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Thursday, December 04, 2008

The White Hart

The White Hart ("hart" is an old word for stag) was the personal badge of Richard II, who derived it from the arms of his mother, Joan "The Fair Maid of Kent, heiress of Edmund of Woodstock. In the Wilton Diptych (National Gallery, London), which is the earliest authentic contemporary portait of an English king, Richard II wears a gold and enamelled white hart jewel, and even the angels surrounding the Virgin Mary all wear white hart badges.

There are still many inns and pubs in England that sport a sign of the White Hart.

An inn at the sign of the White Hart was established in the medieval period on Borough High Street in Southwark. It is mentioned by William Shakespeare in Henry VI, part 1 as the headquarters of the rebels in Jack Cade's 1450 Peasants' Revolt. It became one of the many famous coaching inns in the days of Charles Dickens, and it was here that Sam Weller met Mr Pickwick in the famous scene from the Pickwick Papers. The Inn was pulled down in the 19th Century.

It is next door to the George,_Southwark and near the site of the Tabard.

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