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Blazon

In heraldry and heraldic vexillology, a blazon is a formal description of a coat of arms, flag or similar emblem, from which the reader can reconstruct the appropriate image. The verb to blazon means to create such a description. The visual depiction of a coat of arms or flag has traditionally had considerable latitude in design, but a verbal blazon specifies the essentially distinctive elements. A coat of arms or flag is therefore primarily defined not by a picture but rather by the wording of its blazon (though in modern usage flags are often additionally and more precisely defined using geometrical specifications). Blazon is also the specialized language in which a blazon is written, and, as a verb, the act of writing such a description. Blazonry is the art, craft or practice of creating a blazon. The language employed in blazonry has its own vocabulary, grammar and syntax, which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms.

Other armorial objects and devices – such as badges, banners, and seals – may also be described in blazon.

The noun and verb blazon (referring to a verbal description) are not to be confused with the noun emblazonment, or the verb to emblazon, both of which relate to the graphic representation of a coat of arms or heraldic device.

Etymology

The word blazon is derived from French blason, "shield". It is found in English by the end of the 14th century.[1]

Formerly, heraldic authorities believed that the word was related to the German verb blasen, "to blow (a horn)".[2][3] Present-day lexicographers reject this theory as conjectural and disproved.[1]

Grammar

Blazon is generally designed to eliminate ambiguity of interpretation, to be as concise as possible, and to avoid repetition and extraneous punctuation. English antiquarian Charles Boutell stated in 1864:

Heraldic language is most concise, and it is always minutely exact, definite, and explicit; all unnecessary words are omitted, and all repetitions are carefully avoided; and, at the same time, every detail is specified with absolute precision. The nomenclature is equally significant, and its aim is to combine definitive exactness with a brevity that is indeed laconic.[4]

However, John Brooke-Little, Norroy and Ulster King of Arms, wrote in 1985: "Although there are certain conventions as to how arms shall be blazoned ... many of the supposedly hard and fast rules laid down in heraldic manuals [including those by heralds] are often ignored."[5]

A given coat of arms may be drawn in many different ways, all considered equivalent and faithful to the blazon, just as the letter "A" may be printed in many different fonts while still being the same letter. For example, the shape of the escutcheon is almost always immaterial, with very limited exceptions (e.g., the coat of arms of Nunavut, for which a round shield is specified).

The main conventions of blazon are as follows:

  • Every blazon of a coat of arms begins by describing the field (background), with the first letter capitalised, followed by a comma ",". In a majority of cases this is a single tincture; e.g. Azure (blue).
  • If the field is complex, the variation is described, followed by the tinctures used; e.g. Chequy gules and argent (checkered red and white).
  • If the shield is divided, the division is described, followed by the tinctures of the subfields, beginning with the dexter side (shield bearer's right, but viewer's left) of the chief (upper) edge; e.g. Party per pale argent and vert (dexter half silver, sinister half green), or Quarterly argent and gules (clockwise from viewer's top left, i.e. dexter chief: white, red, white, red). In the case of a divided shield, it is common for the word "party" or "parted" to be omitted (e.g., Per pale argent and vert, a tree eradicated counterchanged).
  • Some authorities prefer to capitalise the names of tinctures and charges, but this convention is far from universal. Where tinctures are not capitalised, an exception may be made for the metal Or, in order to avoid confusion with the English word "or". Where space is at a premium, tincture names may be abbreviated: e.g., ar. for argent, gu. for gules, az. for azure, sa. for sable, and purp. for purpure.
  • Following the description of the field, the principal ordinary or ordinaries and charge(s) are named, with their tincture(s); e.g., a bend or.
  • The principal ordinary or charge is followed by any other charges placed on or around it. If a charge is a bird or a beast, its attitude is defined, followed by the creature's tincture, followed by anything that may be differently coloured; e.g. An eagle displayed gules armed and wings charged with trefoils or (see the coat of arms of Brandenburg below).
  • Counterchanged means that a charge which straddles a line of division is given the same tinctures as the divided field, but reversed (see the arms of Behnsdorf below).
  • A quartered (composite) shield is blazoned one quarter (panel) at a time, proceeding by rows from chief (top) to base, and within each row from dexter (the right side of the bearer holding the shield) to sinister; in other words, from the viewer's left to right.
  • Following the description of the shield, any additional components of the achievement – such as crown/coronet, helmet, torse, mantling, crest, motto, supporters and compartment – are described in turn, using the same terminology and syntax.
  • A convention often followed historically was to name a tincture explicitly only once within a given blazon. If the same tincture was found in different places within the arms, this was addressed either by ordering all elements of like tincture together prior to the tincture name (e.g., Argent, two chevrons and a canton gules); or by naming the tincture only at its first occurrence, and referring to it at subsequent occurrences obliquely, for example by use of the phrase "of the field" (e.g., Argent, two chevrons and on a canton gules a lion passant of the field); or by reference to its numerical place in the sequence of named tinctures (e.g., Argent, two chevrons and on a canton gules a lion passant of the first: in both these examples, the lion is argent). However, these conventions are now avoided by the College of Arms in London, England, and by most other formal granting bodies, as they may introduce ambiguity to complex blazons.[6]
  • It is common to print all heraldic blazons in italic.[6][7] Heraldry has its own vocabulary, word-order and punctuation, and presenting it in italics indicates to the reader the use of a quasi-foreign language.

