16 John m.12d. p 193
Feet of Fines. Co Cornwall. 28 Henry III (28 Oct 1243-27 Oct 1244)
Calendar of the Patent Rolls preserved in the Public Record Office. Edw III, Vol VIII, 1348-1350. London: HM Stationery Office. 1905. P.548. 24 Edward III – Part II. Membrane 21. 3 June 1350, Westminster.
Bishop’s Register. Registrum Commune-Anno 21. A.D. 1390. Vol 1. Homajuim. P.697 {Reference supplied by JAVIM. Presumably this was a private chapel. Cf. Magna Britannia. Vol III Cornwall. Daniel and Samuel Lysons. London. T Cadell and W Davies. 1814. P 210.
Reference in the Royal Institution of Cornwall, 23 October 1462. HD/11/10
In his will, dated 16 September 1578, John Rayshlygh describes himself as ‘merchaunt’. Proved PCC 6 Nov 1582.
The Monumental Brasses of Cornwall by Edwin Hadlow Wise Duncan. First published 1882. Reproduced and reprinted in facsimile edition in 1970, Redwood Press Ltd Trowbridge and London
The Visitation of the County of Cornwall in the Year 1620 edited by Lieut-Col JL Vivian and Henry H Drake, London Mitchell & Hughes 1874 p. 306
{left blank}
Not ‘2 sonne’ as given in the Lanyon pedigree in the Visitations of the County of Cornwall, 1530, 1573 and 1620. Edited by Lt-Col JL Vivian. Exeter: William Pollard & Co 1887 p.281.
{Left blank} (Gwinear Parish Register)
{Left blank} (Royal Institution of Cornwall 19 Jan 1589 HJ/3/12)
Magna Britannica Vol III Cornwall. Daniel and Samuel Lysons. London ; T Cadoll & W Davies 1814 p.128
{Left blank} (Epitome of Exchequer Deposition 10 Chas I Mich 41 (25 Jun 1634)
{Left blank} (Survey of Cornwall by Richard Carew 1602)
Lanyon MSS letter in my possession from Major Charley Valentine Lanyon, 30th October 1947
Armorial Families by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies. London T.C and E.C Jack. 1910
Encyclopaedia of Heraldry, or General Armory of England, Scotland and Ireland. John Burke, Esq and John Bernard Burke, Esq. London 1844
The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. Sir Bernard Burke, London 1878.
The Visitation of the County of Cornwall in the Year 1620 edited by Lt-Col JL Vivian 1874.
Dictionary of National Biography
The words John & Peggy omitted in Bill’s text.
Personnae
Edward Augustus Bullmore F.R.C.S., F.S.A., 1875-1948 was an authority on the Bulmer family. In recognition of his contributions to that genealogy he was made a Fellow of the Society of Antiquarians. Through his marriage to Hilda Maude Lanyon, he became interested in the history of the Lanyon family and for some years corresponded frequently with Miss Jane Veale Mitchell of Newquay East. Dr Bullmore, at least in part, apparently underwrote the expenses which Miss Mitchell incurred in researching the Lanyon family history. In 1948, the author, having corresponded with Dr Bullmore concerning Lanyon matters for two years, visited him at his residence in Falmouth and was permitted to borrow many of his Lanyon MSS. including the entire Bullmore-Mitchell correspondence. Upon his death, later in 1948, Dr Bullmore’s youngest son, Dr G H Lanyon Bullmore, wrote to the author to confirm the loan as a bequest by his father.
William Smith Lamparter, M.A., 1926- 1992, the author is descended from the Lanyons through his maternal grandmother, Elizabeth Arthur Lanyon. He has been researching the Lanyon family history for some years in Cornwall, London and in America. This is his first ‘published’ article on the family. Mr Lamparter is vice-president of the Century Furniture Company in Hickory, North Carolina.
Jane Veale Mitchell 1866-1929 was a daughter of Samuel Mitchell and his wife Jane Veale Lanyon, and was descended through her mother from the St Allen Lanyons. An indefatigable Lanyon scholar her connection with Dr Bullmore began in 1925 when he wrote her a letter of enquiry following publication in the Western Morning News of an article which she had written about the Lanyons. A lively correspondence ensued, involving suggestions, research and data exchange, lasting until 1929. By that time, Miss Mitchell had prepared and had reproduced, on four large pages, a heavily annotated holographic pedigree of the Lanyon family 1215-1928. Three of these pedigrees are known to be in private possession. The disposition of Miss Mitchell’s Lanyon MSS following her death in 1929 is uncertain.
