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{{short description|Record of ships of the English Tudor navy of the 1540s}}
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{{short description|A record of ships of the English Tudor navy of the 1540s}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}
{{Use British English|date=March 2018}}
{{Use British English|date=March 2018}}


[[File:AnthonyRoll-1 Great Harry.jpg|alt=A colorful illustration shows a highly ornamented ship with four masts and bristling with guns sailing over a mild swell towards the right of the picture, towing a small boat|thumb|right|The first illustration of the first roll of the Anthony Roll, depicting the ''[[Henry Grace à Dieu]]'', the largest ship in the English navy during the reign of [[King Henry VIII]].]]
[[File:AnthonyRoll-1 Great Harry.jpg|alt=A colorful illustration shows a highly ornamented ship with four masts and bristling with guns sailing over a mild swell towards the right of the picture, towing a small boat|thumb|right|The first illustration of the first roll of the Anthony Roll, depicting the ''[[Henry Grace à Dieu]]'', the largest ship in the English navy during the reign of [[King Henry VIII]].]]
The '''Anthony Roll''' is a paper record of ships of the English [[Tudor navy]] of the 1540s, named after its creator, Anthony Anthony. It originally consisted of three rolls of [[vellum]], depicting 58 naval vessels along with information on their size, crew, armament, and basic equipment. The rolls were presented to [[King Henry VIII]] in 1546, and were kept in the royal library. In 1680 [[Charles II of England|King Charles II]] gave two of the rolls to [[Samuel Pepys]], who had them cut up and bound as a single volume book, which is now in the [[Pepys Library]] at [[Magdalene College, Cambridge]]. The third roll remained in the royal collection until it was given by [[King William IV]] to his daughter [[Lady Mary Fox]], who sold it to the [[British Museum]] in 1858; it is now owned by the [[British Library]].
The '''Anthony Roll''' is a written record of ships of the English [[Tudor navy]] of the 1540s, named after its creator, Anthony Anthony. It originally consisted of three rolls of [[vellum]], depicting 58 naval vessels along with information on their size, crew, armament, and basic equipment. The rolls were presented to [[King Henry VIII]] in 1546, and were kept in the royal library. In 1680 [[Charles II of England|King Charles II]] gave two of the rolls to [[Samuel Pepys]], who had them cut up and bound as a single volume book, which is now in the [[Pepys Library]] at [[Magdalene College, Cambridge]]. The third roll remained in the royal collection until it was given by [[King William IV]] to his daughter [[Lady Mary Fox]], who sold it to the [[British Museum]] in 1858; it is now owned by the [[British Library]].


The Anthony Roll is the only known fully illustrated inventory of ships of the English navy in the [[Tudor period]]. As the work of a successful state official in 16th century England, the artistic value of the Anthony Roll has been described as being characterised by "naive draughtsmanship and conformity to a pattern" though its artistic aspects display "a decent amateur grasp of form and colour".{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=20}} While the inventories listed in its text have proven to be highly accurate, most of the ship illustrations are rudimentary and made according to a set formula. The level of detail of the ship design, armament and especially rigging has therefore proven to be only approximate. Nevertheless, through their depiction of the ceremonial ornamentation the illustrations in the Roll have provided relevant secondary information to the study of Tudor period [[heraldry]], [[flag]]s and ship ornamentation.
The Anthony Roll is the only known fully illustrated inventory of ships of the English navy in the [[Tudor period]]. As the work of a successful state official in 16th century England, the artistic value of the Anthony Roll has been described as being characterised by "naive draughtsmanship and conformity to a pattern" though its artistic aspects display "a decent amateur grasp of form and colour".{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=20}} While the inventories listed in its text have proven to be highly accurate, most of the ship illustrations are rudimentary and made according to a set formula. The level of detail of the ship design, armament and especially rigging has therefore proven to be only approximate. Nevertheless, through their depiction of the ceremonial ornamentation the illustrations in the Roll have provided relevant secondary information to the study of Tudor period [[heraldry]], [[flag]]s and ship ornamentation.
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==Author and artist==
==Author and artist==
'''Anthony Anthony'''<!--Please leave the name of the bolded since the author redirects to this section--> has been identified as the compiler of the information and the artist behind the illustrations through his signature, which has been compared with [[holograph]] letters among the State Papers.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|p=5}} Anthony's father was William Anthony (died 1535) a [[Flemish people|Fleming]] from [[Middelburg]] in [[Zeeland]] who migrated to England in 1503. William was a supplier of beer to the army, and Anthony followed in his father's footsteps. He went into beer exporting no later than 1530 and became a supplier of beer to the navy. In 1533 Anthony was appointed gunner at the [[Tower of London]], a position he retained nominally until his death. He rose to the rank of overseer of the [[Ordnance Office]], the government body responsible for supplying the armed forces with artillery, and it was in this position that he compiled his Roll. In 1549 he was promoted to master surveyor of the ordnance in the Tower, [[Calais]], [[Boulogne]], and elsewhere for life. He continued the work of supplying arms to English forces, and was active in the last month of his life supplying guns for an expedition against [[Le Havre]].{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=3-4}}
'''Anthony Anthony'''<!--Please leave the name of the bolded since the author redirects to this section--> (before 1530 – {{circa|1564}}) has been identified as the compiler of the information and the artist behind the illustrations through his signature, which has been compared with [[holograph]] letters among the State Papers.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|p=5}} Anthony's father was William Anthony (died 1535) a [[Flemish people|Fleming]] from [[Middelburg, Zeeland|Middelburg]] in [[Zeeland]] who migrated to England in 1503. William was a supplier of beer to the army, and Anthony followed in his father's footsteps. He went into beer exporting no later than 1530 and became a supplier of beer to the navy. In 1533 Anthony was appointed gunner at the [[Tower of London]], a position he retained nominally until his death. He rose to the rank of overseer of the [[Ordnance Office]], the government body responsible for supplying the armed forces with artillery, and it was in this position that he compiled his Roll.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Loades |first=D. M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uW9QDwAAQBAJ&dq=Ordnance+anthony+anthony&pg=PA3 |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Add MS 22047 with Related Material |date=2017-09-29 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-351-54670-6 |language=en}}</ref> In 1549 he was promoted to master surveyor of the ordnance in the Tower, [[Calais]], [[Boulogne]], and elsewhere for life. He continued the work of supplying arms to English forces, and was active in the last month of his life supplying guns for an expedition against [[Le Havre]].{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=3-4}}


