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Charge (heraldry)

In heraldry, a charge is any emblem or device occupying the field of an escutcheon (shield). That may be a geometric design (sometimes called an ordinary) or a symbolic representation of a person, animal, plant, object, building, or other device. In French blazon, the ordinaries are called pièces, and other charges are called meubles ("[the] mobile [ones]").

The term charge can also be used as a verb; for example, if an escutcheon depicts three lions, it is said to be charged with three lions; similarly, a crest or even a charge itself may be "charged", such as a pair of eagle wings charged with trefoils (as on the coat of arms of Brandenburg). It is important to distinguish between the ordinaries and divisions of the field, as that typically follow similar patterns, such as a shield divided "per chevron", as distinct from being charged with a chevron.

While thousands of objects found in religion, nature, mythology, or technology have appeared in armory, there are several charges (such as the cross, the eagle, and the lion) which have contributed to the distinctive flavour of heraldic design. Only these and a few other notable charges (crowns, stars, keys, etc.) are discussed in this article, but a more exhaustive list will be found in the list of heraldic charges.

In addition to being shown in the regular way, charges may be blazoned as umbrated (shadowed), detailed,[a] (rather incorrectly) outlined,[2] highly unusually shaded[3] and rather irregularly in silhouette or, more ambiguously, confusingly, and unhelpfully, futuristic,[4] stylized or simplified.[5] There are also several units in the United States Air Force with charges blazoned as "mythical",[6] or beasts as "chimerical",[7] but those conceptions are meaningless and irrelevant to the conception of heraldry, and it does not affect the appearance of those charges.

Ordinary charges – Ordinaries and sub-ordinaries

Unlike mobile charges, the ordinary charches[8] reach to the edge of the field. Some heraldic writers[b] distinguish, albeit arbitrarily, between (honourable) ordinaries and sub-ordinaries. While some authors hold that only nine charges are "honourable" ordinaries, exactly which ones fit into this category is a subject of constant disagreement. The remainder are often termed sub-ordinaries, and narrower or smaller versions of the ordinaries are called diminutives. While the term ordinaries is generally recognised, so much dispute may be found among sources regarding which are "honourable" and which are relegated to the category of "sub-ordinaries" that indeed one of the leading authors in the field, Arthur Charles Fox-Davies (1871–1928), wrote at length on what he calls the "utter absurdity of the necessity for any [such] classification at all", stating that the ordinaries and sub-ordinaries are, in his mind, "no more than first charges".[9] Apparently ceding the point for the moment, Fox-Davies lists the generally agreed-upon "honourable ordinaries" as the bend, fess, pale, pile, chevron, cross, saltire, and chief.[9] Woodcock sheds some light on the matter, stating that earlier writers such as Leigh, Holme and Guillim proposed that "honourable ordinaries" should occupy one-third of the field, while later writers such as Edmondson favoured one-fifth, "on the grounds that a bend, pale, or chevron occupying one-third of the field makes the coat look clumsy and disagreeable".[10] Woodcock goes so far as to enumerate the ordinaries thus: "The first Honourable Ordinary is the cross", the second is the chief, the third is the pale, the fourth is the bend, the fifth is the fess, the sixth is the inescutcheon, the seventh is the chevron, the eighth is the saltire, and the ninth is the bar, while stating that "some writers" prefer the bordure as the ninth ordinary.[11] Volborth, having decidedly less to say on the matter, agrees that the classifications are arbitrary and the subject of disagreement, and lists the "definite" ordinaries as the chief, pale, bend, fess, chevron, cross and saltire.[12] Boutell lists the chief, pale, bend, bend sinister, fess, bar, cross, saltire and chevron as the "honourable ordinaries".[13] Thus, the chief, bend, pale, fess, chevron, cross and saltire appear to be the undisputed ordinaries, while authors disagree over the status of the pile, bar, inescutcheon, bordure and others.

Honourable ordinaries

Several different figures are recognised as honourable ordinaries, each normally occupying about one-fifth to one-third of the field.[10] As discussed above, much disagreement exists among authors regarding which ordinary charges are "honourable", so only those generally agreed to be "honourable ordinaries" will be discussed here, while the remainder of ordinary charges will be discussed in the following section.

  • The chief is the upper portion of the field.
  • The bend is a stripe running from the upper left to the lower right, as \, as seen by the viewer. The bend sinister runs from the upper right to the lower left, as /. (In heraldry sinister (Latin: left) refers to the left side of the shield from the perspective of the one wearing it, hence the right side from the viewer's perspective.)
  • The pale is a vertical stripe in the centre of the field.
  • The fess is a broad horizontal stripe across the centre of the field.
  • The chevron is a construction shaped like an inverted letter V.
  • The cross is a geometric construction of two perpendicular lines or bands, vertical and horizontal. It has hundreds of variants, most of which are mobile charges rather than ordinaries; some of these will be discussed below.
  • The saltire is a diagonal cross, often called Saint Andrew's cross.

Most of the ordinaries have corresponding diminutives, narrower versions, most often mentioned when two or more appear in parallel: bendlets, pallets, bars (multiples of the fess), and chevronels.

Honourable ordinaries or sub-ordinaries

In addition to those mentioned in the above section, the following are variously called "honourable ordinaries" by different authors, while others of these are often called sub-ordinaries.

  • The bordure is a border touching the edge of the field.
  • The pile is a wedge issuing from the top of the field and tapering to a point near the bottom. Its length and width vary widely. Piles may occur in any orientation, e.g. pile reversed, pile bendwise and so on.
  • The pall or pairle is shaped like the letter Y.