Article written by William S Lamparter during the 1970s for publication in the Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall.
William was baptised at Sancreed in 1680, the son of William Lanyon and Jane Keigwin. We don’t know the name of his wife but his sons John & Thomas lived at Fowey (see the post ‘Fowey Boys’).
A William Lanyon of Sancreed was excommunicated on 16th Jan 1722 for contumacy (stubborn refusal to obey or comply with authority, especially disobedience to a court order or summons). Source NA ARD/160/24 – National Archives Archdeanery of Cornwall.
William was excommunicated by Lancelot Blackburne, the Bishop of Exeter.
Lancelot Blackburne – Attributed to Joseph Highmore, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
We don’t know what he did but it must have been bad enough for the Bishop of Exeter to get involved and for William to move to Fowey and raise his children away from Sancreed.
Mary Ann Lanyon was born abt. 1858 at Hayle in Cornwall but I can’t find a record of her birth or her parents’ marriage. Her father was John Lanyon the son of Thomas Lanyon and Ann Uren and her mother was Emma Jane and perhaps her surname was Elems, Elums or Bassett!
John was a boilermaker, steam engineer and in 1861 the family were living in Tavistock, Devon. It’s not clear if John died or just abandoned his family but by 1864 his ‘wife’ had remarried to William Barrett, a fisherman, almost ten years younger than she was.
Children from her ‘marriage’ to John Lanyon:
Mary Ann Lanyon1858-1925
William Thomas Lanyon 1859-1859
Emma Jane Lanyon 1862-
Children from her marriage to William Barrett:
Elizabeth Barrett 1869-
Beatrice Barrett 1874-
Bessie Barrett 1876-
Florence barrett 1870-
William Barrett 1878-
At the age of sixteen Mary Ann had her first illegitimate child, Kate and two years later she had Edith Annie. In 1879 she had twin boys, Francis and Alfred. By 1881 she was in the St Germans Union workhouse with her twins and expecting her fifth illegitimate child. She was just 24 years old. The census described her as a fish saleswoman and a pauper. Whilst she was in the workhouse her daughters Kate and Edith were living with her mother.
Her fifth child was William John Glanville Lanyon. Her sixth child was Hetty Roseanna Beer born in 1884. Mary Ann married Hetty’s father, William Henry Beer in 1885. William was a journeyman tailor born in Saltash in 1860. They had three more children before William died in 1896: William George Henry 1886 (her second son called William, the first was known as John), James Robert Beer 1888, Beatrice Florence (Betty) Beer 1890.
Two years after her husband’s death Frederick Charles Beer was born in 1898. According to the 1911 census she had twelve children altogether and three died. There are two still to trace.
In 1901 she was working as a charwoman and in 1911 she was living with her four single sons: Alfred (an invalid), Francis, John and George.
Settlement Certificates or Paupers Passports were documents that in effect permitted poor people to travel between parishes usually to look for work.
Under the old Poor Law everyone was deemed to have a home parish or place of settlement. The Act for the Better Relief of the Poor of 1662 (Act of Settlement) was an attempt to provide for the poorest, to prevent migration and to restrict the arrival of vagrants who may become an expense for the parish.
In effect it tied labourers to a particular parish and enabled employers to exploit them and pay poor wages as they could not leave to search for work elsewhere.
Eventually Settlement Certificates were issued. These documents proved an individual’s parish of settlement, enabling him or her to move to other parishes, perhaps to find work. Without one, a migrant was liable to be sent back to his or her parish of settlement. Settlement certificates could be issued for individuals or whole families. They guaranteed that their home parish would pay for their ‘removal’ costs (from the host parish) back to their home if they needed poor relief.
If a removal order was issued the Settlement Certificate would be pinned to the pauper and they would be returned to their home parish.
In 1834 the New Poor Law was brought in and ensured that paupers were clothed, housed and fed but many still encountered terrible problems when they fell on hard times.
Poor Law of 1834 in Britain – Public Domain
This post is about Louisa Lanyon and the order to remove her and her child from St Allen to Mawgan in Meneage in 1856.
Louisa was the wife of Thomas Lanyon. She was baptised on 22 Apr 1821 at Kenwyn in Cornwall, the daughter of Soloman and Ann Williams. Thomas was the son of James Lanyon and Ann Rogers and was baptised in 1819 in Mawgan in Meneage. James, a widower, got Ann Rogers pregnant and had to marry her. He became a father again at the age of 60!
