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The armiger's father holds a Warrant from the Lord Lyon King of Arms dated 18th
March 2005 in recognition of his application dated 21st September 2000
recognising the petitioner as Camilo Agasim-Pereira of Fulwood, Baron of Fulwood
and authorising the Lyon Clerk to prepare Letters Patent granting the petitioner
and his heirs armorial bearings complete with baronial additaments.
Rendition of Arms by Neil Bromley modification by J. A. Duncan of Sketraw.
The undifferenced arms those of the armiger's father
Camilo Agasim-Pereira of Fulwood & Dirleton, baron of Fulwood and Dirleton. Used
by the heir to the arms they are shown with a three point label.
The Arms of the Baron of Fulwood and Dirleton and his heirs represents their
Jewish faith, love for Scotland and family name origins.
The Magen David Argent has been the symbol of Israel
and of the Jewish faith for ages past. The thistle slipped represents the
armiger’s pride for his country Scotland. The fructed pear tree eradicated
proper, represents the family name Pears or Pear Tree. The fleur-de-lis is a
true representation of his past in Europe and the favourite motif of the family.
The lion sejant Or is also one of the oldest symbols of Judaism and the script
in Hebrew "Adonai Malech (“The Lord is King” in Hebrew letter") testifying to
the armiger's faith: only the Lord is truly Noble and Faithful.
The Fulwoods & Dirletons have traced their family's lineage back more than
fourteen generations to a Juan Calderon (b. 1662, in Villa Ciervo, Salamanca,
Spain) who married Ana Sanchez, also from Villa Ciervo, the family lived in the
same area until 1901 when they immigrated to Brazil.
The armiger is the younger of Fulwood and Lord of the Hundreds of
Gresley and Repton. |