French vocabulary and grammar

Because heraldry developed at a time when English clerks wrote in Anglo-Norman French, many terms in English heraldry are of French origin. Some of the details of the syntax of blazon also follow French practice: thus, adjectives are normally placed after nouns rather than before.

A number of heraldic adjectives may be given in either a French or an anglicised form: for example, a cross pattée or a cross patty; a cross fitchée or a cross fitchy. In modern English blazons, the anglicised form tends to be preferred.[6]

Where the French form is used, a problem may arise as to the appropriate adjectival ending, determined in normal French usage by gender and number.

"To describe two hands as appaumées, because the word main is feminine in French, savours somewhat of pedantry. A person may be a good armorist, and a tolerable French scholar, and still be uncertain whether an escallop-shell covered with bezants should be blazoned as bezanté or bezantée".

— (John Edwin Cussans), The Handbook of Heraldry, [9]

The usual convention in English heraldry is to adhere to the feminine singular form, for example: a chief undée and a saltire undée, even though the French nouns chef and sautoir are in fact masculine.[9] Efforts have however been made, for example by J. E. Cussans, who suggested that all French adjectives should be expressed in the masculine singular, without regard to the gender and number of the nouns they qualify, thus a chief undé and a saltire undé.

Complexity

Full descriptions of shields range in complexity, from a single word to a convoluted series describing compound shields:

Quarterly I. Azure three Lions' Heads affronté Crowned Or (for Dalmatia); II. chequy Argent and Gules (for Croatia); III. Azure a River in Fess Gules bordered Argent thereon a Marten proper beneath a six-pointed star Or (for Slavonia); IV. per Fess Azure and Or over all a Bar Gules in the Chief a demi-Eagle Sable displayed addextré of the Sun-in-splendour and senestré of a Crescent Argent in the Base seven Towers three and four Gules (for Transylvania); enté en point Gules a double-headed Eagle proper on a Peninsula Vert holding a Vase pouring Water into the Sea Argent beneath a Crown proper with bands Azure (for Fiume); over all an escutcheon Barry of eight Gules and Argent impaling Gules on a Mount Vert a Crown Or issuant therefrom a double-Cross Argent (for Hungary).[10]

Points

Inescutcheon

Divisions of the field

 
A shield parted per pale and per fir twig fess

The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture, as can the various heraldic charges. Many coats of arms consist simply of a division of the field into two contrasting tinctures. These are considered divisions of a shield, so the rule of tincture can be ignored. For example, a shield divided azure and gules would be perfectly acceptable. A line of partition may be straight or it may be varied. The variations of partition lines can be wavy, indented, embattled, engrailed, nebuly, or made into myriad other forms; see Line (heraldry).[11]

Ordinaries

In the early days of heraldry, very simple bold rectilinear shapes were painted on shields. These could be easily recognized at a long distance and could be easily remembered. They therefore served the main purpose of heraldry: identification.[12] As more complicated shields came into use, these bold shapes were set apart in a separate class as the "honorable ordinaries". They act as charges and are always written first in blazon. Unless otherwise specified they extend to the edges of the field. Though ordinaries are not easily defined, they are generally described as including the cross, the fess, the pale, the bend, the chevron, the saltire, and the pall.[13]

There is a separate class of charges called sub-ordinaries which are of a geometrical shape subordinate to the ordinary. According to Friar, they are distinguished by their order in blazon. The sub-ordinaries include the inescutcheon, the orle, the tressure, the double tressure, the bordure, the chief, the canton, the label, and flaunches.[14]

Ordinaries may appear in parallel series, in which case blazons in English give them different names such as pallets, bars, bendlets, and chevronels. French blazon makes no such distinction between these diminutives and the ordinaries when borne singly. Unless otherwise specified an ordinary is drawn with straight lines, but each may be indented, embattled, wavy, engrailed, or otherwise have their lines varied.[15]

Charges

A charge is any object or figure placed on a heraldic shield or on any other object of an armorial composition.[16] Any object found in nature or technology may appear as a heraldic charge in armory. Charges can be animals, objects, or geometric shapes. Apart from the ordinaries, the most frequent charges are the cross – with its hundreds of variations – and the lion and eagle. Other common animals are stags, wild boars, martlets, and fish. Dragons, bats, unicorns, griffins, and more exotic monsters appear as charges and as supporters.

