File:Coat of arms of William Russell, 5th Earl of Bedford, KG.png

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English: Coat of arms of William Russell, 5th Earl of Bedford, KG. Quarterly of 16:
  • 1: Russell
  • 2: de la Tour
  • 3: Muschamp
  • 4: Herringham
  • 5: Wise
  • 6: Sapcote; Anne Sapcote (a daughter and co-heiress of Sir Guy Sapcote of Eltham, Huntingdonshire) was the wife of John Russell, 1st Earl of Bedford;
  • 7: Dinham (Sapcote heiress)
  • 8: Gules, three bezants
  • 9: Courtenay (of Wootton Courtenay, Somerset?): Or, three torteaux over all a bendlet componée argent and azure (Courtenay, Earl of Devon, differenced by a bendlet). Arms of Sir Thomas Courtenay (1312–1362) of Wootton Courtenay in Somerset, the fourth son of w:Hugh de Courtenay, 9th Earl of Devon (1276–1340). His elder daughter and co-heiress was Muriel Courtenay, the wife of Sir John Dinham (1318–1383). Their son was Sir John Dinham (1359–1428). Stated by Pole to be the arms of Courtenay of "Coleton Prall" (location unclear) (Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.475)
  • 10: Arches (Dinham heiress)
  • 11: Semark (St Mark), a Sapcote heiress, the mother of Sir Guy Sapcote was Anne Semark/St Mark, daughter and heiress of Thomas Semark. (see Sapcote pedigree in Ellis, Sir Henry, ed. (1849). The Visitation of the County of Huntingdon, under the authority of William Camden, Clarenceux King of Arms, by his deputy, Nicholas Charles, Lancaster Herald, A.D. 1613. Camden Society, 1st ser. 43. London: Camden Society, p.12[1])
  • 12: Sable semée of crosses crosslet argent, a lion rampant of the second (Long) (See: Heraldry of the Bedford Chapel, Chenies, Bedfordshire, Middlesex heraldry Society, 1980, p.18, B12[2])
  • 13: Argent, on a chief gules a stag's head affrontée cabossed or between two bezants (Popham, heiress of Long (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884 , p.620 "Long of Draycot")) (usually appear as Argent, on a chief gules two stag's faces cabossed or)
  • 14: Seymour (heiress of Long (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884 , p.620 "Long of Draycot"))
  • 15: Brydges
  • 16: Chandos
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Author Rs-nourse

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