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English: Coat of arms of the London Borough of Hounslow. Blazon. Per fesse Azure and Gules on a Fesse wavy between in chief two Wings conjoined in base Argent ...
The town of Hounslow, which has existed since the 13th century, is located at the centre of the Borough of Hounslow. The name Hounslow means 'Hund's mound'; the personal name Hund is followed by the Old English hlaew meaning mound or barrow. (The mound may have been his burial place.) It was recorded in the Domesday Book as Honeslaw. [2]
Coat of arms of Hounslow. Coat of arms of Islington. ... Coat of arms of the Greater London Council, 1965-1986. Metropolitan boroughs (1900-1965)
Coat of arms of Middlesex On Kew Bridge (see also under Richmond upon Thames ) 51°29′13″N 0°17′14″W / 51.48708°N 0.28735°W / 51.48708; -0.28735 ( Coat of arms of Middlesex
The gold and silver lion came from the arms of Hounslow Priory, founded in the thirteenth century by the Trinitarian Brothers of Redemption, on the site now occupied by Holy Trinity Church. The motto referred to the union of the two formerly separate parishes of Heston and Isleworth. [14]
Municipal coats of arms of the 32 London borough councils — serving the Boroughs of London in the Greater London region of England. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Coats of arms of Middlesex (left) and Buckinghamshire (right) in stained glass at the exit from Uxbridge tube station County of Middlesex sign in 2014, on the border between the London Boroughs of Barnet and Enfield. Coats of arms were attributed by the mediaeval heralds to the kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy.
Feltham was an urban district in the former county of Middlesex, England from 1904 to 1965. As Middlesex was disbanded in 1965, Feltham now is a part of Greater London. It was the main civic body covering the overlapping civil (and almost identical ecclesiastical) parish of Feltham.