Animals are found in various stereotyped positions or attitudes. Quadrupeds can often be found rampant (standing on the left hind foot). Another frequent position is passant, or walking, like the lions of the coat of arms of England. Eagles are almost always shown with their wings spread, or displayed. A pair of wings conjoined is called a vol.

In English heraldry the crescent, mullet, martlet, annulet, fleur-de-lis, and rose may be added to a shield to distinguish cadet branches of a family from the senior line. These cadency marks are usually shown smaller than normal charges, but it still does not follow that a shield containing such a charge belongs to a cadet branch. All of these charges occur frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms.[17]

Marshalling

To marshal two or more coats of arms is to combine them in one shield. This can be done in a number of ways, of which the simplest is impalement: dividing the field per pale and putting one whole coat in each half. Impalement replaced the earlier dimidiation – combining the dexter half of one coat with the sinister half of another – because dimidiation can create ambiguity.

A more versatile method is quartering, division of the field by both vertical and horizontal lines. As the name implies, the usual number of divisions is four, but the principle has been extended to very large numbers of "quarters".

The third common mode of marshalling is with an inescutcheon, a small shield placed in front of the main shield.

Variations of the field

The field of a shield, or less often a charge or crest, is sometimes made up of a pattern of colours, or variation. A pattern of horizontal (barwise) stripes, for example, is called barry, while a pattern of vertical (palewise) stripes is called paly. A pattern of diagonal stripes may be called bendy or bendy sinister, depending on the direction of the stripes. Other variations include chevrony, gyronny and chequy. Wave shaped stripes are termed undy. For further variations, these are sometimes combined to produce patterns of barry-bendy, paly-bendy, lozengy and fusilly. Semés, or patterns of repeated charges, are also considered variations of the field.[18] The Rule of tincture applies to all semés and variations of the field.

Differencing and cadency

Cadency is any systematic way to distinguish arms displayed by descendants of the holder of a coat of arms when those family members have not been granted arms in their own right. Cadency is necessary in heraldic systems in which a given design may be owned by only one person at any time, generally the head of the senior line of a particular family. As an armiger's arms may be used 'by courtesy', either by children or spouses, while they are still living, some form of differencing may be required so as not to confuse them with the original undifferenced or "plain coat" arms. Historically, arms were only heritable by males and therefore cadency marks had no relevance to daughters; in the modern era, Canadian and Irish heraldry include daughters in cadency. These differences are formed by adding to the arms small and inconspicuous marks called brisures, similar to charges but smaller. They are placed on the fess-point, or in-chief in the case of the label.[19] Brisures are generally exempt from the rule of tincture. One of the best examples of usage from the medieval period is shown on the seven Beauchamp cadets in the stained-glass windows of St Mary's Church, Warwick.[19]

