Hamlyn-Williams baronets

The Hamlyn, later Hamlyn-Williams Baronetcy, of Clovelly Court in the County of Devon and of Edwinsford in the County of Carmarthen, was a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain.

This coat of arms was one of many of the Hamlin/Hamelin family, and was transmitted from John de Hameline, knight of Leicester, who served under King Edward I, A. D. 1272 to 1307.

Their son, the second Baronet, assumed the additional surname of Williams in 1798.

Charles Hamlyn-Williams, younger son of the second Baronet, was a Rear-Admiral in the Royal Navy.

Susan Hester Hamlyn-Williams, eldest daughter of the third Baronet, inherited the family seat of Clovelly Court and married Henry Fane, who assumed the surname Hamlyn-Fane.

Arms of Hamlyn: Gules, a lion rampant ermine crowned or . [ 1 ] As shown on mural monument to Zachary Hamlyn (1677-1759) in Clovelly Church