Sub-ordinaries

  • The quarter is a rectangle occupying the top left quarter of the field, as seen by the viewer.
  • The canton is a square occupying the left third of the chief (sometimes reckoned to be a diminutive of the quarter).
  • The orle may be considered an inner bordure: a reasonably wide band away from the edge of the shield, it is always shown following the shape of the shield, without touching the edges.
    • The tressure is a narrower version of the orle, rarely seen except in the double tressure flory and counter-flory, an element of the royal coat of arms of Scotland and of many other Scots coats.
  • The base or terrace in base is the lower portion of the field.
  • The fret originally consisted of three bendlets interlaced with three bendlets sinister; other depictions form the outer bendlets into a mascle through which the two remaining bendlets are woven. This has also been called a Harington knot, as in the arms of Harington.[14]
  • Flaunches, flanches or flasks are regions on the sides of the field, bounded by a pair of circular arcs whose centers are beyond the sides of the shield.
  • A label is a horizontal strap, with a number of pendants (usually called points) suspended from it; the default is three, but any number may be specified. The label is nearly always a mark of cadency in British and French heraldry,[c] but is occasionally found as a regular charge in early armory and even in the 20th century. It is sometimes called a file, as in the canting arms of Belfile, a label with a bell hanging from each point. There are some examples in which the strap is omitted, the points issuing from the top of the shield.[d]
  • The gyron is a right triangle occupying the lower half of the first quarter: its edges follow per bend and per fess from the dexter side to the centre of the field. A gyron sinister, much rarer, is a similar figure in the sinister chief. Gyrons are sometimes blazoned to be shown in other positions – as in 'the sun in his splendour .. along with in dexter base a sixth gyron voided'

Mobile charges

The so-called mobile charges[8] (or sometimes common charges) are not tied to the size and shape of the shield, and so may be placed in any part of the field, although whenever a charge appears alone, it is placed with sufficient position and size to occupy the entire field. Common mobile charges include human figures, human parts, animals, animal parts, legendary creatures (or "monsters"), plants and floral designs, inanimate objects, and other devices. The heraldic animals need not exactly resemble the actual creatures.

Geometric charges

A number of geometric charges are sometimes listed among the subordinaries (see above), but as their form is not related to the shape of the shield – indeed they may appear independent of the shield (i.e. in crests and badges) – they are more usefully considered here. These include the escutcheon or inescutcheon, lozenge, fusil, mascle, rustre, billet, roundel, fountain, and annulet.

  • The escutcheon is a small shield. If borne singly in the centre of the main shield, it is sometimes called an inescutcheon, and is usually employed to combine multiple coats. It is customarily the same shape as the shield it is on, though shields of specific shapes are rarely specified in the blazon.
  • The lozenge is a rhombus generally resembling the diamonds of playing cards.
    • The fusil: A more acute lozenge.
    • The mascle: A lozenge voided (i.e. with a lozenge-shaped hole).
    • The rustre: A lozenge pierced (i.e. with a round hole).
  • The billet is a rectangle, usually at least twice as tall as it is wide; it may represent a block of wood or a sheet of paper. Billets appear in the shield of the house of Nassau, which was modified to become that of the kingdom of the Netherlands.
  • The roundel is a solid circle, frequently of gold (blazoned a bezant).
    • A fountain is depicted as a roundel barry wavy argent and azure.
    • An annulet is a roundel voided (i.e. a ring).

Several other simple charges occur with comparable frequency. These include the mullet or star, crescent and cross:

  • The mullet is a star of (usually five) straight rays, and may have originated as a representation of the rowel or revel of a spur (although "spur revels" do appear under that name).[17] Mullets frequently appear pierced. An unpierced mullet is sometimes called a "star" in Scottish heraldry, and stars also appear in English and continental heraldry under that name (often with six points). The "spur revel" is also found in Scottish heraldry.
    • The estoile: A star with (usually six) wavy rays is called an estoile (the Old French word for 'star'; modern French étoile).
  • The comet is shown as a mullet with a bendwise wavy tail, rather than naturalistically.
  • The crescent, a symbol of the Moon, normally appears with its horns upward; if its horns are to dexter it represents a waxing moon (increscent), and with horns to sinister it represents a waning moon (decrescent).
  • The cross: One of the most frequently found charges in heraldry, if not the most, is the cross, which has developed into, some say, 400 varieties.[18] When the cross does not reach the edges of the field, it becomes a mobile charge. The plain Greek cross (with equal limbs) and Latin cross (with the lower limb extended) are sometimes seen, but more often the tip of each limb is developed into some ornamental shape. The most commonly found crosses in heraldry include the cross botonny, the cross flory, the cross moline, the cross potent, the cross patée or formée, the cross patonce and the cross crosslet.[19]

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. It does not follow, however, that a shield containing such a charge necessarily belongs to a cadet branch. All of these charges occur frequently in basic (undifferenced) coats of arms.

Human or humanlike figures

Humans, deities, angels and demons occur more often as crests and supporters than on the shield. (Though in many heraldic traditions the depiction of deities is considered taboo, exceptions to this also occur.) When humans do appear on the shield, they almost always appear affronté (facing forward), rather than toward the left like beasts. Such as the arms of the Dalziel family of Scotland, which depicted a naked man his arms expanded on a black background.[20] The largest group of human charges consists of saints, often as the patron of a town. Knights, bishops, monks and nuns, kings and queens also occur frequently. There are rare occurrences of a "child" (without further description, this is usually understood to be a very young boy, and young girls are extremely rare in heraldry), both the head and entire body. A famous example is the child swallowed by a dragon (the biscione) in the arms of Visconti dukes of Milan.

Greco-Roman mythological figures typically appear in an allegorical or canting role. Angels very frequently appear, but angelic beings of higher rank, such as cherubim and seraphim, are extremely rare. An archangel appears in the arms of Arkhangelsk. The Devil or a demon is occasionally seen, being defeated by the archangel Saint Michael. Though the taboo is not invariably respected, British heraldry in particular, and to a greater or lesser extent the heraldry of other countries, frowns on depictions of God or Christ, though an exception may be in the not-uncommon Continental depictions of Madonna and Child, including the Black Madonna in the arms of Marija Bistrica, Croatia.[e]

Moors—or more frequently their heads, often crowned—appear with some frequency in medieval European heraldry. They are also sometimes called moore, blackmoor or negro.[21] Moors appear in European heraldry from at least as early as the 13th century,[22] and some have been attested as early as the 11th century in Italy,[22] where they have persisted in the local heraldry and vexillology well into modern times in Corsica and Sardinia. Armigers bearing moors or moors' heads may have adopted them for any of several reasons, to include symbolizing military victories in the Crusades, as a pun on the bearer's name in the canting arms of Morese, Negri, Saraceni, etc., or in the case of Frederick II, possibly to demonstrate the reach of his empire.[22] Even the arms of Pope Benedict XVI feature a moor's head, crowned and collared red. Nevertheless, the use of moors (and particularly their heads) as a heraldic symbol has been deprecated in modern North America,[f] where racial stereotypes have been influenced by a history of Trans-Atlantic slave trade and racial segregation, and applicants to the College of Arms of the Society for Creative Anachronism are urged to use them delicately to avoid creating offensive images.[23]

