![]() ![]() In March 2023 this was held at the House of Lords. The society also hosts one large dinner each term with the Annual Dinner (in the Lent term) attracting up to 70 diners. In recent years, the society has visited the College of Arms, the Society of Genealogists and various cathedrals and museums. There are generally two outings each year-one in Michaelmas and one in Lent-–to places of heraldic and genealogical interest. These are in the general area of heraldry and genealogy but also include cognate subjects such as ceremonial dress, tartan, local history, customs, military medals or indeed anything of an antiquarian nature. įour speaker meetings are held in each of the Michaelmas and Lent terms and a ninth at the beginning of the Easter term. ![]() The committee was to consist of a president, a secretary, a senior treasurer, a junior treasurer and ordinary committee members. The structure of the new society was to include a patron and a number of honorary vice-presidents. Meetings held earlier in the term had led to the formal culmination of a series of discussions for the consolidation and amalgamation. Not surprisingly many members of one society were members of the other and on 10 June 1957, sponsored by some vice-presidents, by agreement between the secretaries, special general meetings of both societies were held and resolutions passed abolishing both societies on condition that a new joint society was formed later in the day. In 1954, a separate Cambridge University Society of Genealogists was formed. The first Cambridge University Heraldic Society was founded in 1948 from the remnants of the late nineteenth-century Monumental Brass Society. The Cambridge University Heraldic and Genealogical Society was formed as the result of the merger in 1957 of a previous Heraldic Society (founded 1948) with the Cambridge University Society of Genealogists (founded 1954). Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 18th Duke of Norfolk ![]()
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