Thomas married his first wife Mary Whilley abt. 1840 and they had two children, James and Mary Ann. Mary died in 1844 and Thomas married for a second time in 1845 to Louisa Rawling Williams at St Allen.
Thomas was a labourer/husbandman and he died of kidney disease on 4 Nov 1855 at St Allen aged just 36. Louisa was left a widow with a young son, John Henry Lanyon and James and Mary Ann were left orphans.
The Parish of St Allen, full of compassion for the young widow and her son, promptly ordered her removal back to Mawgan in Meneage, her husband’s home parish (wives automatically assumed the home parish of their husband on marriage) even though Louisa had never lived there or knew anyone there.
Louisa appealed:
Removal Order Appeal – 9 April* 1856 – Louisa Lanyon, widow, and son St. Allen to Mawgan in Meneage
MAWGAN IN MENEAGE, appellant; Mr. Shilson and Mr. F.V. Hill. ST. ALLEN, respondent; Mr. Childs and Mr. Chilcott.—An appeal against an order by H.P. Andrew, Esq., and W.P. Kempe, Esq., for removal of Louisa Lanyon, widow, and John Henry, her son, aged 7 years, from the parish of St. Allen, to Mawgan in Meneage.
Settlement in respondent parish being admitted, the appellant set up a settlement of pauper’s deceased husband in the parish of Cury, by hiring and service with Mr. James Randle, farmer, of Colvenor in that parish.
Mr. CHILDS took a preliminary objection to the ground of appeal in which it was alleged that, ‘in or about the year 1831,’ the pauper’s husband, Thomas Lanyon, hired himself to James Randle of Cury,—the objection being that the words ‘in or about the year 1831’ were not sufficiently definite to establish a complete year’s service prior to the year 1834—the date of the Poor Law Act, which abolished settlement by hiring and service. In support of the objection Mr. Childs cited the cases of St. Ann’s Westminster, and St. Paul’s Covent Garden.
The Court overruled the objection, and held that the grounds of appeal would enable the appellant to go on.
Mr. SHILSON then stated the nature of the appellant’s case—for establishing a settlement of the pauper’s deceased husband in Cury. The deceased being born in 1819 was in or about 1831 hired, by agreement made in his behalf by his mother, to Mr. James Randle of Colvenor, as a yearly servant; and in two subsequent years, he served in a similar way, by fresh agreements made in his behalf by his mother.
In support of this case, Mr. SHILSON examined Ann Lanyon, aged 75 years, mother of the deceased Thomas Lanyon; and Samuel Hendy, aged 40, who at the time of Thomas Lanyon’s service with James Randle, was living with his father at Sawanna, within one field of Colvenor, and was in the habit of seeing Thomas Lanyon at labour on the farm; and the COURT, on the evidence adduced, held that the settlement in Cury had been made out.
Mr. CHILDS proposed to rebut the evidence of dates by counter evidence. He would show that at the time Lanyon went into the service of Randle, he was of the age of 14 years, and consequently, on the evidence of his birth in 1819, the time of his entering that service was in September 1833, and the conclusion of the year’s service would not have been until after the passing of the Poor Law Act, in August 1834. This evidence of the period of service would be corroborated by an account book, belonging to Mr. James Randle of Colvenor, who would also prove that Lanyon was not in his service more that twelve months. If these facts were substantiated, then the respondent’s case was fully made out; while the appellants could not maintain their case, unless they showed, without doubt, that the alleged settlement in Cury was clearly prior to the passing of the Poor Law Act.
The witnesses called and examined for the respondent, were Mr. James Randle of Colvenor; his servant Martha Rogers; and his son Samuel Randle, now living at Stithians.
The Court held that the settlement in Cury was gained previous to the statute of August 1834. Order quashed, £5 costs.
Source: Royal Cornwall Gazette 11 April 1856 (Cornwall Easter Sessions)
It’s quite a distance to remove someone from their family and friends.
By 1861 (source – the census) Louisa Lanyon (a charwoman) was living in St Allen with her mother Ann Williams (a charwoman) and her son John Henry who was 13 and working as an agricultural labourer.
By 1864 at the age of 43 she was dead. In 1868 Ann Williams was dead. We don’t know what happened to John Henry Lanyon, did he die, did he emigrate, did he use a different name? There is a John Henry Lanyon who died in Lincolnshire in 1935 is it the same person?