Human parts

Parts of human bodies occur more often than the whole, particularly heads (occasionally of exotic nationality), hearts (always stylized), hands, torso and armored limbs. A famous heraldic hand is the Red Hand of Ulster, alluding to an incident in the legendary Milesian invasion. Hands also appear in the coat of arms of Antwerp. Ribs occur in Iberian armory, canting for the Portuguese family da Costa. According to Woodward & Burnett, the Counts Colleoni of Milan bear arms blazoned: "Per pale argent and gules, three hearts reversed counterchanged;" but in less delicate times these were read as canting arms[24] showing three pairs of testicles (coglioni = "testicles" in Italian).[25][g] The community of Cölbe in Hesse has a coat of arms with a similar charge.

Animals

Animals, especially lions and eagles, feature prominently as heraldic charges. Some differences may be observed between an animal's natural form and the conventional attitudes (positions) into which heraldic animals are contorted; additionally, various parts of an animal (claws, horns, tongue, etc.) may be differently coloured, each with its own terminology. Most animals are broadly classified, according to their natural form, into beasts, birds, sea creatures and others, and the attitudes that apply to them may be grouped accordingly. Beasts, particularly lions, most often appear in the rampant position; while birds, particularly the eagle, most often appear displayed. While the lion, regarded as the king of beasts, is by far the most frequently occurring beast in heraldry, the eagle, equally regarded as the king of birds, is overwhelmingly the most frequently occurring bird, and the rivalry between these two is often noted to parallel with the political rivalry between the powers they came to represent in medieval Europe. Neubecker notes that "in the heroic poem by Heinrich von Veldeke based on the story of Aeneas, the bearer of the arms of a lion is set against the bearer of the arms of an eagle. If one takes the latter to be the historical and geographical forerunner of the Holy Roman emperor, then the bearer of the lion represents the unruly feudal lords, to whom the emperor had to make more and more concessions, particularly to the powerful duke of Bavaria and Saxony, Henry the Lion of the House of Welf."[26]

The beast most often portrayed in heraldry is the lion. When posed passant guardant (walking and facing the viewer), he is called a léopard in French blazon. Other beasts frequently seen include the wolf, bear, boar, horse, bull or ox, and stag or hart. The tiger (unless blazoned as a Bengal tiger) is a fanciful beast with a wolflike body, a mane and a pointed snout. Dogs of various types, and occasionally of specific breeds, occur more often as crests or supporters than as charges. According to Neubecker, heraldry in the Middle Ages generally distinguished only between pointers, hounds and whippets, when any distinction was made.[27] The unicorn resembles a horse with a single horn, but its hooves are usually cloven like those of a deer. The griffin combines the head (but with ears), chest, wings and forelegs of the eagle with the hindquarters and legs of a lion. The male griffin lacks wings and his body is scattered with spikes.

The bird most frequently found in armory is, by far, the eagle. Eagles in heraldry are predominantly presented with one or two heads, though triple-headed eagles are not unknown, and one eagle appearing in the Codex Manesse curiously has its wing bones fashioned into additional heads.[h] Eagles and their wings also feature prominently as crests. Eagles most frequently appear full-bodied, with one head, in numerous positions including displayed, statant, passant and rising. The demi-eagle, which is shown only from the waist up, occurs less frequently. Double-headed eagles almost always appear displayed. As a result of being the dominant charge on the imperial Byzantine, Holy Roman, Austrian and Russian coats of arms, the double eagle gained enduring renown throughout the Western world. Among the present day nations with an eagle charge on their coat of arms are: Albania, Austria, Germany, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Russia, and Serbia. Additionally, the Double-Headed Eagle of Lagash is used as an emblem by the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.[28] There are many meanings attached to this symbol, and it was introduced in France in the early 1760s as the emblem of the Knight Kadosh degree.[29]

The martlet, a stylized swift or swallow without feet (sometimes incorrectly, at least in the Anglophone heraldries these days, said to have no beak), is a mark of cadency in English heraldry, but also appears as a simple charge in undifferenced arms. Its attitude is usually statant (and is never blazoned as such); but it can also be found volant. The pelican is notable as frequently occurring in a peculiar attitude described as in her piety (i.e. wings raised, piercing her own breast to feed her chicks in the nest, which is how it is actually often blazoned, 'in its piety' being a fairly modern conceit). This symbol carries a particular religious meaning (as a symbol of Christ sacrificing Himself),[citation needed] and became so popular in heraldry that pelicans rarely exist in heraldry in any other position.[30] Distinction is however observed, between a pelican "vulning herself" (alone, piercing her breast) and "in her piety" (surrounded by and feeding her chicks).[31] The swan is also often seen, and the peacock in heraldry is described as being in its pride. The domestic cock (or rooster) is sometimes called dunghill cock to distinguish it from the game cock which has a cut comb and exaggerated spurs, and the moor cock, which is the farmyard cock with a game bird's tail.[32] Other birds occur less frequently.

The category of sea creatures may be seen to include various fish, a highly stylized "dolphin", and various fanciful creatures, sea monsters, which are shown as half-fish and half-beast, as well as mermaids and the like. The "sea lion" and "sea horse", for example, do not appear as natural sea lions and seahorses, but rather as half-lion half-fish and half-horse half-fish, respectively. Fish of various species often appear in canting arms, e.g.: pike, also called luce, for Pike or Lucy; dolphin (a conventional kind of fish rather than the natural mammal) for the Dauphin de Viennois. The escallop (scallop shell) became popular as a token of pilgrimage to the shrine of Santiago de Compostela. The sea-lion and sea-horse, like the mermaid, combine the foreparts of a mammal with the tail of a fish, and a dorsal fin in place of the mane. (When the natural seahorse is meant, it is blazoned as a hippocampus.) The sea-dog and sea-wolf are quadrupeds but with scales, webbed feet, and often a flat tail resembling that of the beaver.