In 1939 Dutch historian Nicholas Beets proposed that the Flemish artist and cartographer [[Cornelis Antoniszoon]] (or Antonisz., c.&nbsp;1507–1553) could have been Anthony Anthony's brother. Although Beets' suggestion of kinship was conjectural and without any direct evidence, it was picked up by [[Geoffrey Callender]] in the ''[[Mariner's Mirror]]'' in 1963 and has been relayed by several other authors.{{sfn|Rodger|1997|p=548|loc=note 35}} The will of William Anthony did not mention any other sons and Anthonisz. is believed to have been the son of Antonis Egbertson, the daughter of [[Jacob Corneliszoon van Oostzanen]]. That Cornelis and Anthony were related is, in the words of Ann Payne, "not, presumably, impossible, but there is little evidence that they were connected at all".{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=24-25}}
In 1939 Dutch historian Nicholas Beets proposed that the Flemish artist and cartographer [[Cornelis Antoniszoon]] (or Antonisz., c.&nbsp;1507–1553) could have been Anthony Anthony's brother. Although Beets' suggestion of kinship was conjectural and without any direct evidence, it was picked up by [[Geoffrey Callender]] in the ''[[Mariner's Mirror]]'' in 1963 and has been relayed by several other authors.{{sfn|Rodger|1997|p=548|loc=note 35}} The will of William Anthony did not mention any other sons and Anthonisz. is believed to have been the son of Antonis Egbertson, the daughter of [[Jacob Corneliszoon van Oostzanen]]. That Cornelis and Anthony were related is, in the words of Ann Payne, "not, presumably, impossible, but there is little evidence that they were connected at all".{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=24-25}}
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There are three such plats depicting naval actions and expeditions that are attributed to Anthony: the route of [[Anne of Cleves]] from the [[Low Countries]] to England (1539), a French attack on a coastal fort (date unknown) and a French raid on Brighton (July 1545). The design of the ships in these paintings, especially that of the Brighton raid, closely match those in the rolls. It is not known exactly when work on the rolls began nor when it was finished. It is only certain that it was presented to the king the year it was dated, 1546. The inclusion of the ''[[Mary Rose]]'' that sank at the [[Battle of the Solent]] 19 July 1545 does not mean it was necessarily started before this date, since it was still considered possible that she could be raised even as late as 1549. The [[galleass]]es, the ''[[HMS Antelope (1546)|Antelope]]'', ''Hart'', ''Bull'' and ''Tiger'', all present in the second roll, were still being built around March 1546, and the ''Hart'' was not at sea until October that year. At the same time the ''Galley Blanchard'', captured from the French 18 May 1546 is not included.{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=20-23}}
There are three such plats depicting naval actions and expeditions that are attributed to Anthony: the route of [[Anne of Cleves]] from the [[Low Countries]] to England (1539), a French attack on a coastal fort (date unknown) and a French raid on Brighton (July 1545). The design of the ships in these paintings, especially that of the Brighton raid, closely match those in the rolls. It is not known exactly when work on the rolls began nor when it was finished. It is only certain that it was presented to the king the year it was dated, 1546. The inclusion of the ''[[Mary Rose]]'' that sank at the [[Battle of the Solent]] 19 July 1545 does not mean it was necessarily started before this date, since it was still considered possible that she could be raised even as late as 1549. The [[galleass]]es, the ''[[HMS Antelope (1546)|Antelope]]'', ''Hart'', ''Bull'' and ''Tiger'', all present in the second roll, were still being built around March 1546, and the ''Hart'' was not at sea until October that year. At the same time the ''Galley Blanchard'', captured from the French 18 May 1546 is not included.{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=20-23}}


[[File:Pepys portrait by Kneller.png|thumb|upright|left|alt=A copper engraving of a man with a composed expression wearing a large, dark, long-haired wig.|[[Samuel Pepys]] in 1689. Pepys, the owner of two of the rolls, had them cut up and bound in a single volume.]]
[[File:Samuel Pepys.jpg|thumb|left|alt=A painting of a man with a composed expression wearing a large, dark, long-haired wig.|[[Samuel Pepys]], who owned two of the rolls and had them cut up and bound in a single volume.]]
After the rolls were presented to the king they were archived in the royal collections. In 1680 [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] gave two of the rolls to [[Samuel Pepys]], a navy administrator and avid book collector. Pepys did not disclose the details of how the rolls were given to him, but it is believed that the gift came out of a meeting with King Charles where Pepys took down the king's account of how he escaped from the [[Battle of Worcester]] (1651). The plan was that Pepys would edit and publish the already famous story, but he never did so. It is also known that Pepys was planning to write a history of the navy and that he was gathering material for this task, but this project also was never finished. It is considered likely that King Charles was aware of Pepys' plans and presented him with two of the rolls either as a gift or as payment for the intended publication of the escape story. The second roll could not be located at that time, and it was not until 1690 that it was discovered by Henry Thynne, keeper of the royal library 1677–89 and a close friend of Pepys. Thynne arranged for Pepys to make copies of some of the illustrations, but by 1690 Charles was dead and James II was in exile. Pepys had resigned from his position as Secretary of the Admiralty that same year and refused to recognize the reign of [[William III of England|William III]] and [[Mary II]], which meant that acquisition of the final roll for his collection was out of the question. The creation of the codex from the first and third rolls is therefore assumed to have been completed shortly after that time. After Pepys' death in 1703 his library passed on to his nephew John Jackson. After the death of Jackson in 1724 the library, along with the codex, was then passed on to Pepys' old college at [[Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], [[Cambridge]], where it remains to this day.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=4-5}}
After the rolls were presented to the king they were archived in the royal collections. In 1680 [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] gave two of the rolls to [[Samuel Pepys]], a navy administrator and avid book collector. Pepys did not disclose the details of how the rolls were given to him, but it is believed that the gift came out of a meeting with King Charles where Pepys took down the king's account of how he escaped from the [[Battle of Worcester]] (1651). The plan was that Pepys would edit and publish the already famous story, but he never did so. It is also known that Pepys was planning to write a history of the navy and that he was gathering material for this task, but this project also was never finished. It is considered likely that King Charles was aware of Pepys' plans and presented him with two of the rolls either as a gift or as payment for the intended publication of the escape story. The second roll could not be located at that time, and it was not until 1690 that it was discovered by Henry Thynne, keeper of the royal library 1677–89 and a close friend of Pepys. Thynne arranged for Pepys to make copies of some of the illustrations, but by 1690 Charles was dead and James II was in exile. Pepys had resigned from his position as Secretary of the Admiralty that same year and refused to recognize the reign of [[William III of England|William III]] and [[Mary II]], which meant that acquisition of the final roll for his collection was out of the question. The creation of the codex from the first and third rolls is therefore assumed to have been completed shortly after that time. After Pepys' death in 1703 his library passed on to his nephew John Jackson. After the death of Jackson in 1724 the library, along with the codex, was then passed on to Pepys' old college at [[Magdalene College, Cambridge|Magdalene]], [[Cambridge]], where it remains to this day.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=4-5}}


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The Anthony Roll was originally a set of three separate [[vellum]] rolls. It exists today in the form of a bound volume containing the first and third rolls while the second roll is preserved in its original form. The three original rolls were made up out of a total of 17 individual membranes glued to the back of the next membrane. The membranes were of a width of {{convert|27+1⁄2|in|cm}} and a height varying from {{convert| 31|to|37+3/4|in|cm}}.{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=23}} After receiving the first and third rolls Pepys had his clerks cut the rolls up and bound in a single volume as a book, now known as '''Pepys 2991'''. The transformation of the two rolls created a horizontal page structure, and some of the ornamentation that was cut in process was copied into the volume by hand. Pepys also inserted abstracts between the two rolls and a summarizing table that was not Anthony's, but pre-dated Pepys' binding of the rolls. This radical treatment of the original document has damaged some of the illustrations and is today deprecated. The first three illustrations of the ''[[Henry Grace à Dieu]]'', ''[[Mary Rose]]'' and ''[[Peter Pomegranate]]'' were all too large to fit on one page and were therefore converted to two-page spreads. The resulting bend down the centre of the illustrations led to noticeable loss of detail. Despite this, there are no plans to attempt a recreation of the original structure of the first and third rolls. The second roll, '''British Library Add MS 22047''', is still in its original condition with the exception of a written endorsement by Mary Fox from 1857 and some damage caused by an application of chemicals to reveal faded writing.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=5-9}}
The Anthony Roll was originally a set of three separate [[vellum]] rolls. It exists today in the form of a bound volume containing the first and third rolls while the second roll is preserved in its original form. The three original rolls were made up out of a total of 17 individual membranes glued to the back of the next membrane. The membranes were of a width of {{convert|27+1⁄2|in|cm}} and a height varying from {{convert| 31|to|37+3/4|in|cm}}.{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=23}} After receiving the first and third rolls Pepys had his clerks cut the rolls up and bound in a single volume as a book, now known as '''Pepys 2991'''. The transformation of the two rolls created a horizontal page structure, and some of the ornamentation that was cut in process was copied into the volume by hand. Pepys also inserted abstracts between the two rolls and a summarizing table that was not Anthony's, but pre-dated Pepys' binding of the rolls. This radical treatment of the original document has damaged some of the illustrations and is today deprecated. The first three illustrations of the ''[[Henry Grace à Dieu]]'', ''[[Mary Rose]]'' and ''[[Peter Pomegranate]]'' were all too large to fit on one page and were therefore converted to two-page spreads. The resulting bend down the centre of the illustrations led to noticeable loss of detail. Despite this, there are no plans to attempt a recreation of the original structure of the first and third rolls. The second roll, '''British Library Add MS 22047''', is still in its original condition with the exception of a written endorsement by Mary Fox from 1857 and some damage caused by an application of chemicals to reveal faded writing.{{sfn|Knighton|2000|pp=5-9}}