What happened to his half brother and sister?
James Lanyon 1841-1883 married Mary Ann Kempe. He worked as an agricultural labourer and they never had any children.
Mary Ann Lanyon 1842-1908 married Richard Grigg, a carrier, in 1883 at Penzance and they never had any children.
Perhaps becoming orphans put them off ever having children of their own.
Whilst researching the family tree I discovered that there were several beautiful windows erected in memory of various Lanyons. Whilst the photos are included on the site along with the individuals concerned I thought it worth creating a page with all the windows together.
I’d like to thank Dr Mark Charter the webmaster of Cornish Stained Glass Windows https://www.cornishstainedglass.org.uk for permission to use the photos.
Camborne Church
Christ healing the impotent man at the pool of Bethesda.
Made by Alexander Gibbs 1864. Erected by Charlotte Lanyon (Reynolds) in memory of her husband Edward who died in 1861. (Post about Edward in Gwinear Branch – Christ and the Impotent Man!).
St Allen Church
Chancel East
Christ saves Peter from drowning.
Made in 1874 possibly by Lavers and Barreau. Erected by Henrietta Lanyon in memory of her parents Henry Lanyon and Isabella Lanyon. (Post about Henry & Isabella in St Allen branch – ‘Captain Cork!’)
Detail of Christ saving Peter
Lanyon Arms and family motto ‘Vive ut Vivas’.
Nave North 3
Made in 1889 by Arthur Louis Moore
Christ’s commission to Peter: “Feed my sheep” – Panel 1 in memory of John and Peggy Lanyon of Henver. (Post about John and Peggy in St Allen branch – ‘Henry and Mary Lanyon’s Sons’.)
Suffer little children – Panel 2 in memory of Simon Lanyon John and Peggy’s fourth son who died at Mineral Point, Wisconsin. (Post about Simon Lanyon in St Allen branch – Henry Lanyon and Mary Searle’s Grandsons part. 1.)
Healing of a man born blind – erected by Simon Henry Lanyon son of Simon Lanyon on his visit to England in 1889. (Post about Simon Lanyon in St Allen branch – Henry Lanyon and Mary Searle’s Grandsons part. 1.)
Detail Panel 1Detail Panel 2Detail Panel 3
Nave North 4
Made in 1910, maker unknown.
In memory of Eliel Lanyon of Henver, son of John and Peggy Lanyon of Trevalsa, St Allen, died 10th October 1909 aged 86.
Detail Panel 1Detail Panel 2Detail Panel 3
St Stithians
North Aisle East
Window erected in memory of Richard Lanyon of Kennal Vale and of Acton Castle, died 8th December 1863 aged 66.
Made in 1864, maker not known.
Decorative panels with diagonal memorial inscription in centre light. Lanyon arms (Polsue).
James Lanyon and Mary Pearce had six great grandsons to carry on the family name: two called Thomas, two called William and two called John!
Thomas Lanyon 1783-1859
Thomas was baptised in Marazion in 1783 and married Ann Uren at Gwinear in 1826. Thomas was a shoemaker. He and Ann had six children:
Hannah Uren 1827- married John Philips at Phillack in 1850 one daughter traced
Thomas 1829-1914was a blacksmith and he married Elizabeth Williams in 1854. Four children.
Catherine 1832- she was a labourer and may be the Catherine Lanyon who married Thomas Drew in 1852, no further trace.
William 1835-1878 he was an engine driver and married Mary Jenkyn at Phillack in 1859, six children of which only two daughters survived to adulthood.
John 1837-1861 was a boilermaker and steam engineer, he married Emma Jane and had three children, we’ll follow his daughter Mary Ann Lanyon in a separate post ‘The Woman in the White Apron’.
