The Great Hall Window Heraldic Shield No.5 - The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, U.K.
Posted by: Mike_bjm
N 52° 26.921 W 001° 55.848
30U E 572663 N 5811481
One of the heraldic shields in the stained-glass window of the Great Hall in the Aston Webb buiding
Waymark Code: WM1244F
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 02/22/2020
Views: 1
One of the heraldic shields in the stained-glass window of the Great Hall in the Aston Webb building of the University of Birmingham.
The south window was designed by Thomas Ralph Spence (1855-1913) and was installed 1908. There are 53 lights in all, focusing on the arms of the University itself, with the shields of the Midland counties above it, so that, as elsewhere, the decorative motifs "expressed the conviction that there was a symbiosis between the University and the region". Benefactors' arms are shown as well. (
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This light of the window displays a shield representing the county of Worcestershire. The shield displays a horizontal stripe across the middle of the shield between three pears.
This is the second of the Arms of Worcestershire shown in the Official blazon shown below:
'Arms: Quarterley sable and gules, a castle triple-towered argent.
Arms: Argent, a fesse between three pears sable.'
'Worcestershire County Council was created in 1889; it was abolished in 1974 and replaced by Hereford and Worcester County Council.' (
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The window is 'flanked by massive organ pipes and fine woodwork of the original organ cases...A late insertion, this was donated by Sir John Holder in May 1907...T.R. Spence designed the window and it has fifty-three light. The focus, as with the north front, is the University shield. Above it, in the spandrels, we find shields of the six Midland counties on either side of a full achievement of the arms of the City of Birmingham. The window, in other words, takes up the theme of civic commitment to the Midlands University announced by the entrance front, and this was emphasised by a display of county banners down the hall on either side. The other central lights speak of private support: at the top the Calthorpe arms and Sir John Holder's own shield at the bottom, below a woman holding
the Chamberlain crest.' 'The First Civic University: Birmingham 1880-1980, An Introductory History' by Eric Ives, Diane Drummond, Leonard Schwarz (ISBN: 1-902459-07-5)