The three rolls list 58 ships divided into classes based roughly on size and construction. Each ship is presented along with its name, tonnage,{{efn|This is a rather rough estimate of burthen, the carrying capacity of a ship, and should not be confused with the much more modern measurement of [[displacement (ship)|displacement]], which would be considerably higher than the figures in the roll. For a detailed discussion of the meaning of tonnage and burthen in early modern naval terminology, {{harvnb|Rodger|1997|pp=xx–xxii}} }} crew size and, in Anthony's own words, "the ordenaunce, artillery, munitions and habillimentes for warre".{{sfn|Knighton|Loades|2000|p=41}} The first roll lists the [[carrack]]s and one pinnace, beginning with the largest ship ''Henry Grace à Dieu''. The second roll lists [[galleass]]es, a hybrid of oar-powered and sailing vessels, and one [[galley]]. Finally, the third roll is reserved for [[full rigged pinnace|pinnaces]] and "rowbarges", both basically smaller versions of galleasses. {{efn|See {{harvnb|Bennel|2000|p=35}} for a detailed discussion of the definition of the various oar-powered vessels.}}
The three rolls list 58 ships divided into classes based roughly on size and construction. Each ship is presented along with its name, tonnage,{{efn|This is a rather rough estimate of burthen, the carrying capacity of a ship, and should not be confused with the much more modern measurement of [[displacement (ship)|displacement]], which would be considerably higher than the figures in the roll. For a detailed discussion of the meaning of tonnage and burthen in early modern naval terminology, {{harvnb|Rodger|1997|pp=xx–xxii}} }} crew size and, in Anthony's own words, "the ordenaunce, artillery, munitions and habillimentes for warre".{{sfn|Knighton|Loades|2000|p=41}} The first roll lists the [[carrack]]s and one pinnace, beginning with the largest ship ''Henry Grace à Dieu''. The second roll lists [[galleass]]es, a hybrid of oar-powered and sailing vessels, and one [[galley]]. Finally, the third roll is reserved for [[full rigged pinnace|pinnaces]] and "rowbarges", both basically smaller versions of galleasses.{{efn|See {{harvnb|Bennel|2000|p=35}} for a detailed discussion of the definition of the various oar-powered vessels.}}


==Artistic analysis==
==Artistic analysis==
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The first two rolls were done with roughly the same amount of detail while the lesser rowbarges (essentially small galleys) were done more hastily. The first two ships of the first roll, the ''Henry Grace à Dieu'' and the ''Mary Rose'', have traces of a grid pattern, indicating that they were transferred from a different drawing while the rest are done in freehand. Overall, the ships follow a formula depending on the type of ship. The exceptions are [[quarter gallery|stern galleries]] of some of the galleasses and the [[figurehead (object)|figureheads]] of the ''Mary Rose'', ''Salamander'' and the ''Unicorn'', the latter both captured from the Scots in 1544.{{sfn|Nau|1883|pp=318, 338-9}}{{sfn|Seccombe|1903|pp=39-44}} The prominent exception is the ''Galley Subtle'' placed in the middle of the second roll. It is more consistent in type with Mediterranean-type galleys than the galleasses and small rowbarges, and features a considerable amount of detail not present in the other ships.{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=23-24}} It is the only ship where any crew is visible, in this case rowers behind [[pavises|pavisades]] as protection from enemy arrows and an overseer wearing "a [[Tudor bonnet|bonnet]], full skirted armorial [[doublet (clothing)|doublet]] and baggy breeches" holding a stick or baton, as if beating the time of the strokes of the rowers.{{sfn|Bennel|2000|p=35}}
The first two rolls were done with roughly the same amount of detail while the lesser rowbarges (essentially small galleys) were done more hastily. The first two ships of the first roll, the ''Henry Grace à Dieu'' and the ''Mary Rose'', have traces of a grid pattern, indicating that they were transferred from a different drawing while the rest are done in freehand. Overall, the ships follow a formula depending on the type of ship. The exceptions are [[quarter gallery|stern galleries]] of some of the galleasses and the [[figurehead (object)|figureheads]] of the ''Mary Rose'', ''Salamander'' and the ''Unicorn'', the latter both captured from the Scots in 1544.{{sfn|Nau|1883|pp=318, 338-9}}{{sfn|Seccombe|1903|pp=39-44}} The prominent exception is the ''Galley Subtle'' placed in the middle of the second roll. It is more consistent in type with Mediterranean-type galleys than the galleasses and small rowbarges, and features a considerable amount of detail not present in the other ships.{{sfn|Payne|2000|pp=23-24}} It is the only ship where any crew is visible, in this case rowers behind [[pavises|pavisades]] as protection from enemy arrows and an overseer wearing "a [[Tudor bonnet|bonnet]], full skirted armorial [[doublet (clothing)|doublet]] and baggy breeches" holding a stick or baton, as if beating the time of the strokes of the rowers.{{sfn|Bennel|2000|p=35}}


==Use as an historical source==
==Use as a historical source==
As an historical record, the Anthony Roll is in many ways unique. It is the only known fully illustrated list of a Tudor period royal navy,{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=25}}> though the pictures should not be seen as exact depictions drawn from real life. For example, the lists of guns of the individual ships, which are considered to be an accurate record produced by a senior state official, are only approximately matched to the paintings.{{sfn|Loades|2000|p=13}} The rigging is only roughly accurate, and has been described by [[Margaret Rule]], archaeological project leader of the ''Mary Rose'' excavations, as "a confusing assemblage of [[shroud (sailing)|shroud]]s, [[ratlines]] and [[Stays (nautical)|stay]]s". Many details are present, but others are missing, such as the chain-wales (the horizontal platforms extending from the sides) to which the shrouds (the parallel ropes that stabilized the masts) were attached to keep them clear of the hull.{{sfn|Rule|1983|p=137}}
As a historical record, the Anthony Roll is in many ways unique. It is the only known fully illustrated list of a Tudor period royal navy,{{sfn|Payne|2000|p=25}} though the pictures should not be seen as exact depictions drawn from real life. For example, the lists of guns of the individual ships, which are considered to be an accurate record produced by a senior state official, are only approximately matched to the paintings.{{sfn|Loades|2000|p=13}} The rigging is only roughly accurate, and has been described by [[Margaret Rule]], archaeological project leader of the ''Mary Rose'' excavations, as "a confusing assemblage of [[shroud (sailing)|shroud]]s, [[ratlines]] and [[Stays (nautical)|stay]]s". Many details are present, but others are missing, such as the chain-wales (the horizontal platforms extending from the sides) to which the shrouds (the parallel ropes that stabilized the masts) were attached to keep them clear of the hull.{{sfn|Rule|1983|p=137}}
[[File:AnthonyRoll-3 Peter.jpg|thumb|right|"Peter Promengrate" sister ship of the "Mary Rose"]]
[[File:AnthonyRoll-3 Peter.jpg|thumb|right|''[[Peter Pomegranate]]'' sister ship of the "Mary Rose"]]