Reptiles and invertebrates occurring in heraldry include serpents, lizards, salamanders and others, but the most frequently occurring of these are various forms of dragons. The "dragon", thus termed, is a large monstrous reptile with, often, a forked or barbed tongue, membraned wings like a bat's, and four legs. The wyvern and lindworm are dragons with only two legs. The salamander is typically shown as a simple lizard surrounded by flames. Also notably occurring (undoubtedly owing much of its fame to Napoleon, though it also appears in much earlier heraldry) is the bee.[i]

Animal parts

Animals' heads are also very frequent charges, as are the paw or leg (gamb) of the lion, the wing (often paired) of the eagle, and the antlers (attire) of the stag. Sometimes only the top half of a beast is shown; for example, the demi-lion is among the most common forms occurring in heraldic crests.

Heads may appear cabossed (also caboshed or caboched): with the head cleanly separated from the neck so that only the face shows; couped: with the neck cleanly separated from the body so that the whole head and neck are present; or erased: with the neck showing a ragged edge as if forcibly torn from the body. While cabossed heads are shown facing forward (affronté), heads that are couped or erased face dexter unless otherwise specified for differencing. Heads of horned beasts are often shown cabossed to display the horns, but instances can be found in any of these circumstances. A lion's head cabossed is called simply a face, and a fox's head cabossed, a mask.[33]

Attitude of animals

The attitude, or position, of the creature's body is usually explicitly stated in English blazon. When such description is omitted, a lion can be assumed to be rampant, a leopard or herbivore passant.

By default, the charge faces dexter (left as seen by the viewer); this would be forward on a shield worn on the left arm. In German armory, animate charges in the dexter half of a composite display are usually turned to face the center.

  • An animal toward sinister or contourny is turned toward the right of the shield (as seen by the observer, i.e. the shield-bearer's left), the sinister.
  • An animal affronté or full faced faces the viewer.
  • An animal guardant faces dexter with its head turned to face the viewer.
  • An animal regardant faces dexter with its head turned toward sinister, as if looking over its shoulder.

Certain features of an animal are often of a contrasting tincture. The charge is then said to be armed (claws and horns and tusks), langued (tongue), vilené[34] or pizzled[35] (penis), attired (antlers or very occasionally horns), unguled (hooves), crined (horse's mane or human hair) of a specified tincture.

Many attitudes have developed from the herald's imagination and ever-increasing need for differentiation, but only the principal attitudes found in heraldry need be discussed here. These, in the case of beasts, include the erect positions, the seated positions, and the prone positions. In the case of birds, these include the "displayed" positions, the flying positions, and the resting positions. Additionally, birds are frequently described by the position of their wings. A few other attitudes warrant discussion, including those particular to fish, serpents, griffins and dragons.

The principal attitude of beasts is rampant (i.e. standing on one hind leg with forepaws raised as if to climb or mount - sometimes including an erect member). Beasts also frequently appear walking, passant or, in the case of stags and the occasional unicorn, trippant, and may appear statant (standing), salient or springing (leaping), sejant (seated), couchant or lodged (lying prone with head raised), or occasionally dormant (sleeping). The principal attitude of birds, namely the eagle, is displayed (i.e. facing the viewer with the head turned toward dexter and wings raised and upturned to show the full underside of both wings). Birds also appear rising or rousant (i.e. wings raised and head upturned as if about to take flight), volant (flying), statant (standing, with wings raised), close (at rest with wings folded), and waterfowl may appear naiant (swimming), while cranes may appear vigilant (standing on one leg). Fish often appear naiant (swimming horizontally) or hauriant (upwards) or urinant (downwards), but may also appear addorsed (two fish hauriant, back to back). Serpents may appear glissant (gliding in a wavy form) or nowed (as a figure-eight knot). Griffins and quadrupedal dragons constantly appear segreant (i.e. rampant with wings addorsed and elevated) and, together with lions, may appear combatant (i.e. two of them turned to face each other in the rampant position).

Plants

Plants are extremely common in heraldry and figure among the earliest charges. The turnip, for instance, makes an early appearance, as does wheat. Trees also appear in heraldry; the most frequent tree by far is the oak (drawn with large leaves and acorns), followed by the pine. Apples and bunches of grapes occur very frequently, other fruits less so. When the fruit is mentioned, as to indicate a different tincture, the tree is said to be fructed of the tincture. If a tree is "eradicated" it is shown as if it has been ripped up from the ground, the roots being exposed. "Erased" is rarely used for a similar treatment.[j] In Portuguese heraldry, but rarely in other countries, trees are sometimes found decorticated.

The most famous heraldic flower (particularly in French heraldry) is the fleur-de-lis, which is often stated to be a stylised lily, though despite the name there is considerable debate on this.[citation needed] The "natural" lily, somewhat stylised, also occurs, as (together with the fleur-de-lis) in the arms of Eton College. The rose is perhaps even more widely seen in English heraldry than the fleur-de-lis. Its heraldic form is derived from the "wild" type with only five petals, and it is often barbed (the hull of the bud, its points showing between the petals) and seeded in contrasting tinctures. The thistle frequently appears as a symbol of Scotland.

The trefoil, quatrefoil and cinquefoil are abstract forms resembling flowers or leaves. The trefoil is always shown slipped (i.e. with a stem), unless blazoned otherwise. The cinquefoil is sometimes blazoned fraise (strawberry flower), most notably when canting for Fraser. The trillium flower occurs occasionally in a Canadian context, and the protea flower constantly appears in South Africa, since it is the national flower symbol.

Wheat constantly occurs in the form of "garbs" or sheaves and in fields (e.g. in the arms of the province of Alberta, Canada), though less often as ears, which are shown unwhiskered (though some varieties of wheat are naturally whiskered). Ears of rye are depicted exactly as wheat, except the ears droop down and are often whiskered, e.g. in the arms of the former Ruislip-Northwood Urban District. Barley, cannabis, maize, and oats also occur. The "garb" in the arms of Gustav Vasa (and in the Coat of Arms of Sweden) is not a wheatsheaf, although it was pictured in that way from the 16th to 19th century; rather, this "vasa" is a bundle but of unknown sort.