Elizabeth J 1846- she’s on the 1851 census and then no further trace
William Lanyon 1791-1871
William was a cordwainer/shoemaker like his brother Thomas. He married Elizabeth Andrewartha at St Hilary in 1825. They had four children:
William 1826-1892 he was a miner and married Jane Bleweth at St Hilary in 1850 – eight children
Richard Henry 1828- 1871 he was a cordwainer, no trace of a marriage or children
Elizabeth Jane 1830-1887 married John Andrewartha at Penzance in 1855 – six daughters
Thomas 1831-1904 he married Mary Whear in 1851. He was a miner and by 1881 he had moved his family to Barrow in Furness, twelve children
Apprentice domestic shoemaker in the 19th century. Image taken from The Band of Hope Review November 1861. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
John Lanyon 1793-1869
John was baptised at Breage in 1793 and married Mary Hammill at Sithney in 1817. He was a tin miner. They had eleven children:
John & Mary’s tree
Mary Ann 1820-1889 married Henry Martin and four children, emigrated to Mineral Point Wisconsin
Catherine 1822-1824 died in infancy
Catherine 1824-1871 born in the Scilly Isles, married Robert Sedgman a mariner, at Porthleven in 1851, he died in 1856 and in 1858 she married Henry Goodman, a miner, and they had three daughters.
William 1824-1847 born at St Mary’s in the Scilly Isles and died at Bodmin Asylum age 22, he was suffering from TB and epilepsy
John 1825-1874 born at St Mary’s in the Scilly Isles he was a tin miner, he married Mary Rogers at Sithney in 1848. They had nine children
Ellen 1826-1905 baptised at Sithney and married James Rogers there in 1847, three children
Jane 1829-1830 died in infancy
Florence 1832-1897 married John Martin in 1850, four children and emigrated to Mineral Point Wisconsin
Blanch Hammill 1833-1833 died in infancy
Grace Hammill 1833-1833 died in infancy (it’s not clear if they are twins)
Blanch Hammill 1835-1888 married John Pascoe a miner at Camborne in 1861, five children
Thomas was baptised at Mawgan in Meneage in 1819. He was a farm labourer. His first marriage was to Mary Whilley and there were two children:
James 1841-1883
Mary Ann 1842-1908
Mary Whilley died in 1844 and was buried at Kea. He them married for a second time to Louisa Rawling Williams at St Allen in 1845. There was one child from this marriage:
John Henry 1849-1935
Thomas died of kidney disease in 1855 aged just 36. We’ll find out what happened to his widow and children in the post ‘Pauper’s Passport’.
Charles Lanyon died at Falmouth in 1748 and is probably the Charles Lanyon baptised at St Hilary in 1687. His first marriage to Grace Berteau produced one son, Charles. This post is about him and his descendants.
Charles was baptised at Falmouth in 1711 (Source – FHL Film 267525) and married Mary Tresedder at Mawnan in 1739. They had six children:
Charles & Mary’s tree
Samuel 1739-1830
Mary 1741- married Crousley Shovel Flaxman (what a great name!), a mariner, at Falmouth in 1761
Grace 1744- married Richard Stannings, a mariner, at Falmouth in 1773
Charles 1746-1754 died young
Margery Wills 1749-1823 spinster
John 1756-1774 drowned at Falmouth, age 18
Charles died at Falmouth in 1762 and his wife Mary Tresedder died in 1773.
Samuel Lanyon 1739-1830
In 1755 Samuel was apprenticed to Richard Hosken of Falmouth, a carpenter, cost £13 10/- (Source – Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices Indentures). In 1764 he married Elizabeth Saltren (Sic) and they had six children:
Charles & Elizabeth’s tree
John Salter 1765-1812 he was a merchant and a bachelor. He died at Bodmin in 1812 and his father Samuel administered his estate.
Samuel 1767-1805 he worked for the East India Company as a seaman on the packet ‘Swallow’. He died in 1805 and administration of his estate was granted to his father Samuel. Samuel Junior was a bachelor.
East India Company Ships – Thomas Whitcombe, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Martha 1770- married George Burne at Falmouth in 1806
Philip was the only one of Samuel’s sons to have children. He was baptised at Falmouth in 1777 and became a carpenter like his father and in later life a farmer. In 1802 he married Prudence Body at Falmouth and they had seven children:
Philip & Prudence’s tree
Philip Body 1802-1892
Harriett 1804-1891 In 1826 Harriett had an illegitimate daughter, Eliza. Harriett never married and lived with her father until his death and then with her niece Eliza. She then worked as a farm labourer in her 70s! By 1891 she was in the workhouse and listed as a pauper. She died there in Nov 1891. Her daughter Eliza married Joseph Lawrence and they had six children
Samuel 1807-1808 died in infancy
Mary 1811-1813 died in infancy
Martha 1814-1815 died in infancy
Samuel George 1816-1894
Elizabeth 1819-aft.1841 she’s on the 1841 census as a dressmaker and no trace after that
Like his father Philip lived to the age of 90 and died in Falmouth in 1868. Philip left two sons who both had sons of their own to carry on the family name, Philip and Samuel.