===Comparisons with the ''Mary Rose''===
===Comparisons with the ''Mary Rose''===
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Along the railing of all ships, most prominently on the large carracks and the ''Galley Subtle'', there are rows of banners displaying various heraldic designs, including the English royal arms, one or three [[fleur-de-lis]] of the French arms, Saint George's crosses and Henry VIII's monogram ("HR") in gold on blue, what appears to be the Tudor rose, and the green and white of the [[House of Tudor]]. The depictions of the flags and banners on the ships are in a heraldic and military sense considered to be roughly accurate but not entirely consistent. A kind of system of command among the various vessels is apparent in how flags are displayed on the masts, but it does not appear to have been carried through systematically. Some of the heraldic designs have been described as "unlikely" by the 20th century herald [[George Bellew]], but have deemed to at least be "plausible" by Wilson.{{sfn| Wilson|Hayward|2000|pp=28-30}}
Along the railing of all ships, most prominently on the large carracks and the ''Galley Subtle'', there are rows of banners displaying various heraldic designs, including the English royal arms, one or three [[fleur-de-lis]] of the French arms, Saint George's crosses and Henry VIII's monogram ("HR") in gold on blue, what appears to be the Tudor rose, and the green and white of the [[House of Tudor]]. The depictions of the flags and banners on the ships are in a heraldic and military sense considered to be roughly accurate but not entirely consistent. A kind of system of command among the various vessels is apparent in how flags are displayed on the masts, but it does not appear to have been carried through systematically. Some of the heraldic designs have been described as "unlikely" by the 20th century herald [[George Bellew]], but have deemed to at least be "plausible" by Wilson.{{sfn| Wilson|Hayward|2000|pp=28-30}}


==Gallery: The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: 58 War Ships ==
==Notes==
* First roll — 20 [[carrack|''Carracks'']] (Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.)
* Second roll — 15 [[galleas|''Galleasses'']] (Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.)
* Third roll — 23 [[Full-rigged_pinnace|''Pinnaces'']] and rowbarges (British Library)

==The first roll: 20 great ships (English military [[carrack|''carracks'']] with [[forecastle]] and [[aftcastle]])==
<gallery>
File:AnthonyRoll-1 Great Harry.jpg| The carrack ''[[:en:Henry Grace à Dieu|Henry Grace à Dieu AKA Great Harry]]''
File:AnthonyRoll-2 Mary Rose.jpg| The carrack ''[[:en:Mary Rose|Mary Rose]]''
File:AnthonyRoll-3 Peter.jpg|The carrack ''[[:en:Peter Pomegranate|Peter Pomegranate (later Peter)]]''
File:AnthonyRoll-4 Matthew.jpg|The carrack ''Matthew''
File:AnthonyRoll-5 Great Bark.jpg|The carrack ''Great Bark''
File:AnthonyRoll-6 Jesus of Lübeck.jpg|The carrack ''Jesus of Lübeck''
File:AnthonyRoll-7 Pauncy.jpg|The carrack ''Pauncy''
File:AnthonyRoll-8 Morian.jpg|The carrack ''Morian''
File:AnthonyRoll-9 Struse.jpg|The carrack ''Struse''
File:AnthonyRoll-10 Mary of Hamburg.jpg|The carrack ''Mary of Hamburg''
File:AnthonyRoll-11 Christopher of Bremen.jpg|The carrack ''Christopher of Bremen''
File:AnthonyRoll-12 Trinity Harry.jpg|The carrack ''Trinity Harry''
File:AnthonyRoll-13 Small Bark.jpg|The carrack ''Small Bark''
File:AnthonyRoll-14 Sweepstake.jpg|The carrack ''Sweepstake''
File:AnthonyRoll-15 Minion.jpg|The carrack ''Minion''
File:AnthonyRoll-16 Lartique.jpg|The carrack ''Lartique''
File:AnthonyRoll-17 Mary Thomas.jpg|The carrack ''Mary Thomas''
File:AnthonyRoll-18 Hoy Bark.jpg|The carrack ''Hoy Bark''
File:AnthonyRoll-19 George.jpg|The carrack ''George''
File:AnthonyRoll-20 Mary James.jpg|The galleass ''Mary James''
</gallery>

== The second roll: 15 [[galleas|''Galleasses'']] (English military [[galleon|''galleons'']] with lower [[forecastle]] and [[aftcastle]])==
<gallery>
File:AnthonyRoll-21 Grand Mistress.jpg|The galleass ''Grand Mistress''
File:AnthonyRoll-22 Anne Gallant.jpg|The galleass ''Anne Gallant''
File:AnthonyRoll-23 Hart.jpg|The galleass ''Heart''
File:AnthonyRoll-24 Antelope.jpg|The galleass ''[[:en:Antelope (1546 ship)|Antelope]]''
File:AnthonyRoll-25 Tiger.jpg|The galleass ''Tiger''
File:AnthonyRoll-26 Bull.jpg|The galleass ''Bull''
File:AnthonyRoll-27 Salamander.jpg|The galleass ''Salamander''
File:AnthonyRoll-28 Unicorn.jpg|The galleass ''Unicorn''
File:AnthonyRoll-29 Swallow.jpg|The galleass ''Swallow''
File:AnthonyRoll-30 Galley Subtle.jpg|The ''Galley Subtle''
File:AnthonyRoll-31 New Bark.jpg|The galleass ''New Bark''
File:AnthonyRoll-32 Greyhound.jpg|The galleass ''Greyhound''
File:AnthonyRoll-33 Jennet.jpg|The galleass ''Jennet''
File:AnthonyRoll-34 Lion.jpg|The galleass ''Lion''
File:AnthonyRoll-35 Dragon.jpg|The galleass ''Dragon''
</gallery>

== The third roll: 23 [[Full-rigged_pinnace|''pinnaces'']] and rowbarges ==
Rowbarge: A war galley or flat boat propelled by sails and rowing oars.
It is believed that [[:en:Henry VIII|''Henry VIII]] influenced the design of rowbarges and similar galleys {{Sfn|Loades|2009|pp=82–83}}

<gallery>
File:AnthonyRoll-36 Falcon.jpg|The pinnace ''Falcon''
File:AnthonyRoll-37 Saker.jpg|The pinnace ''Saker''
File:AnthonyRoll-38 Hind.jpg|The pinnace ''Hind''
File:AnthonyRoll-39 Roo.jpg|The pinnace ''Roo''
File:AnthonyRoll-40 Phoenix.jpg|The pinnace ''Phoenix''
File:AnthonyRoll-41 Merlin.jpg|The pinnace ''Merlin''
File:AnthonyRoll-42 Less Pinnace.jpg|The pinnace ''Less Pinnace''
File:AnthonyRoll-43 Brigandine.jpg|The pinnace ''Brigandine''
File:AnthonyRoll-44 Hare.jpg|The pinnace ''Hare''
File:AnthonyRoll-45 Trego Renneger.jpg|The pinnace ''Trego Renneger''
File:AnthonyRoll-46 Double Rose.jpg|The rowbarge ''Double Rose''
File:AnthonyRoll-47 Flower de Luce.jpg|The rowbarge ''Flower de Luce''
File:AnthonyRoll-48 Portcullis.jpg|The rowbarge ''Portcullis''
File:AnthonyRoll-49 Harp.jpg|The rowbarge ''harp''
File:AnthonyRoll-50 Cloud in the Sun.jpg|The rowbarge ''Cloud in the Sun''
File:AnthonyRoll-51 Rose in the Sun.jpg|The rowbarge ''Rose in the Sun''
File:AnthonyRoll-52 Hawthorn.jpg|The rowbarge ''Hawthorn''
File:AnthonyRoll-53 Three Ostrich Feathers.jpg|The rowbarge ''Three Ostrich Feathers''
File:AnthonyRoll-54 Falcon in the Fetterlock.jpg|The rowbarge ''Falcon in the Fetterlock''
File:AnthonyRoll-55 Maiden Head.jpg|The rowbarge ''Maidenhead''
File:AnthonyRoll-56 Rose Slip.jpg|The rowbarge ''Rose Slip''
File:AnthonyRoll-57 Gillyflower.jpg|The rowbarge ''Gillyflower''
File:AnthonyRoll-58 Sun.jpg|The rowbarge ''Sun''
</gallery>