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b "blazon, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th. ed., vol.11, p.683, "Heraldry"
  3. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Blazon" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  4. ^ Boutell, Charles, Heraldry, Historical and Popular, 3rd edition, London, 1864, pp. 8–9.
  5. ^ J. P. Brooke-Little: An Heraldic Alphabet; new and revised edition, p. 52. London: Robson Books, 1985.
  6. ^ a b c . CoA: The Coat of Arms. Archived from the original on 27 December 2017. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  7. ^ Boutell 1864, p. 11.
  8. ^ Courtenay, P. The Armorial Bearings of Sir Winston Churchill 2013-07-18 at the Wayback Machine. The Churchill Centre.
  9. ^ a b Cussans, John E. (1874). The Handbook of Heraldry (2nd ed.). London: Chatto & Windus. p. 47.
  10. ^ Velde, François (August 1998). "Hungary". Heraldry by Countries. Retrieved 13 December 2007.
  11. ^ Stephen Friar and John Ferguson. Basic Heraldry. (W.W. Norton & Company, New York: 1993), 148.
  12. ^ von Volborth (1981), p. 18
  13. ^ Friar (1987), p. 259
  14. ^ Friar (1987), p. 330
  15. ^ Woodcock & Robinson (1988), p. 60
  16. ^ Boutell (1890), p. 311
  17. ^ Moncreiffe & Pottinger (1953), p. 20
  18. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), pp. 101
  19. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th edition (1884), vol. 11, p. 704
General
  • Brault, Gerard J. (1997). Early Blazon: Heraldic Terminology in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, (2nd ed.). Woodbridge, UK: The Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-711-4.
  • Elvin, Charles Norton. (1969). A Dictionary of Heraldry. London: Heraldry Today. ISBN 0-900455-00-4.
  • Parker, James. A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, (2nd ed.). Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle Co. ISBN 0-8048-0715-9.
  • Pimbley, Arthur Francis (1908). Pimbley's dictionary of heraldry. Pimbley.
  • . An Tir College of Heralds. Archived from the original on 20 April 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011. An 'achievement' is a full formal display of a coat of arms.
Books
  • Boutell, Charles (1890). Aveling, S. T. (ed.). Heraldry, Ancient and Modern: Including Boutell's Heraldry. London: Frederick Warne. OCLC 6102523 – via Internet Archive.
  • Burke, Bernard (1967). The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales; Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing.
  • Dennys, Rodney (1975). The Heraldic Imagination. New York: Clarkson N. Potter.
  • Elvins, Mark Turnham (1988). Cardinals and Heraldry. London: Buckland Publications.
  • Fairbairn, James (1986). Fairbairn's Crests of the Families of Great Britain & Ireland. New York: Bonanza Books.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1904). The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopedia of Armory. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack – via Internet Archive.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1909). A Complete Guide to Heraldry. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack. LCCN 09023803 – via Internet Archive.
  • Franklyn, Julian (1968). Heraldry. Cranbury, NJ: A.S. Barnes and Company. ISBN 9780498066832.
  • Friar, Stephen, ed. (1987). A Dictionary of Heraldry. New York: Harmony Books. ISBN 9780517566657.
  • Gwynn-Jones, Peter (1998). The Art of Heraldry: Origins, Symbols, and Designs. London: Parkgate Books. ISBN 9780760710821.
  • Humphery-Smith, Cecil (1973). General Armory Two. London: Tabard Press. ISBN 9780806305837.
  • Innes of Learney, Thomas (1978). Innes of Edingight, Malcolm (ed.). Scots Heraldry (3rd ed.). London: Johnston & Bacon. ISBN 9780717942282.
  • Le Févre, Jean (1971). Pinches, Rosemary; Wood, Anthony (eds.). A European Armorial: An Armorial of Knights of the Golden Fleece and 15th Century Europe. London: Heraldry Today. ISBN 9780900455131.
  • Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1981). Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. New York: Clarkson Potter.
  • Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, George (1680). Scotland's Herauldrie: the Science of Herauldrie treated as a part of the Civil law and Law of Nations. Edinburgh: Heir of Andrew Anderson.
  • Moncreiffe, Iain; Pottinger, Don (1953). Simple Heraldry – Cheerfully Illustrated. London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson and Sons.
  • Neubecker, Ottfried (1976). Heraldry: Sources, Symbols and Meaning. Maidenhead, England: McGraw-Hill.
  • Nisbet, Alexander (1984). A system of Heraldry. Edinburgh: T & A Constable.
  • Parker, James (1970). A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
  • Pastoureau, Michel (1997). Heraldry: An Introduction to a Noble Tradition. Abrams Discoveries. New York: Harry N. Abrams.
  • Paul, James Balfour (1903). An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland. Edinburgh: W. Green & Sons – via Internet Archive.
  • Pinches, J. H. (1994). European Nobility and Heraldry. Heraldry Today. ISBN 0-900455-45-4.
  • Reid of Robertland, David; Wilson, Vivien (1977). An Ordinary of Arms. Vol. Second. Edinburgh: Lyon Office.
  • Rietstap, Johannes B. (1967). Armorial General. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing.
  • Siebmacher, Johann. J. (1890–1901). Siebmacher's Grosses und Allgemeines Wappenbuch Vermehrten Auglage. Nürnberg: Von Bauer & Raspe.
  • Slater, Stephen (2003). The Complete Book of Heraldry. New York: Hermes House. ISBN 9781844772247.
  • von Volborth, Carl-Alexander (1981). Heraldry – Customs, Rules and Styles. Ware, Hertfordshire: Omega Books. ISBN 0-907853-47-1.
  • Wagner, Anthony (1946). Heraldry in England. Penguin. OCLC 878505764.
  • Wagner, Anthony R (1967). Heralds of England: A History of the Office and College of Arms. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
  • von Warnstedt, Christopher (October 1970). "The Heraldic Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms. XI (84).
  • Woodcock, Thomas; Robinson, John Martin (1988). The Oxford Guide to Heraldry. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Woodward, John; Burnett, George (1892) [1884]. Woodward's a treatise on heraldry, British and foreign: with English and French glossaries. Edinburgh: W. & A. B. Johnson. ISBN 0-7153-4464-1. LCCN 02020303 – via Internet Archive.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of blazon at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Illustrated atlas of French and English heraldic terms at Wikimedia Commons
  • A Heraldic Primer, by Stephen Gold and Timothy Shead, explaining the terminology in detail
  • A Grammar of Blazonry by Bruce Miller
  • "Commonly Known" Heraldic Blazon/Emblazon Knowledge, an SCA page with a lengthy dictionary of blazon terms
  • Public Register of the Canadian Heraldic Authority with many useful official versions of modern coats of arms, searchable online
  • Civic Heraldry of England and Wales, fully searchable with illustrations
  • , fully searchable with illustrations of bearings
  • Arms of members of the Heraldry Society (England), with illustrations of bearings
  • Members' Roll of Arms of the Royal Heraldry Society of Canada, with illustrations of bearings
  • Create a Shield from a Blazon. It tries to draw a shield from blazon text.