Philip Body Lanyon 1802-1892
Philip was born at Germoe and baptised at Breage in 1802 he married Elizabeth Chinn (ten years his senior) at Falmouth in 1827 (his father was a witness). The census lists him variously as a farmer and carpenter. By 1871 the census notes that he is blind. They had two sons:
William Henry 1828-1871 he was a carpenter he died age 41, unmarried.
FALMOUTH.
INTERMENT OF A FORESTER.—On Sunday afternoon, the remains of the late Mr. W. H. Lanyon were interred in Falmouth cemetery. Deceased being a forester, about 150 members of that order formed in procession at their lodge-room, whence they repaired to the residence of the deceased to pay their last tribute of respect. About half-past three the funeral procession proceeded to the cemetery, the coffin being borne to the grave on the shoulders of the members. The burial service was impressively read by the Rev. J. Baly, rector, and that appointed by the Order by Mr. E. Gregg, Chief Ranger. A large concourse of spectators witnessed the proceedings.
William Henry LANYON of Swanpool Street, Parish of Falmouth, a carpenter aged 42, was buried at Falmouth Cemetery on 2 April 1871
Royal Cornwall Gazette 8 April 1871 Funeral of Mr. W.H. Lanyon
Thomas James 1830-1892 worked as an agricultural labourer he married Mary Ann Ould at Constantine in 1866, he’s listed as a widower but I can’t find an earlier marriage for him. On the 1851 census he is ‘unmarried’. On the 1861 census he is listed as married to Mary A from Mawnan who was born abt. 1827 and they have three children. On the 1871 census he’s married Mary A from Constantine who was born abt. 1831. Are they the same person and the dates of birth have been entered incorrectly?
A bit of research and head scratching revealed that Thomas had two wives both called Mary Ann Ould! What are the chances of that?
Wife number 1 married Thomas Q4 1851 at Falmouth. She was baptised at Mawnan in 1828 and called Marianne Ould, the daughter of Francis and Mary. She died at Mawnan 5 Jul 1861 aged just 33.
Wife number 2 married Thomas at Constantine in 1866. She was baptised at Constantine in 1832, the daughter of Emanuel and Jane. She died at Falmouth in 1909.
Presumably both women were cousins but I can’t find the connection.
There were four children of the first marriage:
Philip 1852-1915 he was a mariner in the Royal Navy, he married Mary Roberts but there were no children
Elizabeth Mary 1854-1894 a spinster
Emily Jane 1856-1914 she married Thomas Ivey in 1896 at Plymouth no children traced
Francis 1859-1860 died in infancy
Thomas James Lanyon died in 1892, his father Philip Body Lanyon outlived him. As Philip had no male great grandchildren this little branch of the tree died out.
Samuel was the youngest son of Philip Lanyon and Prudence Body. He was baptised at Falmouth and married Eliza Winn at Mawnan in 1843. Samuel was a mason. He and Eliza had eight children:
Eliza Jane 1844- married William Thomas Hillman in 1864 however the census records him as being called John Hillman, a mason, several children
Mary Ann 1845-1851 died young
Elizabeth 1848-1921 married Francis Henry Richardson in 1876 – nine children
Samuel 1850-1916 he was a shepherd. He married Elizabeth Mills in Q3 1900 but appears to have been married to another Elizabeth (Toy) before that. She’s listed on the census but I can’t trace a marriage. No children of either marriage.
Mary 1852-1924 married John Symons – several children
Harriet 1854-1856 died in infancy
William H 1856- he was a farmer at Lower Cardew farm near Redruth. He married Eliza Collins at Stithians in 1875. They had fourteen children! In 1916 they were in Canada and many of the children lived in the United States.
James and Mary had two sons and five grandsons to carry on the family name.
Thomas Lanyon 1750-1823
Thomas was baptised at Breage in 1750, he was a tinner at St Michael’s Mount and married Sibella Dusting/Disting at St Hilary in 1778. They had four children:
Catharine 1778-1779 died in infancy
Catharine 1781- in 1822 a Catherine Lanyon married Richard James at Breage could be this Catharine?
Thomas 1783-1859
William 1791-1871
Thomas senior was buried at St Hilary in 1823. Sibella was buried there in 1830.