==References==
===Notes===
{{notelist}}
{{notelist}}
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


==References==
===Sources===
{{Refbegin|2|}}
{{Refbegin|2|}}
*{{cite book|last1=Gardiner|first1=Julie |last2=Allen|first2=Michael J. |title=Before the Mast: Life and Death Aboard the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zcecQAAACAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=Volume 4|year=2005|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-4-5}}
*{{cite book|last1=Gardiner|first1=Julie |last2=Allen|first2=Michael J. |title=Before the Mast: Life and Death Aboard the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zcecQAAACAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=4|year=2005|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-4-5}}
*{{cite book|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
*{{cite book|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=John |last=Bennel|chapter=The Oared Vessels|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=John |last=Bennel|chapter=The Oared Vessels|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=C.S. |last=Knighton|chapter=The Manuscript and its Compiler|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=C.S. |last=Knighton|chapter=The Manuscript and its Compiler|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=D. M. |last=Loades|chapter=The Ordnance|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=D. M. |last=Loades|chapter=The Ordnance|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=Ann|last=Payne|chapter=An Artistic Survey|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first=Ann|last=Payne|chapter=An Artistic Survey|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first1=Stuart |last1=Vine|first2=Alexzandra |last2=Hildred|chapter=The Evidence of the ''Mary Rose'' Excavation|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first1=Stuart |last1=Vine|first2=Alexzandra |last2=Hildred|chapter=The Evidence of the ''Mary Rose'' Excavation|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first1=Timothy |last1=Wilson|first2=Maria |last2=Hayward|chapter=The Flags|editor-last1=Knighton|editor-first1=C. S. |editor-last2=Loades|editor-first2=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
**{{cite book|first1=Timothy |last1=Wilson|first2=Maria |last2=Hayward|chapter=The Flags|editor1-last=Knighton|editor1-first=C. S. |editor2-last=Loades|editor2-first=D. M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Additional MS 22047 with Related Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mV1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=Ashgate|location=Aldershot|isbn=978-0-7546-0094-7}}
*{{cite book|author-link=David Loades |last=Loades |first=David |title=The Tudor Navy: An Administrative, Political and Military History |publisher=Scolar Press |location=Aldershot |year=1992 |isbn=0-85967-922-5}}
*{{cite book|author-link=David Loades |last=Loades |first=David |title=The Tudor Navy: An Administrative, Political and Military History |publisher=Scolar Press |location=Aldershot |year=1992 |isbn=0-85967-922-5}}
* {{Cite book |last=Loades |first=David |url=https://archive.org/details/henryviiicourtch0000load |title=Henry VIII: Court, Church and Conflict |date=2009 |publisher=The National Archives |isbn=978-1-9056-1542-1 |author-link=David Loades |url-access=registration}}
*{{cite book|last=Marsden|first=Peter |title=Sealed by Time: The Loss and Recovery of the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JZ7fAAAAMAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=Volume 1|year=2003|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-0-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Marsden|first=Peter |title=Your Noblest Shippe: Anatomy of a Tudor Warship|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bEGGvwEACAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=Volume 2|year=2009|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-2-1}}
*{{cite book|last=Marsden|first=Peter |title=Sealed by Time: The Loss and Recovery of the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JZ7fAAAAMAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=1|year=2003|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-0-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Nau|first=Claude |authorlink=Claude Nau|editor=Stevenson, Joseph|title=The History of Mary Stewart from the Murder of Riccio Until Her Flight Into England|url=https://archive.org/details/historymarystew00naugoog/page/n7|year=1883|publisher=Wm Paterson|location=Edinburgh}}
*{{cite book|last=Marsden|first=Peter |title=Your Noblest Shippe: Anatomy of a Tudor Warship|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bEGGvwEACAAJ|series=The Archaeology of the Mary Rose|volume=2|year=2009|publisher=Mary Rose Trust|location=Portsmouth|isbn=978-0-9544029-2-1}}
*{{cite book|last=Nau|first=Claude |author-link=Claude Nau|editor=Stevenson, Joseph|title=The History of Mary Stewart from the Murder of Riccio Until Her Flight Into England|url=https://archive.org/details/historymarystew00naugoog/page/n7|year=1883|publisher=Wm Paterson|location=Edinburgh}}
*{{cite book|last=Rodger|first=Nicholas A. M.|title=The Safeguard of the Sea: 660-1649|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pgq_QgAACAAJ|year=1997|publisher=W.W. Norton & Company|location=New York|isbn=978-0-00-255128-1}}
*{{cite book|last=Rodger|first=Nicholas A. M.|title=The Safeguard of the Sea: 660-1649|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pgq_QgAACAAJ|year=1997|publisher=W.W. Norton & Company|location=New York|isbn=978-0-00-255128-1}}
*{{cite book|last=Rule|first=Margaret |authorlink=Margaret Rule|title=The Mary Rose: The Excavation and Raising of Henry VIII's Flagship|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cdDVugEACAAJ|edition= 2nd|year=1983|publisher=Conway Maritime|location=London|isbn=978-0-85177-382-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Rule|first=Margaret |author-link=Margaret Rule|title=The Mary Rose: The Excavation and Raising of Henry VIII's Flagship|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cdDVugEACAAJ|edition= 2nd|year=1983|publisher=Conway Maritime|location=London|isbn=978-0-85177-382-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Russell|first=Margarita |title=Visions of the Sea: Hendrick C. Vroom and the Origins of Dutch Marine Painting|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AsoUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA85|year=1983|publisher=Brill Archive|location=Leiden|isbn=90-04-06938-0}}
*{{cite book|last=Russell|first=Margarita |title=Visions of the Sea: Hendrick C. Vroom and the Origins of Dutch Marine Painting|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AsoUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA85|year=1983|publisher=Brill Archive|location=Leiden|isbn=90-04-06938-0}}
*{{cite book|editor-first=Thomas |editor-last=Seccombe|title=Tudor tracts: 1532-1588|url=https://archive.org/details/tudortracts01pollgoog/page/n78|year=1903|publisher=A. Constable and Co.|location=Westminster|chapter=The Late Expedition in Scotland|orig-year=1544}}
*{{cite book|editor-first=Thomas |editor-last=Seccombe|title=Tudor tracts: 1532-1588|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/tudortracts01pollgoog/page/n78|year=1903|publisher=A. Constable and Co.|location=Westminster|chapter=The Late Expedition in Scotland|orig-year=1544}}
*{{cite book|last=Stirland|first=Ann |title=Raising the Dead: The Skeleton Crew of Henry VIII's Great Ship, the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bp7fAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=Chichester|isbn=978-0-471-98485-6}}
*{{cite book|last=Stirland|first=Ann |title=Raising the Dead: The Skeleton Crew of Henry VIII's Great Ship, the Mary Rose|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bp7fAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=Chichester|isbn=978-0-471-98485-6}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}
Line 89: Line 169:
==Further reading==
==Further reading==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|last=Anderson|first=Roger Charles |title=Oared Fighting Ships: From Classical Times to the Coming of Steam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2SIgAAAAMAAJ|year=1962|publisher=P. Marshall}}
*{{cite book|last=Anderson|first=Roger Charles |title=Oared Fighting Ships: From Classical Times to the Coming of Steam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2SIgAAAAMAAJ|year=1962|publisher=P. Marshall}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|last=Childs|first=David |title=Tudor Sea Power: The Foundation of Greatness|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qe_RAwAAQBAJ|year=2009|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|isbn=978-1-84832-031-4}}
*{{cite book|last=Childs|first=David |title=Tudor Sea Power: The Foundation of Greatness|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qe_RAwAAQBAJ|year=2009|publisher=Seaforth Publishing|isbn=978-1-84832-031-4}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|last1=Knighton|first1=C.S.|last2=Loades|first2=D.M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII? Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Add MS 22047 with Related Material|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E8w3DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA1|year=2017|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-351-54669-0}}
*{{cite book|last1=Knighton|first1=C.S.|last2=Loades|first2=D.M. |title=The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII? Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Add MS 22047 with Related Material|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E8w3DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA1|year=2017|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-351-54669-0}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|last=Nelson|first=Arthur |title=The Tudor Navy: The Ships, Men and Organisation, 1485-1603|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7l1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2001|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|isbn=978-0-85177-785-6}}
*{{cite book|last=Nelson|first=Arthur |title=The Tudor Navy: The Ships, Men and Organisation, 1485-1603|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7l1nAAAAMAAJ|year=2001|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|isbn=978-0-85177-785-6}}