blazon, this, article, about, heraldry, term, used, romantic, poetry, blason, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find,. This article is about heraldry For the term used in Romantic poetry see Blason This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Blazon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message In heraldry and heraldic vexillology a blazon is a formal description of a coat of arms flag or similar emblem from which the reader can reconstruct the appropriate image The verb to blazon means to create such a description The visual depiction of a coat of arms or flag has traditionally had considerable latitude in design but a verbal blazon specifies the essentially distinctive elements A coat of arms or flag is therefore primarily defined not by a picture but rather by the wording of its blazon though in modern usage flags are often additionally and more precisely defined using geometrical specifications Blazon is also the specialized language in which a blazon is written and as a verb the act of writing such a description Blazonry is the art craft or practice of creating a blazon The language employed in blazonry has its own vocabulary grammar and syntax which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms Other armorial objects and devices such as badges banners and seals may also be described in blazon The noun and verb blazon referring to a verbal description are not to be confused with the noun emblazonment or the verb to emblazon both of which relate to the graphic representation of a coat of arms or heraldic device Contents 1 Etymology 2 Grammar 2 1 French vocabulary and grammar 3 Complexity 4 Points 5 Inescutcheon 6 Divisions of the field 7 Ordinaries 8 Charges 9 Marshalling 10 Variations of the field 11 Differencing and cadency 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEtymology EditThe word blazon is derived from French blason code fra promoted to code fr shield It is found in English by the end of the 14th century 1 Formerly heraldic authorities believed that the word was related to the German verb blasen code deu promoted to code de to blow a horn 2 3 Present day lexicographers reject this theory as conjectural and disproved 1 Grammar EditBlazon is generally designed to eliminate ambiguity of interpretation to be as concise as possible and to avoid repetition and extraneous punctuation English antiquarian Charles Boutell stated in 1864 Heraldic language is most concise and it is always minutely exact definite and explicit all unnecessary words are omitted and all repetitions are carefully avoided and at the same time every detail is specified with absolute precision The nomenclature is equally significant and its aim is to combine definitive exactness with a brevity that is indeed laconic 4 However John Brooke Little Norroy and Ulster King of Arms wrote in 1985 Although there are certain conventions as to how arms shall be blazoned many of the supposedly hard and fast rules laid down in heraldic manuals including those by heralds are often ignored 5 A given coat of arms may be drawn in many different ways all considered equivalent and faithful to the blazon just as the letter A may be printed in many different fonts while still being the same letter For example the shape of the escutcheon is almost always immaterial with very limited exceptions e g the coat of arms of Nunavut for which a round shield is specified The main conventions of blazon are as follows Every blazon of a coat of arms begins by describing the field background with the first letter capitalised followed by a comma In a majority of cases this is a single tincture e g Azure blue If the field is complex the variation is described followed by the tinctures used e g Chequy gules and argent checkered red and white If the shield is divided the division is described followed by the tinctures of the subfields beginning with the dexter side shield bearer s right but viewer s left of the chief upper edge e g Party per pale argent and vert dexter half silver sinister half green or Quarterly argent and gules clockwise from viewer s top left i e dexter chief white red white red In the case of a divided shield it is common for the word party or parted to be omitted e g Per pale argent and vert a tree eradicated counterchanged Some authorities prefer to capitalise the names of tinctures and charges but this convention is far from universal Where tinctures are not capitalised an exception may be made for the metal Or in order to avoid confusion with the English word or Where space is at a premium tincture names may be abbreviated e g ar for argent gu for gules az for azure sa for sable and purp for purpure Following the description of the field the principal ordinary or ordinaries and charge s are named with their tincture s e g a bend or The principal ordinary or charge is followed by any other charges placed on or around it If a charge is a bird or a beast its attitude is defined followed by the creature s tincture followed by anything that may be differently coloured e g An eagle displayed gules armed and wings charged with trefoils or see the coat of arms of Brandenburg below Counterchanged means that a charge which straddles a line of division is given the same tinctures as the divided field but reversed see the arms of Behnsdorf below A quartered composite shield is blazoned one quarter panel at a time proceeding by rows from chief top to base and within each row from dexter the right side of the bearer holding the shield to sinister in other words from the viewer s left to right Following the description of the shield any additional components of the achievement such as crown coronet helmet torse mantling crest motto supporters and compartment are described in turn using the same terminology and syntax A convention often