Inanimate objects

Very few inanimate objects in heraldry carry a special significance distinct from that of the object itself, but among such objects are the escarbuncle, the fasces, and the key. The escarbuncle developed from the radiating iron bands used to strengthen a round shield, eventually becoming a heraldic charge.[36] The fasces (not to be confused with the French term for a bar or fess) is emblematic of the Roman magisterial office and has often been granted to mayors.[36] Keys (taking a form similar to a "skeleton key") are emblematic of Saint Peter and, by extension, the papacy, and thus frequently appear in ecclesiastical heraldry.[36] Because St. Peter is the patron saint of fishermen, keys also notably appear in the arms of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers.[36]

The sun is a disc with twelve or more wavy rays, or alternating wavy and straight rays, often represented "in his splendour" (i.e. with a face). The moon "in her plenitude" (full) sometimes appears, distinguished from a roundel argent by having a face; but crescents occur much more frequently. Estoiles are stars with six wavy rays, while stars (when they occur under that name) have straight rays usually numbering five in British and North American heraldry and six in continental European heraldry. Clouds often occur, though more frequently for people or animals to stand on or issue from than as isolated charges.[k] The raindrop as such is unknown, though drops of fluid (goutte) is known. These occasionally appear as a charge, but more frequently constitute a field semé (known as goutté). The snowflake occurs in modern heraldry, sometimes blazoned as a "snow crystal" or "ice crystal".

The oldest geological charge is the mount, typically a green hilltop rising from the lower edge of the field, providing a place for a beast, building or tree to stand. This feature is exceedingly common in Hungarian arms. Natural mountains and boulders are not unknown, though ranges of mountains are differently shown. An example is the arms of Edinburgh, portraying Edinburgh Castle atop Castle Rock. Volcanos are shown, almost without exception, as erupting, and the eruption is generally quite stylised. In the 18th century, landscapes began to appear in armory, often depicting the sites of battles. For example, Admiral Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson received a chief of augmentation containing a landscape alluding to the Battle of the Nile.

By far the most frequent building in heraldry is the tower, a tapering cylinder of masonry topped with battlements, usually having a door and a few windows. The canting arms of the Kingdom of Castile are Gules, a tower triple-turreted Or (i.e. three small towers standing atop a larger one). A castle is generally shown as two towers joined by a wall, the doorway often shown secured by a portcullis. The portcullis was used as a canting badge by the House of Tudor ("two-doors"), and has since come to represent the British Parliament. The modern chess-rook would be indistinguishable from a tower; the heraldic chess rook, based on the medieval form of the piece, instead of battlements, has two outward-splayed "horns". Civic and ecclesiastical armory sometimes shows a church or a whole town, and cities, towns and Scots burghs often bear a mural crown (a crown in the form of a wall with battlements or turrets) in place of a crown over the shield. Ships of various types often appear; the most frequent being the ancient galley often called, from the Gaelic, a lymphad. Also frequent are anchors and oars.

The maunch is a 12th-century lady's sleeve style. Its use in heraldry arose from the custom of the knights who attended tournaments wearing their ladies sleeves, as "gages d'amour" (tokens of love). This fashion of sleeve would later evolve into Tippet-style stoles. In French blazon this charge is sometimes informally referred to as manche mal taillée (a sleeve badly cut).[38]

Spurs also occur, sometimes "winged", but more frequently occurring is the spur-rowel or spur-revel, which is said to more often termed a "mullet of five points pierced" by English heralds.[39]

Crowns and coronets of various kinds are constantly seen. The ecclesiastical hat and bishop's mitre are nearly ubiquitous in ecclesiastical heraldry. The sword is sometimes a symbol of authority, as in the royal arms of the Netherlands, but may also allude to Saint Paul, as the patron of a town (e.g. London) or dedicatee of a church. Sometimes it is shown with a key, owing to the fact that Saints Peter and Paul are paired together. Other weapons occur more often in modern than in earlier heraldry. The mace also appears as a weapon, the war mace, in addition to its appearance as a symbol of authority, plain mace. The globus cruciger, also variously called an orb, a royal orb, or a mound (from French monde, Latin mundus, the world) is a ball or globe surmounted by a cross, which is part of the regalia of an emperor or king, and is the emblem of sovereign authority and majesty.[40]

Books constantly occur, most frequently in the arms of colleges and universities, though the Gospel and Bible are sometimes distinguished. Books if open may be inscribed with words. Words and phrases are otherwise rare, except in Spanish and Portuguese armory. Letters of the various alphabets are also relatively rare. Arms of merchants in Poland and eastern Germany are often based on house marks, abstract symbols resembling runes, though they are almost never blazoned as runes, but as combinations of other heraldic charges. Musical instruments commonly seen are the harp (as in the coat of arms of Ireland), bell and trumpet. The drum, almost without exception, is of the field drum type. Since musical notation is a comparatively recent invention, it is not found in early heraldry, though it does appear in 20th century heraldry.

Japanese mon are sometimes used as heraldic charges. They are blazoned in traditional heraldic style rather than in the Japanese style.[41]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As in the coat of arms of the 432d Reconnaissance Group of the United States Air Force.[1]
  2. ^ Woodcock, himself apparently one such author, lists Leigh, Holme, Guillim and Edmondson among these, while other prominent authors such as Fox-Davies shun the distinction as an arbitrary and unuseful practice.
  3. ^ Marks of cadency differ from country to country, but are largely the same in Britain and France, and similar in other European countries outside of the German-speaking (and Nordic) countries, where brisures on the shield were less common and different crests were often adopted to indicate the difference.[15] It should also be noted that the English system of cadency, by which the use of the label to indicate the first son is best known, was not developed until the Tudor dynasty.[16]
  4. ^ See the arms of William de Valence, Earl of Pembroke in Fox-Davies (1909, fig. 120) for an example of this.
  5. ^ The arms of Marija Bistrica depicting the black Madonna can be found at Heimer (2018).
  6. ^ In his July 15, 2005 blog article "Is that a Moor's head?", Mathew N. Schmalz refers to a discussion on the American Heraldry Society's web site where at least one participant described the moor's head as a "potentially explosive image."
  7. ^ See also Coats of arms of the House of Colleoni at Wikimedia Commons.
  8. ^ The town of Waiblingen was granted arms in 1957 displaying a triple-headed eagle said to represent the dukes of Swabia, seen here, and the arms of Reinmar von Zweter, depicted in the Codex Manesse, can be seen here.
  9. ^ 'Gyronny of eight ermine and gules - in each of the last four gyrons a bee volant en arriere argent' was recorded in the 1670s, well before Napoleon Bonaparte's time.
  10. ^ An example of a tree "erased" can be found here.
  11. ^ Any notion of a mushroom or "atomic cloud" is of relatively recent vintage.[37]