{{refend}}
{{refend}}
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{{wikisource}}
{{wikisource}}
*[http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/gb-anth.html Article on the flags in the Roll]
*[http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/gb-anth.html Article on the flags in the Roll]
*[http://www.bl.uk/learning/histcitizen/uk/armada/source1/warship.html The Anthony Roll at the British Library]
*[https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/the-anthony-roll The Anthony Roll at the British Library]


{{featured article}}
{{featured article}}
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[[Category:British Library additional manuscripts]]
[[Category:British Library additional manuscripts]]
[[Category:History of the Royal Navy]]
[[Category:History of the Royal Navy]]
[[Category:Manuscripts in Cambridge]]
[[Category:Manuscripts held by the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Maritime paintings]]
[[Category:Maritime paintings]]
[[Category:Military history of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Military history of the United Kingdom]]

Latest revision as of 12:46, 2 December 2024

A colorful illustration shows a highly ornamented ship with four masts and bristling with guns sailing over a mild swell towards the right of the picture, towing a small boat
The first illustration of the first roll of the Anthony Roll, depicting the Henry Grace à Dieu, the largest ship in the English navy during the reign of King Henry VIII.

The Anthony Roll is a written record of ships of the English Tudor navy of the 1540s, named after its creator, Anthony Anthony. It originally consisted of three rolls of vellum, depicting 58 naval vessels along with information on their size, crew, armament, and basic equipment. The rolls were presented to King Henry VIII in 1546, and were kept in the royal library. In 1680 King Charles II gave two of the rolls to Samuel Pepys, who had them cut up and bound as a single volume book, which is now in the Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge. The third roll remained in the royal collection until it was given by King William IV to his daughter Lady Mary Fox, who sold it to the British Museum in 1858; it is now owned by the British Library.

The Anthony Roll is the only known fully illustrated inventory of ships of the English navy in the Tudor period. As the work of a successful state official in 16th century England, the artistic value of the Anthony Roll has been described as being characterised by "naive draughtsmanship and conformity to a pattern" though its artistic aspects display "a decent amateur grasp of form and colour".[1] While the inventories listed in its text have proven to be highly accurate, most of the ship illustrations are rudimentary and made according to a set formula. The level of detail of the ship design, armament and especially rigging has therefore proven to be only approximate. Nevertheless, through their depiction of the ceremonial ornamentation the illustrations in the Roll have provided relevant secondary information to the study of Tudor period heraldry, flags and ship ornamentation.

The only known contemporary depictions of prominent Tudor era vessels like the Henry Grace à Dieu and the Mary Rose are contained in the Anthony Roll. As the Mary Rose sank by accident in 1545 and was successfully salvaged in 1982, comparison between the information in the Roll and the physical evidence of the Mary Rose has provided new insights into the study of the naval history of the period.

Author and artist

[edit]

Anthony Anthony (before 1530 – c. 1564) has been identified as the compiler of the information and the artist behind the illustrations through his signature, which has been compared with holograph letters among the State Papers.[2] Anthony's father was William Anthony (died 1535) a Fleming from Middelburg in Zeeland who migrated to England in 1503. William was a supplier of beer to the army, and Anthony followed in his father's footsteps. He went into beer exporting no later than 1530 and became a supplier of beer to the navy. In 1533 Anthony was appointed gunner at the Tower of London, a position he retained nominally until his death. He rose to the rank of overseer of the Ordnance Office, the government body responsible for supplying the armed forces with artillery, and it was in this position that he compiled his Roll.[3] In 1549 he was promoted to master surveyor of the ordnance in the Tower, Calais, Boulogne, and elsewhere for life. He continued the work of supplying arms to English forces, and was active in the last month of his life supplying guns for an expedition against Le Havre.[4]

In 1939 Dutch historian Nicholas Beets proposed that the Flemish artist and cartographer Cornelis Antoniszoon (or Antonisz., c. 1507–1553) could have been Anthony Anthony's brother. Although Beets' suggestion of kinship was conjectural and without any direct evidence, it was picked up by Geoffrey Callender in the Mariner's Mirror in 1963 and has been relayed by several other authors.[5] The will of William Anthony did not mention any other sons and Anthonisz. is believed to have been the son of Antonis Egbertson, the daughter of Jacob Corneliszoon van Oostzanen. That Cornelis and Anthony were related is, in the words of Ann Payne, "not, presumably, impossible, but there is little evidence that they were connected at all".[6]

History of the manuscript

[edit]
A small fleet of large, highly decorated carracks are riding on a wavy sea. In the foreground are two low, fortified towers bristling with cannon and armed soldiers and retinue walking between them.
The Embarkation of Henry VIII at Dover, a contemporary painting that, just like the Anthony Roll, was intended to serve as a showpiece of Tudor royal authority and military might.

The "ship portrait" had a long history in maritime art, from medieval seals and coins to early engravings in the 15th century, and the plain side-on view of a ship under sail, often with no crew shown, was well established as the most effective way of recording the build of vessels.[7] The Anthony Roll belongs to a genre of works that was intended to serve a dual role for the king and the military leadership: as reasonably informative overviews listing details of ships or strategic areas of coastlines they could be studied to determine strengths and weaknesses, and as boastful and lively depictions of Tudor military might they could be used to flatter the king, impress courtiers and impose martial authority on foreign ambassadors. Contemporary maps, or "plats", were routinely decorated with detailed pictures of ships, to mark bodies of water as much as to liven up the scenes. Such maps were common at the time, and were even embellished by artists if deemed too simple or drab. The navy was expanded during Henry VIII's reign, and he was known to take an interest in warships, as can be seen by the epic painting Embarkation of Henry VIII at Dover which portrayed, if rather unrealistically, the ships that took the 29-year-old king to the summit meeting with Francis I of France at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. This painting, recently dated to around 1545, has also been suggested as a likely source of inspiration to Anthony for his illustrations.[1]

There are three such plats depicting naval actions and expeditions that are attributed to Anthony: the route of Anne of Cleves from the Low Countries to England (1539), a French attack on a coastal fort (date unknown) and a French raid on Brighton (July 1545). The design of the ships in these paintings, especially that of the Brighton raid, closely match those in the rolls. It is not known exactly when work on the rolls began nor when it was finished. It is only certain that it was presented to the king the year it was dated, 1546. The inclusion of the Mary Rose that sank at the Battle of the Solent 19 July 1545 does not mean it was necessarily started before this date, since it was still considered possible that she could be raised even as late as 1549. The galleasses, the Antelope, Hart, Bull and Tiger, all present in the second roll, were still being built around March 1546, and the Hart was not at sea until October that year. At the same time the Galley Blanchard, captured from the French 18 May 1546 is not included.[8]

A painting of a man with a composed expression wearing a large, dark, long-haired wig.
Samuel Pepys, who owned two of the rolls and had them cut up and bound in a single volume.