followed historically was to name a tincture explicitly only once within a given blazon If the same tincture was found in different places within the arms this was addressed either by ordering all elements of like tincture together prior to the tincture name e g Argent two chevrons and a canton gules or by naming the tincture only at its first occurrence and referring to it at subsequent occurrences obliquely for example by use of the phrase of the field e g Argent two chevrons and on a canton gules a lion passant of the field or by reference to its numerical place in the sequence of named tinctures e g Argent two chevrons and on a canton gules a lion passant of the first in both these examples the lion is argent However these conventions are now avoided by the College of Arms in London England and by most other formal granting bodies as they may introduce ambiguity to complex blazons 6 It is common to print all heraldic blazons in italic 6 7 Heraldry has its own vocabulary word order and punctuation and presenting it in italics indicates to the reader the use of a quasi foreign language Azure a bend or A coat made famous by the medieval court case Scrope v Grosvenor Party per pale argent and vert a tree eradicated counterchanged Arms of Behnsdorf Argent an eagle displayed gules armed and wings charged with trefoils Or Arms of Brandenburg Quarterly 1st and 4th Sable a lion rampant on a canton Argent a cross Gules 2nd and 3rd quarterly Argent and Gules in the 2nd and 3rd quarters a fret Or overall on a bend Sable three escallops of the first and as an augmentation in chief an inescutcheon Argent a cross Gules and thereon an inescutcheon Azure three fleurs de lis Or Arms of Churchill 8 French vocabulary and grammar Edit Because heraldry developed at a time when English clerks wrote in Anglo Norman French many terms in English heraldry are of French origin Some of the details of the syntax of blazon also follow French practice thus adjectives are normally placed after nouns rather than before A number of heraldic adjectives may be given in either a French or an anglicised form for example a cross pattee or a cross patty a cross fitchee or a cross fitchy In modern English blazons the anglicised form tends to be preferred 6 Where the French form is used a problem may arise as to the appropriate adjectival ending determined in normal French usage by gender and number To describe two hands as appaumees because the word main is feminine in French savours somewhat of pedantry A person may be a good armorist and a tolerable French scholar and still be uncertain whether an escallop shell covered with bezants should be blazoned as bezante or bezantee John Edwin Cussans The Handbook of Heraldry 9 The usual convention in English heraldry is to adhere to the feminine singular form for example a chief undee and a saltire undee even though the French nouns chef code fra promoted to code fr and sautoir code fra promoted to code fr are in fact masculine 9 Efforts have however been made for example by J E Cussans who suggested that all French adjectives should be expressed in the masculine singular without regard to the gender and number of the nouns they qualify thus a chief unde and a saltire unde Complexity EditFull descriptions of shields range in complexity from a single word to a convoluted series describing compound shields Arms of Brittany Ermine Azure a Bend Or over which the families of Scrope and Grosvenor fought a famous legal battle see Scrope v Grosvenor and image above Arms of Ostergotland Sweden Gules a Griffin with dragon wings tail and tongue rampant Or armed beaked langued and membered Azure between four Roses Argent Arms of Hungary dating from 1867 when part of Austria Hungary Quarterly I Azure three Lions Heads affronte Crowned Or for Dalmatia II chequy Argent and Gules for Croatia III Azure a River in Fess Gules bordered Argent thereon a Marten proper beneath a six pointed star Or for Slavonia IV per Fess Azure and Or over all a Bar Gules in the Chief a demi Eagle Sable displayed addextre of the Sun in splendour and senestre of a Crescent Argent in the Base seven Towers three and four Gules for Transylvania ente en point Gules a double headed Eagle proper on a Peninsula Vert holding a Vase pouring Water into the Sea Argent beneath a Crown proper with bands Azure for Fiume over all an escutcheon Barry of eight Gules and Argent impaling Gules on a Mount Vert a Crown Or issuant therefrom a double Cross Argent for Hungary 10 Arms of Brittany Arms of Ostergotland Arms of Hungary 1867 Points EditMain article Escutcheon heraldry PointsInescutcheon EditMain article Escutcheon heraldry InescutcheonDivisions of the field Edit A shield parted per pale and per fir twig fess Main article Division of the field The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture as can the various heraldic charges Many coats of arms consist simply of a division of the field into two contrasting tinctures These are considered divisions of a shield so the rule of tincture can be ignored For example a shield divided azure and gules would be perfectly acceptable A line of partition may be straight or it may be varied The variations of partition lines can be wavy indented embattled engrailed nebuly or made into myriad other forms see Line heraldry 11 Ordinaries EditMain article Ordinary heraldry In the early days of heraldry very simple bold rectilinear shapes were painted on shields These could be easily recognized at a long distance and could be easily remembered They therefore served the main purpose of heraldry identification 12 As more complicated shields came into use these bold shapes were set apart in a separate class as the honorable ordinaries They act as charges and are always written first in blazon Unless otherwise specified they extend to the edges of the