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Beaufort Tabards displaying quartered coats of arms on
front and sleeves: the
Denys br**** of 1505, Olveston,
Gloucestershire Heraldic tabards worn at the...
- upon at
times to read
proclamations publicly; for
which they
still wear
tabards emblazoned with the
royal coat of arms.
There are
active official heralds...
- The
Tabard was an inn in
Southwark established in 1307,
which stood on the east side of
Borough High Street, at the road's
intersection with the ancient...
- The
Tabard Inn
Library was a
circulating subscription library with
numerous exchange stations (also
known as sub-stations)
across the
United States. It...
-
various appendages such as
lance rests or plumeholders, or
clothing such as
tabards or surcoats,
which were
often worn over a harness.
There are a variety...
- The
Tabard Theatre is a
small 96-seat
theatre in
Chiswick in the
London Borough of Hounslow.
Close to
Turnham Green Underground station, it is situated...
- Look up
tabard in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. A
tabard is a
short coat
which was a
common item of men's
clothing in the
Middle Ages, and
which has...
-
Tabard Inn may
refer to: The
Tabard, Chiswick,
London The
Tabard, Southwark,
London Tabard Inn (Washington, D.C.), one of the
National Register of Historic...
-
Tabard Gardens is a
small park in Southwark, London. It is
located on
Tabard Street (itself
named after the
former Tabard public house) and
gives its...
-
Balliol or John de
Balliol (c. 1249 – late 1314),
known derisively as Toom
Tabard (meaning 'empty coat'), was King of
Scots from 1292 to 1296.
Little is known...