After the rolls were presented to the king they were archived in the royal collections. In 1680 Charles II gave two of the rolls to Samuel Pepys, a navy administrator and avid book collector. Pepys did not disclose the details of how the rolls were given to him, but it is believed that the gift came out of a meeting with King Charles where Pepys took down the king's account of how he escaped from the Battle of Worcester (1651). The plan was that Pepys would edit and publish the already famous story, but he never did so. It is also known that Pepys was planning to write a history of the navy and that he was gathering material for this task, but this project also was never finished. It is considered likely that King Charles was aware of Pepys' plans and presented him with two of the rolls either as a gift or as payment for the intended publication of the escape story. The second roll could not be located at that time, and it was not until 1690 that it was discovered by Henry Thynne, keeper of the royal library 1677–89 and a close friend of Pepys. Thynne arranged for Pepys to make copies of some of the illustrations, but by 1690 Charles was dead and James II was in exile. Pepys had resigned from his position as Secretary of the Admiralty that same year and refused to recognize the reign of William III and Mary II, which meant that acquisition of the final roll for his collection was out of the question. The creation of the codex from the first and third rolls is therefore assumed to have been completed shortly after that time. After Pepys' death in 1703 his library passed on to his nephew John Jackson. After the death of Jackson in 1724 the library, along with the codex, was then passed on to Pepys' old college at Magdalene, Cambridge, where it remains to this day.[9]

The second roll was presumed lost by the 1780s, but actually remained in the hands of the royal family. William IV gave it to his illegitimate daughter Mary FitzClarance sometime in the early 19th century. In 1824, FitzClarance married Charles Robert Fox, a major-general and from 1832–35 an officer of the surveyor of the ordnance, the same position Anthony Anthony had three centuries before him. Fox was a bibliophile, and historian Charles Knighton has suggested he knew the value of the roll, but its location nevertheless remained unknown to scholars. In 1857 Frederic Madden, keeper of manuscripts at the British Museum, was shown the second roll and learned that Mary Fox wished to sell it. After negotiations it was sold for £15 to the British Museum and was numbered Add MS 22047.[10] It was kept in its original format as a roll and has been stored in the British Library's manuscript collection at St Pancras since 1999.[2]

The Anthony Roll has been used frequently as a primary source for histories of the English navy of the 16th century but the full text and all illustrations were not collected in one volume until 2000.[11]

Description

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A worn parchment document with several columns of text above a picture of a small sailing vessel.
A view of the second roll of the Anthony Roll, showing the layout used throughout the document. The information for each vessel is displayed in columns directly below its illustration, here with the text for the Grand Mistress (seen only partially above the text) and a full view of the illustration of the galleass Anne Gallant.

The Anthony Roll was originally a set of three separate vellum rolls. It exists today in the form of a bound volume containing the first and third rolls while the second roll is preserved in its original form. The three original rolls were made up out of a total of 17 individual membranes glued to the back of the next membrane. The membranes were of a width of 27+12 inches (70 cm) and a height varying from 31 to 37+34 inches (79 to 96 cm).[12] After receiving the first and third rolls Pepys had his clerks cut the rolls up and bound in a single volume as a book, now known as Pepys 2991. The transformation of the two rolls created a horizontal page structure, and some of the ornamentation that was cut in process was copied into the volume by hand. Pepys also inserted abstracts between the two rolls and a summarizing table that was not Anthony's, but pre-dated Pepys' binding of the rolls. This radical treatment of the original document has damaged some of the illustrations and is today deprecated. The first three illustrations of the Henry Grace à Dieu, Mary Rose and Peter Pomegranate were all too large to fit on one page and were therefore converted to two-page spreads. The resulting bend down the centre of the illustrations led to noticeable loss of detail. Despite this, there are no plans to attempt a recreation of the original structure of the first and third rolls. The second roll, British Library Add MS 22047, is still in its original condition with the exception of a written endorsement by Mary Fox from 1857 and some damage caused by an application of chemicals to reveal faded writing.[13]

The three rolls list 58 ships divided into classes based roughly on size and construction. Each ship is presented along with its name, tonnage,[a] crew size and, in Anthony's own words, "the ordenaunce, artillery, munitions and habillimentes for warre".[14] The first roll lists the carracks and one pinnace, beginning with the largest ship Henry Grace à Dieu. The second roll lists galleasses, a hybrid of oar-powered and sailing vessels, and one galley. Finally, the third roll is reserved for pinnaces and "rowbarges", both basically smaller versions of galleasses.[b]

Artistic analysis

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A colorful image of a one-masted vessel propelled by a large group of rowers. Toward the back of the ship a man is holding a raised baton, urging the rowers on.
The Galley Subtle, a Mediterranean-type galley which formed the centrepiece of the three combined rolls and the illustration that displays the highest artistic quality.

Anthony Anthony was not a trained, professional artist. The illustrations are described as "striking and boldly executed, but [...] have few claims to be fine works of art". The vessels are for the most part painted according to a standard formula, with distinct repetitions even in the more elaborate depictions. Anthony's style is signified by a "naive draughtsmanship and conformity to a pattern [...] consistent with the abilities of a government official with a decent amateur grasp of form and colour".[1]

The rolls were all of roughly the same length, about 15 feet (4.6 m), and would most likely have been presented side by side for display on a table or hung on a wall. The focal point of the whole composition is in the second, middle roll where the exceptionally well-executed painting of the Galley Subtle is placed. That this ship was intended to be the centrepiece illustration is made clear by the presence of the pinnace Mary James in the first roll, which is otherwise reserved for (sailing) ships. This appears to have originally been placed at the beginning of the third roll, among the other pinnaces and rowbarges, but was moved to achieve more equal lengths.[1] In his pursuit of living up to the image of a Renaissance prince Henry is known to have been particularly fond of galleys, something which would have been known to Anthony.[15][16]

The lettering, framing lines and floral pattern decorations are painted in red or black with the exception of the first three ships of the first roll, which also feature gold. Most of the illustrations were first sketched with plummet outlines and were then painted over in washes. Ship timbers are a light brown that are shaded in the bow and stern to achieve depth, decorations and anchors are highlighted with red, and green is used for guns. Contours are in black and the sea is in shades varying from "greyish green" to "a richer blue".[17]

A small four-masted sailing vessel with a small lizard-like sculpture in its bow.
The Salamander, a galleass captured from the Scots and one of only three ships in the Anthony Roll which has an identifiable figurehead.