field Though ordinaries are not easily defined they are generally described as including the cross the fess the pale the bend the chevron the saltire and the pall 13 There is a separate class of charges called sub ordinaries which are of a geometrical shape subordinate to the ordinary According to Friar they are distinguished by their order in blazon The sub ordinaries include the inescutcheon the orle the tressure the double tressure the bordure the chief the canton the label and flaunches 14 Ordinaries may appear in parallel series in which case blazons in English give them different names such as pallets bars bendlets and chevronels French blazon makes no such distinction between these diminutives and the ordinaries when borne singly Unless otherwise specified an ordinary is drawn with straight lines but each may be indented embattled wavy engrailed or otherwise have their lines varied 15 Charges EditMain article Charge heraldry A charge is any object or figure placed on a heraldic shield or on any other object of an armorial composition 16 Any object found in nature or technology may appear as a heraldic charge in armory Charges can be animals objects or geometric shapes Apart from the ordinaries the most frequent charges are the cross with its hundreds of variations and the lion and eagle Other common animals are stags wild boars martlets and fish Dragons bats unicorns griffins and more exotic monsters appear as charges and as supporters Animals are found in various stereotyped positions or attitudes Quadrupeds can often be found rampant standing on the left hind foot Another frequent position is passant or walking like the lions of the coat of arms of England Eagles are almost always shown with their wings spread or displayed A pair of wings conjoined is called a vol In English heraldry the crescent mullet martlet annulet fleur de lis and rose may be added to a shield to distinguish cadet branches of a family from the senior line These cadency marks are usually shown smaller than normal charges but it still does not follow that a shield containing such a charge belongs to a cadet branch All of these charges occur frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms 17 Marshalling EditMain article Heraldry Marshalling To marshal two or more coats of arms is to combine them in one shield This can be done in a number of ways of which the simplest is impalement dividing the field per pale and putting one whole coat in each half Impalement replaced the earlier dimidiation combining the dexter half of one coat with the sinister half of another because dimidiation can create ambiguity A more versatile method is quartering division of the field by both vertical and horizontal lines As the name implies the usual number of divisions is four but the principle has been extended to very large numbers of quarters The third common mode of marshalling is with an inescutcheon a small shield placed in front of the main shield Variations of the field EditMain article Variation of the field The field of a shield or less often a charge or crest is sometimes made up of a pattern of colours or variation A pattern of horizontal barwise stripes for example is called barry while a pattern of vertical palewise stripes is called paly A pattern of diagonal stripes may be called bendy or bendy sinister depending on the direction of the stripes Other variations include chevrony gyronny and chequy Wave shaped stripes are termed undy For further variations these are sometimes combined to produce patterns of barry bendy paly bendy lozengy and fusilly Semes or patterns of repeated charges are also considered variations of the field 18 The Rule of tincture applies to all semes and variations of the field Differencing and cadency EditMain article Cadency See also Ancient and modern arms Cadency is any systematic way to distinguish arms displayed by descendants of the holder of a coat of arms when those family members have not been granted arms in their own right Cadency is necessary in heraldic systems in which a given design may be owned by only one person at any time generally the head of the senior line of a particular family As an armiger s arms may be used by courtesy either by children or spouses while they are still living some form of differencing may be required so as not to confuse them with the original undifferenced or plain coat arms Historically arms were only heritable by males and therefore cadency marks had no relevance to daughters in the modern era Canadian and Irish heraldry include daughters in cadency These differences are formed by adding to the arms small and inconspicuous marks called brisures similar to charges but smaller They are placed on the fess point or in chief in the case of the label 19 Brisures are generally exempt from the rule of tincture One of the best examples of usage from the medieval period is shown on the seven Beauchamp cadets in the stained glass windows of St Mary s Church Warwick 19 See also EditFlag terminologyNotes EditReferences Edit a b blazon n Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed vol 11 p 683 Heraldry Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Blazon Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Boutell Charles Heraldry Historical and Popular 3rd edition London 1864 pp 8 9 J P Brooke Little An Heraldic Alphabet new and revised edition p 52 London Robson Books 1985 a b c Blazon in CoA CoA The Coat of Arms Archived from the original on 27 December 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Boutell 1864 p 11 Courtenay P The Armorial Bearings of Sir Winston Churchill Archived 2013 07 18 at the Wayback Machine The Churchill Centre a b Cussans John E 1874 The Handbook of Heraldry 2nd ed London Chatto amp Windus p 47 Velde Francois August 1998 Hungary Heraldry by Countries Retrieved 