Sir Thomas Gresham Coat-of-Arms - St Michael's Court, Trinity Street, Cambridge, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 52° 12.376 E 000° 07.092
31U E 303094 N 5787894
This coat-of-arms of Thomas Gresham is located below his statue on the north west corner of St Michael's Court on the south east side of Trinity Street in Cambridge. The coat-of-arms are carved in stone.
Waymark Code: WMQRK6
Location: Eastern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 03/24/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 1

The stone carved coat-of-arms of Thomas Gresham show his crest surrounded by carved foliage and, at the top, is a carving of the grasshopper that is synonomous with Thomas Gresham.

Wikipedia describes the Gresham arms as:

Argent, a chevron counter-ermine between three mullets pierced sable.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica website has an article about Thomas Gresham that tells us:

Sir Thomas Gresham, (born 1518/19, London, England—died November 21, 1579, London), English merchant, financier, and founder of the Royal Exchange.

Gresham was educated at the University of Cambridge and later trained as a lawyer. He was an agent of the English government in the Low Countries, where he engaged in espionage, smuggled war materials and bullion, and negotiated with his government’s foreign creditors. The repayment of loans and interest owed by England caused exchange fluctuations between countries which increased the sums that the English government had to repay; Gresham operated in the foreign-exchange market to alleviate these fluctuations. He understood the power of governments to affect the rate of exchange and even suggested the creation of an exchange-equalization account. It was Gresham who advised Queen Elizabeth I to recoin the currency following her father’s debasement of it with inferior metal. Thus, his name would later be associated with the monetary principle, hence known as Gresham’s law, which may be summarized by the aphorism that “bad money drives out good.”

In order to provide a convenient meeting place for the bankers (exchange dealers) in London, Gresham built the Royal Exchange (1566–68), which at first was called the “Bourse” and received its present name by royal proclamation in 1571.

Your impression of the sculpture?:

Date Sculpture was opened for vewing?: 01/01/1909

Website for sculpture?: [Web Link]

Where is this sculpture?:
St Michael's Court
Trinity Street
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire United Kingdom


Sculptors Name: Not listed

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