The first two rolls were done with roughly the same amount of detail while the lesser rowbarges (essentially small galleys) were done more hastily. The first two ships of the first roll, the Henry Grace à Dieu and the Mary Rose, have traces of a grid pattern, indicating that they were transferred from a different drawing while the rest are done in freehand. Overall, the ships follow a formula depending on the type of ship. The exceptions are stern galleries of some of the galleasses and the figureheads of the Mary Rose, Salamander and the Unicorn, the latter both captured from the Scots in 1544.[18][19] The prominent exception is the Galley Subtle placed in the middle of the second roll. It is more consistent in type with Mediterranean-type galleys than the galleasses and small rowbarges, and features a considerable amount of detail not present in the other ships.[20] It is the only ship where any crew is visible, in this case rowers behind pavisades as protection from enemy arrows and an overseer wearing "a bonnet, full skirted armorial doublet and baggy breeches" holding a stick or baton, as if beating the time of the strokes of the rowers.[21]

Use as a historical source

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As a historical record, the Anthony Roll is in many ways unique. It is the only known fully illustrated list of a Tudor period royal navy,[22] though the pictures should not be seen as exact depictions drawn from real life. For example, the lists of guns of the individual ships, which are considered to be an accurate record produced by a senior state official, are only approximately matched to the paintings.[23] The rigging is only roughly accurate, and has been described by Margaret Rule, archaeological project leader of the Mary Rose excavations, as "a confusing assemblage of shrouds, ratlines and stays". Many details are present, but others are missing, such as the chain-wales (the horizontal platforms extending from the sides) to which the shrouds (the parallel ropes that stabilized the masts) were attached to keep them clear of the hull.[24]

Peter Pomegranate sister ship of the "Mary Rose"

Comparisons with the Mary Rose

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A sailing vessel similar in size to the Henry Grace a Dieu already described. On the top of the forecastle in the bow of the ship is a small sculpture of a bright-red flower.
The illustration of the Mary Rose, which has been compared to the salvaged wreck of the actual ship to determine the historical accuracy of Anthony Anthony's ship portrayals

Comparisons with the finds from the salvaged Mary Rose itself have provided an opportunity to compare the accuracy of the records provided in the Roll. The picture of the ship has provided clues about basic structural features, such as the number of masts and sails. When compared with an inventory of the ship from 1514, there is a close match, proving the illustration to be largely accurate. Examination of details in the construction, however, reveals that Anthony allowed himself some artistic licence. The armament in the painted ship appears clearly exaggerated. The heavy stern chasers (cannon placed in the stern aimed backwards) mounted through gun ports on the orlop deck, just about the waterline, would not have been feasible because of the lack of an orlop deck and the steep angle (sheer) of the ship in this area. The number of gunports in the broadside is inaccurate since it implies two slightly staggered rows of nine ports while the surviving starboard side of the Mary Rose has only one row of gunports on the main deck with seven ports. The accuracy of the forecastle has been more difficult to ascertain since none of it remains; conflicting interpretations of what it looked like have been suggested.[25]

The guns in the back of the forecastle have defied explanation, but one theory is that they were included to compensate for the guns that were positioned in the aftcastle, aiming forwards, but which would have been obscured due to the angle from which the ship was depicted.[26] The list of ammunition, small firearms, longbows, arrows, pikes, and bills closely matches the archaeological evidence.[27] As the source that is closest in time to the sinking of the Mary Rose, it has been of central importance for the archaeological project, especially in estimating the size of the crew.[28][29][30]

Flags and ornamentation

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A sailing vessel with square flags along its railing: the designs include horizontal green and white stripes, the cross of Saint George, three fleurs-de-lys on a blue background and the blue, red and gold English royal arms.
The carrack Pansy with various types of heraldic banners along its railings.

The Anthony Roll provides detailed information about the flags used on the ships. According to the vexillologist Timothy Wilson, the flags depicted flying from the ships are "the most elaborate source we have for the flags flown on the ships of King Henry VIII, being richer in visual detail than all other sources put together."[31] Among the most striking flags in the illustrations are the elongated ceremonial streamers, shown flying from all ships in varying numbers. These feature a Saint George red cross on white ground on the hoist, nearest the flagpole, and a very long tail striped in green and white. They all feature gold paint on the red and green, and silver paint (now oxidized to black) on the white. This artistic device was used either to simulate the fluttering of the flags or to actually display the metallic thread and paint that was sometimes used to decorate them.[32]

Along the railing of all ships, most prominently on the large carracks and the Galley Subtle, there are rows of banners displaying various heraldic designs, including the English royal arms, one or three fleur-de-lis of the French arms, Saint George's crosses and Henry VIII's monogram ("HR") in gold on blue, what appears to be the Tudor rose, and the green and white of the House of Tudor. The depictions of the flags and banners on the ships are in a heraldic and military sense considered to be roughly accurate but not entirely consistent. A kind of system of command among the various vessels is apparent in how flags are displayed on the masts, but it does not appear to have been carried through systematically. Some of the heraldic designs have been described as "unlikely" by the 20th century herald George Bellew, but have deemed to at least be "plausible" by Wilson.[33]

Gallery: The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: 58 War Ships

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  • First roll — 20 Carracks (Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.)
  • Second roll — 15 Galleasses (Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge.)
  • Third roll — 23 Pinnaces and rowbarges (British Library)

The first roll: 20 great ships (English military carracks with forecastle and aftcastle)

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The second roll: 15 Galleasses (English military galleons with lower forecastle and aftcastle)

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The third roll: 23 pinnaces and rowbarges

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Rowbarge: A war galley or flat boat propelled by sails and rowing oars. It is believed that Henry VIII influenced the design of rowbarges and similar galleys [34]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ This is a rather rough estimate of burthen, the carrying capacity of a ship, and should not be confused with the much more modern measurement of displacement, which would be considerably higher than the figures in the roll. For a detailed discussion of the meaning of tonnage and burthen in early modern naval terminology, Rodger 1997, pp. xx–xxii
  2. ^ See Bennel 2000, p. 35 for a detailed discussion of the definition of the various oar-powered vessels.
  1. ^ a b c d Payne 2000, p. 20.
  2. ^ a b Knighton 2000, p. 5.
  3. ^ Loades, D. M. (29 September 2017). The Anthony Roll of Henry VIII's Navy: Pepys Library 2991 and British Library Add MS 22047 with Related Material. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-54670-6.
  4. ^ Knighton 2000, pp. 3–4.
  5. ^ Rodger 1997, p. 548, note 35.
  6. ^ Payne 2000, pp. 24–25.
  7. ^ Russell 1983, Chapter III.
  8. ^ Payne 2000, pp. 20–23.
  9. ^ Knighton 2000, pp. 4–5.
  10. ^ Anthony roll at the British Library
  11. ^ Knighton & Loades 2000, p. xi.
  12. ^ Payne 2000, p. 23.
  13. ^ Knighton 2000, pp. 5–9.
  14. ^ Knighton & Loades 2000, p. 41.
  15. ^ Loades 1992, pp. 91–92.
  16. ^ Rodger 1997, pp. 209–10.
  17. ^ Payne 2000, p. 24.
  18. ^ Nau 1883, pp. 318, 338–9.
  19. ^ Seccombe 1903, pp. 39–44.
  20. ^ Payne 2000, pp. 23–24.
  21. ^ Bennel 2000, p. 35.
  22. ^ Payne 2000, p. 25.
  23. ^ Loades 2000, p. 13.
  24. ^ Rule 1983, p. 137.
  25. ^ Vine & Hildred 2000, pp. 15–16.
  26. ^ Loades 2000, pp. 13–14.
  27. ^ Vine & Hildred 2000, p. 18.
  28. ^ Gardiner & Allen 2005.
  29. ^ Marsden 2009.
  30. ^ Stirland 2000.
  31. ^ Wilson & Hayward 2000, p. 28.
  32. ^ Wilson & Hayward 2000, pp. 31–33.
  33. ^ Wilson & Hayward 2000, pp. 28–30.
  34. ^ Loades 2009, pp. 82–83.

Sources

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Further reading

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