References

  1. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 303.
  2. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 393.
  3. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 21.
  4. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 261.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-08-13.
  6. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 339.
  7. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 163.
  8. ^ a b The UK Linguistics Olympiad 2018 on www.uklo.org
  9. ^ a b Fox-Davies (1909), p. 107
  10. ^ a b Woodcock & Robinson (1988), p. 58
  11. ^ Woodcock & Robinson (1988), pp. 58–61
  12. ^ von Volborth (1981), pp. 18–19
  13. ^ Boutell (1890), p. 20
  14. ^ Clark (1892), p. 16
  15. ^ von Volborth (1981), p. 76.
  16. ^ Woodward & Burnett (1894), p. 444.
  17. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), pp. 295–296
  18. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), p. 127
  19. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), pp. 128–9
  20. ^ Douglas, Robert (1764). The peerage of Scotland : containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom, from their origin to the present generation: collected from the public records, and ancient chartularies of this nation, the charters, and other writings of the nobility, and the works of our best historians ... Edinburgh: R. Fleming.
  21. ^ Parker, James. "Man". A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  22. ^ a b c "Africans in medieval & Renaissance art: the Moor's head". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  23. ^ "Part IX: Offensive Armory". Rules for Submissions of the College of Arms of the Society for Creative Anachronism, Inc. 2008-04-02. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  24. ^ Woodward & Burnett (1894), p. 203
  25. ^ Altieri, Ferdinando (1726). Dizionario italiano ed inglese: A dictionary Italian and English
  26. ^ Neubecker (1976), p. 110
  27. ^ Neubecker (1976), p. 83
  28. ^ FXで儲けを得るための手段とは?.
  29. ^ Pierre Mollier (2004). "The Double-Headed Eagle: iconographic sources of the masonic symbol" (PDF). The Chain of Union (Special issue No.3): 5–15. Retrieved 2011-10-30.
  30. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), p. 242
  31. ^ Cussans (2003), p. 93
  32. ^ Jacqueline Fearn. Discovering Heraldry (1988 ed.). Shire Publications Ltd. pp. 35–6.
  33. ^ MacKinnon, Charles (1966). The Observer's Book of Heraldry. Frederick Warne and Co. p. 67.
  34. ^ Rietstap (1884), XXXI, "Vilené: se dit un animal qui a la marque du sexe d'un autre émail que le corps"; translating roughly to "Vilené: when an animal has its genitals in another color than the body"
  35. ^ Velde, Francois R. "Sex in Heraldry".
  36. ^ a b c d Fox-Davies (1909), p. 291
  37. ^ Maurer (1983), p. 372.
  38. ^ Rietstap (1884), page XXV; Woodward & Burnett (1894), p. 376
  39. ^ Fox-Davies (1909), p. 286
  40. ^ Clark (1892), p. 164
  41. ^ Tsubouchi, David Hiroshi (Canadian register of arms)

Bibliography

  • Boutell, Charles (1890). Heraldry, Ancient and Modern: Including Boutell's Heraldry. London: Frederick Warne. OCLC 6102523 – via Internet Archive.
  • Brooke-Little, J P (1985) [1975]. An heraldic alphabet (New and revised ed.). London: Robson Books. ISBN 9780860513209.
  • Cussans, John E. (2003). Handbook of Heraldry. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0-7661-7338-0. LCCN 04024470 – via Internet Archive.
  • Clark, Hugh (1892) [1775]. Planché, J. R. (ed.). An Introduction to Heraldry (18th ed.). London: George Bell & Sons. ISBN 1-4325-3999-X. LCCN 26005078 – via Internet Archive.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1909). A Complete Guide to Heraldry. New York: Dodge Publishing. ISBN 0-517-26643-1. LCCN 09023803 – via Internet Archive.
  • Heimer, Zeljko (9 December 2018). "Krapina and Zagorje County - Communities". The Flags & Arms of the Modern Era.
  • Maurer, Maurer, ed. (1983). Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 9780-912799025.
  • Neubecker, Ottfried (1976). Heraldry: Sources, Symbols and Meaning. Maidenhead, England: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-046312-3.
  • Rietstap, J. B. (1884). Armorial général: précédé d'un Dictionnaire des termes du blason (in French). Vol. 1. G. B. van Goor zonen. OCLC 551247698 – via Internet Archive.
  • von Volborth, Carl-Alexander (1981). Heraldry: Customs, Rules and Styles. Poole, England: Blandford Press. ISBN 0-7137-0940-5. LCCN 81670212.
  • Woodcock, Thomas; Robinson, John Martin (1988). The Oxford Guide to Heraldry. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-211658-4. LCCN 88023554.
  • Woodward, John; Burnett, George (1894) [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.

Further reading

  • Bureau of Heraldry. . National Archives & Records Service of South Africa. Archived from the original on 2019-07-24. Retrieved 2019-07-24.
  • Canadian Heraldic Authority. "Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada".
  • Friar, Stephen, ed. (1987). A New Dictionary of Heraldry. Sherborne: Alphabooks.—Some illustrations of attitudes
  • Greaves, Kevin (2000). A Canadian Heraldic Primer. Ottawa: Heraldry Society of Canada.
  • Heraldry Society (England). "Members' Roll of Arms".
  • Heraldry Society of Scotland. . Archived from the original on 2013-05-07. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
  • Innes, Sir Thomas (1956). Scots Heraldry (second ed.). Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd.
  • Moncreiffe, Iain; Pottinger, Don (1953). Simple Heraldry. London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson and Sons.—Many illustrations
  • Royal Heraldry Society of Canada. "Members' Roll of Arms".
  • Young, Robert (12 May 2005). "Civic Heraldry of England and Wales". Retrieved 24 July 2019.

