English: Shield of arms of The Lord Vaux of Harrowden; Quarterly:
1st and 4th, Gules a fess nebuly or, in chief and in base, a horse rampant between two estoiles of the last (Gilbey);
2nd and 3rd, Per bend sinister ermine and erminois, a lion rampant or (Mostyn); often given as ermines in place of erminois (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884 , p.711, making them the arms of Tudor Trevor, a chieftan of the Marches of Wales, also now borne by Edwards and Pennant (Burke, pp.789, 316
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