Cornish Tin Mne – Internet Archive Book Images, No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons
James Lanyon 1758-bef. 1851
James was baptised at Breage in 1758, he too was a tinner and he married Ann Sirrell at Breage in 1789 (William Lenine was a witness). They had eight children:
Margaret 1790-1872 baptised at Germoe in 1790 and two possible marriages may be hers – William Pearce 1809 at Germoe and George Gregory 1838 at Uny Lelant – two children from the marriage to George
Ann 1791-1873 she married William Bosanko at Germoe in 1834 no children
Catherine 1793-1883 in 1818 she gave birth to an illegitimate daughter at Sithney (Catherine Lanyon of Rosladen, Breage). In 1822 she married Richard James a miner at Breage – three daughters. Catherine died at Germoe aged 90.
Florence 1796-1875 she married Joseph Thomas at Germoe in 1821 – six children
William 1799-1854 was a tin miner, he married Mary Curnow at Germoe in 1822 and they had four children: William 1824 no further trace, Maria 1827-aft. 1901 married John Thomas – six children and two daughters who died in infancy. He then married Ann Beckerleg in 1834 and they had one daughter.
Elizabeth 1805- had an illegitimate son William baptised at Germoe in 1826 no further trace of him. Elizabeth then married William Peters at Germoe in 1829
Mary 1807- no further trace
James 1810-1829 he died age 19 at Germoe
There is no one traceable to continue James’ line. He died before 1851, his widow is listed on the 1851 census as living with her widowed daughter Ann Bosanko and is described as a pauper aged 83.
1851 Census for Germoe
John Lanyon 1763-1835
John was baptised at Breage in 1763 and like his brothers he was a tinner. He married Florence Michell (a relative of his mother) in 1789 at Breage. Their only daughter Ann was baptised at Germoe in Sep 1790, her mother Florence was buried in Jan 1791 aged just 28. Ann married James Provis at St Hilary in 1815.
John married for a second time in Aug 1792 at Breage to Catherine Pope (Witnesses Richard Michell and Thomas Kitto). They had three children:
John 1793-1869
William 1795-1802 died young
Florence Michell 1797-1864 she married Michael Benny at Helston in 1818, they had six children and she died in London in 1864
John senior died at Germoe in 1835 age 77 which gives him a date of birth of 1758, he could have been baptised when he was age 5 or his family may have miscalculated his age when he died.
There were lots of mines in the Germoe/Breage/St Hilary area.
We don’t know which mines they worked in but this film will give you an idea of what it was like.
Richard Lanyon 1770-aft. 1841
Richard was baptised at Germoe in 1770, he was a blacksmith at Marazion. He married his cousin Jane Lanyon at St Hilary in 1794. They had eight children:
William 1794-1871
Richard 1796-1797 died in infancy
Jennifer Jane 1797-1877 married Charles Gundry, a farmer, three children
Richard 1799-1835 died age 35 at Marazion, unmarried
Catherine 1802- aft. 1881 married John Roberts, a miner, she was still alive in 1881 and according to the census her two daughters Eliza (tailoress) and Jane (dressmaker) were living with her and her grandson William, illegitimate son of one of the daughters.
John 1804-1806 died in infancy
Mary John 1806-she married Thomas Harris Roberts at St Hilary in 1841 no further trace
Julia 1809-1843 living with her father on the 1841 census and dead by 1843
Richard senior was still alive in 1841 and living with youngest daughter Julia but after that no trace of his death. He’s often confused with the Richard Lanyon who died at Lostwithiel in 1848.
Victorian Blacksmith – Summer A. Smith, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
James Lanyon 1759-1848
James was the son of James and Catherine Brownfield. He was baptised at Breage in 1759 and married Grace Harry at Germoe in 1790. They had five children:
James 1790- he was a labourer and married Christian Arthur at Breage in 1812, one daughter Mary Anne baptised at Camborne in 1812. There is a Christian Lanyone on the 1841 census living at Helston but no sign of her husband. No further trace.
John 1794-bef. 1796 died in infancy
John 1796-bef. 1808 died in infancy
Jennifred 1799- no further trace
John 1808-1855
James’ wife Grace Harry died in 1815. In 1819 he married again in Mawgan in Meneage to Ann Rogers. They had one son:
Thomas 1819-1855
James died at Mullion in 1848 and Ann Rogers died in 1863 at Mullion.
Out of the five grandsons of James Lanyon and Mary Pearce there were only five great grandsons with children to follow.