External links

  •   Media related to Charges in heraldry at Wikimedia Commons

charge, heraldry, more, comprehensive, list, list, heraldic, charges, heraldry, charge, emblem, device, occupying, field, escutcheon, shield, that, geometric, design, sometimes, called, ordinary, symbolic, representation, person, animal, plant, object, buildin. For a more comprehensive list see List of heraldic charges In heraldry a charge is any emblem or device occupying the field of an escutcheon shield That may be a geometric design sometimes called an ordinary or a symbolic representation of a person animal plant object building or other device In French blazon the ordinaries are called pieces and other charges are called meubles the mobile ones The term charge can also be used as a verb for example if an escutcheon depicts three lions it is said to be charged with three lions similarly a crest or even a charge itself may be charged such as a pair of eagle wings charged with trefoils as on the coat of arms of Brandenburg It is important to distinguish between the ordinaries and divisions of the field as that typically follow similar patterns such as a shield divided per chevron as distinct from being charged with a chevron While thousands of objects found in religion nature mythology or technology have appeared in armory there are several charges such as the cross the eagle and the lion which have contributed to the distinctive flavour of heraldic design Only these and a few other notable charges crowns stars keys etc are discussed in this article but a more exhaustive list will be found in the list of heraldic charges In addition to being shown in the regular way charges may be blazoned as umbrated shadowed detailed a rather incorrectly outlined 2 highly unusually shaded 3 and rather irregularly in silhouette or more ambiguously confusingly and unhelpfully futuristic 4 stylized or simplified 5 There are also several units in the United States Air Force with charges blazoned as mythical 6 or beasts as chimerical 7 but those conceptions are meaningless and irrelevant to the conception of heraldry and it does not affect the appearance of those charges Contents 1 Ordinary charges Ordinaries and sub ordinaries 1 1 Honourable ordinaries 1 2 Honourable ordinaries or sub ordinaries 1 3 Sub ordinaries 2 Mobile charges 2 1 Geometric charges 2 2 Human or humanlike figures 2 2 1 Human parts 2 3 Animals 2 3 1 Animal parts 2 3 2 Attitude of animals 2 4 Plants 2 5 Inanimate objects 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksOrdinary charges Ordinaries and sub ordinaries EditIt has been suggested that this section be merged into Ordinary heraldry Types Discuss Proposed since January 2023 Main article Ordinary heraldry Unlike mobile charges the ordinary charches 8 reach to the edge of the field Some heraldic writers b distinguish albeit arbitrarily between honourable ordinaries and sub ordinaries While some authors hold that only nine charges are honourable ordinaries exactly which ones fit into this category is a subject of constant disagreement The remainder are often termed sub ordinaries and narrower or smaller versions of the ordinaries are called diminutives While the term ordinaries is generally recognised so much dispute may be found among sources regarding which are honourable and which are relegated to the category of sub ordinaries that indeed one of the leading authors in the field Arthur Charles Fox Davies 1871 1928 wrote at length on what he calls the utter absurdity of the necessity for any such classification at all stating that the ordinaries and sub ordinaries are in his mind no more than first charges 9 Apparently ceding the point for the moment Fox Davies lists the generally agreed upon honourable ordinaries as the bend fess pale pile chevron cross saltire and chief 9 Woodcock sheds some light on the matter stating that earlier writers such as Leigh Holme and Guillim proposed that honourable ordinaries should occupy one third of the field while later writers such as Edmondson favoured one fifth on the grounds that a bend pale or chevron occupying one third of the field makes the coat look clumsy and disagreeable 10 Woodcock goes so far as to enumerate the ordinaries thus The first Honourable Ordinary is the cross the second is the chief the third is the pale the fourth is the bend the fifth is the fess the sixth is the inescutcheon the seventh is the chevron the eighth is the saltire and the ninth is the bar while stating that some writers prefer the bordure as the ninth ordinary 11 Volborth having decidedly less to say on the matter agrees that the classifications are arbitrary and the subject of disagreement and lists the definite ordinaries as the chief pale bend fess chevron cross and saltire 12 Boutell lists the chief pale bend bend sinister fess bar cross saltire and chevron as the honourable ordinaries 13 Thus the chief bend pale fess chevron cross and saltire appear to be the undisputed ordinaries while authors disagree over the status of the pile bar inescutcheon bordure and others Honourable ordinaries Edit Several different figures are recognised as honourable ordinaries each normally occupying about one fifth to one third of the field 10 As discussed above much disagreement exists among authors regarding which ordinary charges are honourable so only those generally agreed to be honourable ordinaries will be discussed here while the remainder of ordinary charges will be discussed in the following section The chief is the upper portion of the field The bend is a stripe running from the upper left to the lower right as as seen by the viewer The bend sinister runs from the upper right to the lower left as In heraldry sinister Latin left refers to the left side of the shield from the perspective of the one wearing it hence the right side from the viewer s perspective The pale is a vertical stripe in the centre of the field The fess is a broad horizontal stripe across the centre of the field The chevron is a construction shaped like an inverted letter V The cross is a geometric construction of two perpendicular lines or bands vertical and horizontal It has hundreds of variants most of which are mobile charges rather than ordinaries some of these will be discussed below The saltire is a diagonal cross often called Saint Andrew s cross Most of the ordinaries have corresponding diminutives narrower versions most often mentioned when two or more appear in parallel bendlets pallets bars multiples of the fess and chevronels Chief Bend Pale Fess Chevron Cross SaltireHonourable ordinaries or sub ordinaries Edit In addition to those mentioned in the above section the following are variously called honourable ordinaries by different authors while others of these are often called sub ordinaries The bordure is a border touching the edge of the field The pile is a wedge issuing from the top of the field and tapering to a point near the bottom Its length and width vary widely Piles may occur in any orientation e g pile reversed pile bendwise and so on The pall or pairle is shaped like the letter Y Bordure Pile Pile reversed PallSub ordinaries Edit The quarter is a rectangle occupying the top left quarter of the field as seen by the viewer The canton is a square occupying the left third of the chief sometimes reckoned to be a diminutive of the quarter The orle may be considered an inner bordure a reasonably wide band away from the edge of the shield it is always shown following the shape of the shield without touching the edges The tressure is a narrower version of the orle rarely seen except in the double tressure flory and counter flory an element of the royal coat of arms of Scotland and of many other Scots coats The base or terrace in base is the lower portion of the field The fret originally