13 December 2007 Stephen Friar and John Ferguson Basic Heraldry W W Norton amp Company New York 1993 148 von Volborth 1981 p 18 Friar 1987 p 259 Friar 1987 p 330 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 60 Boutell 1890 p 311 Moncreiffe amp Pottinger 1953 p 20 Fox Davies 1909 pp 101 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th edition 1884 vol 11 p 704 GeneralBrault Gerard J 1997 Early Blazon Heraldic Terminology in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2nd ed Woodbridge UK The Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 711 4 Elvin Charles Norton 1969 A Dictionary of Heraldry London Heraldry Today ISBN 0 900455 00 4 Parker James A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry 2nd ed Rutland VT Charles E Tuttle Co ISBN 0 8048 0715 9 Pimbley Arthur Francis 1908 Pimbley s dictionary of heraldry Pimbley What is an Achievement An Tir College of Heralds Archived from the original on 20 April 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2011 An achievement is a full formal display of a coat of arms BooksBoutell Charles 1890 Aveling S T ed Heraldry Ancient and Modern Including Boutell s Heraldry London Frederick Warne OCLC 6102523 via Internet Archive Burke Bernard 1967 The General Armory of England Scotland Ireland and Wales Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Dennys Rodney 1975 The Heraldic Imagination New York Clarkson N Potter Elvins Mark Turnham 1988 Cardinals and Heraldry London Buckland Publications Fairbairn James 1986 Fairbairn s Crests of the Families of Great Britain amp Ireland New York Bonanza Books Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1904 The Art of Heraldry An Encyclopedia of Armory London T C amp E C Jack via Internet Archive Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry London T C amp E C Jack LCCN 09023803 via Internet Archive Franklyn Julian 1968 Heraldry Cranbury NJ A S Barnes and Company ISBN 9780498066832 Friar Stephen ed 1987 A Dictionary of Heraldry New York Harmony Books ISBN 9780517566657 Gwynn Jones Peter 1998 The Art of Heraldry Origins Symbols and Designs London Parkgate Books ISBN 9780760710821 Humphery Smith Cecil 1973 General Armory Two London Tabard Press ISBN 9780806305837 Innes of Learney Thomas 1978 Innes of Edingight Malcolm ed Scots Heraldry 3rd ed London Johnston amp Bacon ISBN 9780717942282 Le Fevre Jean 1971 Pinches Rosemary Wood Anthony eds A European Armorial An Armorial of Knights of the Golden Fleece and 15th Century Europe London Heraldry Today ISBN 9780900455131 Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1981 Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe New York Clarkson Potter Mackenzie of Rosehaugh George 1680 Scotland s Herauldrie the Science of Herauldrie treated as a part of the Civil law and Law of Nations Edinburgh Heir of Andrew Anderson Moncreiffe Iain Pottinger Don 1953 Simple Heraldry Cheerfully Illustrated London and Edinburgh Thomas Nelson and Sons Neubecker Ottfried 1976 Heraldry Sources Symbols and Meaning Maidenhead England McGraw Hill Nisbet Alexander 1984 A system of Heraldry Edinburgh T amp A Constable Parker James 1970 A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry Newton Abbot David amp Charles Pastoureau Michel 1997 Heraldry An Introduction to a Noble Tradition Abrams Discoveries New York Harry N Abrams Paul James Balfour 1903 An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland Edinburgh W Green amp Sons via Internet Archive Pinches J H 1994 European Nobility and Heraldry Heraldry Today ISBN 0 900455 45 4 Reid of Robertland David Wilson Vivien 1977 An Ordinary of Arms Vol Second Edinburgh Lyon Office Rietstap Johannes B 1967 Armorial General Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Siebmacher Johann J 1890 1901 Siebmacher s Grosses und Allgemeines Wappenbuch Vermehrten Auglage Nurnberg Von Bauer amp Raspe Slater Stephen 2003 The Complete Book of Heraldry New York Hermes House ISBN 9781844772247 von Volborth Carl Alexander 1981 Heraldry Customs Rules and Styles Ware Hertfordshire Omega Books ISBN 0 907853 47 1 Wagner Anthony 1946 Heraldry in England Penguin OCLC 878505764 Wagner Anthony R 1967 Heralds of England A History of the Office and College of Arms London Her Majesty s Stationery Office von Warnstedt Christopher October 1970 The Heraldic Provinces of Europe The Coat of Arms XI 84 Woodcock Thomas Robinson John Martin 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry New York Oxford University Press Woodward John Burnett George 1892 1884 Woodward s a treatise on heraldry British and foreign with English and French glossaries Edinburgh W amp A B Johnson ISBN 0 7153 4464 1 LCCN 02020303 via Internet Archive External links Edit The dictionary definition of blazon at Wiktionary Media related to Illustrated atlas of French and English heraldic terms at Wikimedia Commons Heraldic Dictionary A Heraldic Primer by Stephen Gold and Timothy Shead explaining the terminology in detail A Grammar of Blazonry by Bruce Miller Commonly Known Heraldic Blazon Emblazon Knowledge an SCA page with a lengthy dictionary of blazon terms Public Register of the Canadian Heraldic Authority with many useful official versions of modern coats of arms searchable online Civic Heraldry of England and Wales fully searchable with illustrations Arms of members of the Heraldry Society of Scotland fully searchable with illustrations of bearings Arms of members of the Heraldry Society England with illustrations of bearings Members Roll of Arms of the Royal Heraldry Society of Canada with illustrations of bearings Create a Shield from a Blazon It tries to draw a shield from blazon text Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blazon amp oldid 1132862837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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