What does the Coat of Arms of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries mean?

August 23, 2014

What is a Coat of Arms?

During medieval times a coat of arms was very important. It told everybody who you were, what family you belonged to, who your relatives were, what territory you may hold. It basically said everything about a powerful person that you wanted (and needed) people to know.

A coat of arms is a unique design belonging to a particular person (or group of people i.e. the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries) and is used by them in a wide variety of ways. Some of these ways include as an official seal on important documents, on flags or standards used to identify different groups on a battle field or even to represent different families within a given land area. 

In England and Scotland coats of arms are unique to individuals, not to families, and each successive member of different generations would design their own distinctive coat of arms, often based on the common theme of the family.



What does the Coat of Arms of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries mean?

The coat of arms of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries show Apollo, the God of Healing, overpowering the dragon of disease, represented by the wyvern.


To each side is a unicorn, James I's special beasts which highlights his personal interest in the Society.


At the top is a rhinoceros. It was believed its horns, when powdered, have numerous medicinal properties.


The motto reads: 

Opiferque per orbem dicor which means 'Throughout the world they speak of me as a bringer of help' which is taken from Ovid's first book of Metamorphoses. It relates to a passage where Apollo has killed a python.

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The Start of the Georgians

August 23, 2014

Queen Anne of Great Britain & Ireland (1665-1714)

Only one of Queen Anne's seventeen pregnancies produced a potential heir, William, Duke of Gloucester (1689-1700). His death in July 1700 at the tender age of eleven caused Parliament to institute the Act of Settlement making Electress Sophia of Hanover heiress presumptive. Electress Sophia died two months before Queen Anne.


In 1714 Queen Anne died and was succeeded by her second cousin, Georg Ludwig, Elector of Hanover. Georg was an appealing c...


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History of Mason's Yard, Mayfair

August 21, 2014

History of Mason's Yard, Mayfair

Mason's Yard SW1

Ormond Yard was laid out as a 200 feet square plot of land originally designed to be a stable yard and by 1740 the yard was already being called Mason's Yard, probably due to the owner of the two houses fronting both the yard and Duke street was a Mr Henry Mason. It would make sense for him to have rented some stables in Mason's Yard.


In 1748 the London Evening Post reported a death 'at his House in Duke-Street' of a Mr. Margison 'who for several...


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Rhinoceros in London

August 21, 2014

The worshipful Society of Apothecaries's Hall is filled with rhinoceros, but why?

It's probably one of the most famous and certainly one of the most influential images of an exotic animal to be made.

Towards the end of 1515 Manuel I of Portugal sent an Indian rhinoceros as a present to Pope Leo X. Private menageries housing exotic animals were popular in aristocratic circles in Europe in C15th & C16th. 

Durer drew a rhinoceros without having seen one. He used a description and a living sketch of...


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The National Police Memorial

August 21, 2014

National Police Memorial

Seated at Cambridge Green, on the corner of The Mall and Horse Guards Road, directly outside the Old Admiralty Building.The site had previously been occupied by an air shaft on the Bakerloo Line of the London Underground.


The National Police Memorial consists of two distinct parts; a black granite clad tablet with a glass cabinet containing a book listing the names of every British police officer killed during arrests or as a result of criminal acts. Alongside that is t...


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Royal Artillery Memorial, Hyde Park Corner

August 21, 2014

What is the objective of having a war memorial? 

To remember the dead? To bask in the glory of sacrifice for King and country? Ex-servicemen were quoted by the Manchester Guardian as reminiscing about the war as they examined the statue, and remarking on how the bronze figures had captured the reality of their time in the artillery. The newspaper noted that the frankness of the portrayal was a "terrible revelation long overdue", and hoped that veterans would be able to show the monument to the...


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