Baron Alvanley

Baron Alvanley, of Alvanley in the County Palatine of Chester, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 22 May 1801 for Sir Richard Arden, the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and former Master of the Rolls.[1][2] The title became extinct on the death of his second son, the third Baron (who had succeeded his elder brother), in 1857.

Richard Arden, 1st Baron Alvanley.

Barons Alvanley (1801)

Arms

Coat of arms of Baron Alvanley
Crest
Out of a ducal coronet Or five ostrich feathers Argent charged with a crescent Gules.
Escutcheon
Gules three cross-crosslets fitchée Or on a chief of the second a crescent of the first.
Supporters
Two talbots the dexter Argent collared Gules thereon three arrows of the first the sinister Sable thereon three arrows Gules.
Motto
Patientiâ Vinces [3]
gollark: If I was better at hardware things and actually had money for an FPGA it would be cool to run SHA256 on it and probably beat all the foolish people with nondedicated hardware.
gollark: Which is already quite low because Krist gives blocks quite fast and there aren't many miners.
gollark: Mining pools don't give random people more money, they just reduce the variance.
gollark: It runs on a proof of work thing too I am pretty sure.
gollark: If it was 51% of nodes, people could just run 19471248916249812648126182618256125871875819201279857120581 nodes on one computer and explode everything.

References

  1. "No. 15367". The London Gazette. 23 May 1801. p. 562.
  2. Edmund Lodge, The Peerage of the British Empire as at Present Existing (Saunders and Otley, 1833), 17.
  3. Burke's Peerage. 1850.

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