. The inescutcheon obscures the middle tierce A rare form of impalement which allows for the juxtaposition of three armorials is
tiercing. This is more common in Continental Europe to demonstrate dynastic and territorial relationships. In England it is occasionally used where a man has married twice, with the middle tierce, of greatest honour, showing his own arms. It is also used rarely in England to denote broader relationships, for example in the arms of three Oxford colleges. In the arms of
Brasenose College, Oxford the
dexter tierce shows the personal arms of one founder
William Smyth, while the middle tierce of greatest honour shows the arms of the See of Lincoln, to show his position as
Bishop of Lincoln; the
sinister tierce shows the personal arms of the other founder
Sir Richard Sutton. As with the simple impaled arms of a bishop, the arms of the see are shown in the position of greatest honour, in that case in the
dexter half. Of the three tierces, the middle is of greatest honour, the dexter next, and least in honour the sinister tierce. The arms of
Lincoln College, Oxford are similar, with the dexter and middle tierces representing the founder
Richard Fleming, Bishop of Lincoln, and the sinister tierce carrying the arms of
Thomas Rotherham, a major donor who is considered as co-founder of the current college. At
Corpus Christi College, Oxford the dexter tierce shows a
pelican vulning herself representing the Body of Christ (Latin:
Corpus Christi), which was adopted by the founder
Richard Foxe as his coat of arms; the middle tierce shows the arms of the See of Winchester, reflecting Foxe's position as
Bishop of Winchester, while the sinister tierce shows the personal arms of the co-founder
Hugh Oldham.
Example: institutional The arms of
Brasenose College, Oxford are:
Tierced in pale: (1) Argent, a chevron sable between three roses gules seeded or, barbed vert (for Smyth); (2) or, an escutcheon of the arms of the See of Lincoln (gules, two lions of England in pale or, on a chief azure Our Lady crowned seated on a tombstone issuant from the chief, in her dexter arm the Infant Jesus, in her sinister arm a sceptre, all or), ensigned with a mitre proper; (3) quarterly, first and fourth argent, a chevron between three bugle-horns stringed sable; second and third argent, a chevron between three crosses crosslet sable (for Sutton).
Example: marital (1628–1688), detail from
ledger stone,
King's Nympton Church, Devon, England The arms of
Sir Arthur Northcote, 2nd Baronet (1628–1688), sculpted on his
ledger stone in
King's Nympton Church, Devon, England, show a shield tierced per pale, the second (central) part showing his paternal arms of four quarters. The dexter part shows the arms of Walshe (
six mullets 3:2:1), representing his first wife Elizabeth the daughter of James Walsh of
Alverdiscot in Devon. The sinister part shows the arms of Godolphin (
an eagle displayed double headed between three fleurs-de-lis), representing his second wife Elizabeth the daughter of Sir Francis Godolphin of
Godolphin in Cornwall. ==See also==