History
Overview
The Flemish Origins

The first two decades of the 12th century present us with a significant series of marriages among the chief characters in what we may here call the heraldic drama. On November 11, 1100, Henry I, King of England, marries Malcom Canmore’s elder daughter, the princess Matilda of Scotland; and thus, as their courtiers are eager to point out, unites in their desendants the old and the new dynasties of Britain. Little more than a year later, and fresh from the triumphs of the First Crusade, it’s hero Count Eustace III of Boulogne marries Malcolm Canmore’s younger daughters, the Scottish Princess Mary. Eustace and Mary will have a son, Raoul, and a daughter, Matilda; and the girl, outliving her brother, will become not only her father’s and Countess of Boulogne in her own right, but also, by her marriage to Stephen of Blois – William the Conqueror’s grandson and successor on his throne to Henry I – a future Queen of England. Thus, with Stephen and Matilda’s elder son, their own Count, the intelligent and manly Eustace IV of Boulogne, now heir to the English throne, the aspirations of the Anglo-Boulonnais may at last be said to be fulfilled.

King Henry’s wife, Matilda of Scotland, died in 1118, and three years later he reinforced the connection with his Flemish allies by taking as his second wife Count Eustace’s cousin Adela, daughter of Godfrey, Duke of Bas-Lorraine. Simon de Senlis was also dead (he had succumbed in about 1111, at the outset o a further trip to the Holy Land) and Maud, his widow, took as her second husband the brother-in-law of Count Eustace and King Henry, Malcolm Canmore’s youngest son, David, Earl of Cumbria. In 1124, on the death of his brother Alexander, David ascended the throne of Scotland as David I; so Maud of Lens, like her cousin Matilda of Boulogne, became a British queen.

A complete list of those who traveled north with Maud and her second husband is not quite within our grasp. But it would be broadly true to say that of the Flemish Boulonnais so protectingly established in the East Midlands, the exceptional families would would be those who did not send a son or a brother to accompany their Lady to her new home in Scotland. The intention, however David may have sweetened it with offers of land, was again protective.

We know that these people took with them the devices they had already brought in 1066 from the comtes of Flanders; and more than that, we can see with an astonishing clarity exactly how they used them. One, at least, of the emblems was already there. Seier de Lens, the young nephew of Count Eustace II who so mysteriously disappeared after the Dover raid of 1067, had been in Scotland since perhaps that date, as Seier de Seton, living in the fortress he had built himself on the Firth of Forth which would later be known as Seton Palace. Walter, his son and heir – Walter the Fleming – succeeded him there, as he did at Odell Castle, Bedfordshire; and there can be no doubt at all that his personal heraldic emblem, the triple crescents, gules and a field or, of a second son of the count of Boulogne, flew over both places.

Descendants of Seier’s younger son, Hugh, as well as those of his younger brother, Walter, also used the triple crescents; but being now outside the continental constraint of territorial tinctures, they each changed the colours. Hugh and his family wore the three red crescents on a silver field – a device which, incidentally, flew from the masts of the Boulogne navy in their home port of Huughescluis (so perhaps Hugh was their High Admiral). Old Walter’s grandson, Walter de Preston, took the black and gold colours of Flanders, and both crescents and tinctures survive in the arms of his descendant, the premier viscount of Ireland, Viscount Gormanston. Some of Hugh’s heirs acquired the surname of Legh (or Lea), and took the crescents with them when they moved into Cheshire; here the tinctures moved away from the old tradition into azure and sable.

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