consisted of three bendlets interlaced with three bendlets sinister other depictions form the outer bendlets into a mascle through which the two remaining bendlets are woven This has also been called a Harington knot as in the arms of Harington 14 Flaunches flanches or flasks are regions on the sides of the field bounded by a pair of circular arcs whose centers are beyond the sides of the shield A label is a horizontal strap with a number of pendants usually called points suspended from it the default is three but any number may be specified The label is nearly always a mark of cadency in British and French heraldry c but is occasionally found as a regular charge in early armory and even in the 20th century It is sometimes called a file as in the canting arms of Belfile a label with a bell hanging from each point There are some examples in which the strap is omitted the points issuing from the top of the shield d The gyron is a right triangle occupying the lower half of the first quarter its edges follow per bend and per fess from the dexter side to the centre of the field A gyron sinister much rarer is a similar figure in the sinister chief Gyrons are sometimes blazoned to be shown in other positions as in the sun in his splendour along with in dexter base a sixth gyron voided Quarter Canton Orle Base Fret Flaunches Label GyronMobile charges EditThe so called mobile charges 8 or sometimes common charges are not tied to the size and shape of the shield and so may be placed in any part of the field although whenever a charge appears alone it is placed with sufficient position and size to occupy the entire field Common mobile charges include human figures human parts animals animal parts legendary creatures or monsters plants and floral designs inanimate objects and other devices The heraldic animals need not exactly resemble the actual creatures Geometric charges Edit A number of geometric charges are sometimes listed among the subordinaries see above but as their form is not related to the shape of the shield indeed they may appear independent of the shield i e in crests and badges they are more usefully considered here These include the escutcheon or inescutcheon lozenge fusil mascle rustre billet roundel fountain and annulet The escutcheon is a small shield If borne singly in the centre of the main shield it is sometimes called an inescutcheon and is usually employed to combine multiple coats It is customarily the same shape as the shield it is on though shields of specific shapes are rarely specified in the blazon The lozenge is a rhombus generally resembling the diamonds of playing cards The fusil A more acute lozenge The mascle A lozenge voided i e with a lozenge shaped hole The rustre A lozenge pierced i e with a round hole The billet is a rectangle usually at least twice as tall as it is wide it may represent a block of wood or a sheet of paper Billets appear in the shield of the house of Nassau which was modified to become that of the kingdom of the Netherlands The roundel is a solid circle frequently of gold blazoned a bezant A fountain is depicted as a roundel barry wavy argent and azure An annulet is a roundel voided i e a ring Escutcheon Lozenge Fusil Mascles Rustre Billets Roundels bezants Fountain AnnuletsSeveral other simple charges occur with comparable frequency These include the mullet or star crescent and cross The mullet is a star of usually five straight rays and may have originated as a representation of the rowel or revel of a spur although spur revels do appear under that name 17 Mullets frequently appear pierced An unpierced mullet is sometimes called a star in Scottish heraldry and stars also appear in English and continental heraldry under that name often with six points The spur revel is also found in Scottish heraldry The estoile A star with usually six wavy rays is called an estoile the Old French word for star modern French etoile The comet is shown as a mullet with a bendwise wavy tail rather than naturalistically The crescent a symbol of the Moon normally appears with its horns upward if its horns are to dexter it represents a waxing moon increscent and with horns to sinister it represents a waning moon decrescent Mullet Mullets pierced Estoiles Hexagram Comet Star and crescentThe cross One of the most frequently found charges in heraldry if not the most is the cross which has developed into some say 400 varieties 18 When the cross does not reach the edges of the field it becomes a mobile charge The plain Greek cross with equal limbs and Latin cross with the lower limb extended are sometimes seen but more often the tip of each limb is developed into some ornamental shape The most commonly found crosses in heraldry include the cross botonny the cross flory the cross moline the cross potent the cross patee or formee the cross patonce and the cross crosslet 19 cross botonny cross crosslet cross flory Maltese cross cross moline cross patee cross patonce cross potentIn 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 It does not follow however that a shield containing such a charge necessarily belongs to a cadet branch All of these charges occur frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms Human or humanlike figures Edit Humans deities angels and demons occur more often as crests and supporters than on the shield Though in many heraldic traditions the depiction of deities is considered taboo exceptions to this also occur When humans do appear on the shield they almost always appear affronte facing forward rather than toward the left like beasts Such as the arms of the Dalziel family of Scotland which depicted a naked man his arms expanded on a black background 20 The largest group of human charges consists of saints often as the patron of a town Knights bishops monks and nuns kings and queens also occur frequently There are rare occurrences of a child without further description this is usually understood to be a very young boy and young girls are extremely rare in heraldry both the head and entire body A famous example is the child swallowed by a dragon the biscione in the arms of Visconti dukes of Milan Greco Roman mythological figures typically appear in an allegorical or canting role Angels very frequently appear but angelic beings of higher rank such as cherubim and seraphim are extremely rare An archangel appears in the arms of Arkhangelsk The Devil or a demon is occasionally seen being defeated by the archangel Saint Michael Though the taboo is not invariably respected British heraldry in particular and to a greater or lesser extent the heraldry of other countries frowns on depictions of God or Christ though an exception may be in the not uncommon Continental depictions of Madonna and Child including the Black Madonna in the arms of Marija Bistrica Croatia e Moors or more frequently their heads often crowned appear with some frequency in medieval European heraldry They are also sometimes called moore blackmoor or negro 21 Moors appear in European heraldry from at least as early as the 13th century 22 and some have been attested as early as the 11th century in Italy 22 where they have persisted in the local heraldry and vexillology well into modern times in Corsica and Sardinia Armigers bearing moors or moors heads may have adopted them for any of several reasons to include symbolizing military victories in the Crusades as a pun on the bearer s name in the canting arms of Morese Negri Saraceni etc or in the case of Frederick II possibly to demonstrate the reach of his empire 22 Even the arms of Pope Benedict XVI feature a moor s head crowned and collared red Nevertheless the use of moors and particularly their heads as a heraldic symbol has been deprecated in modern North America f where racial stereotypes have been influenced by a history of Trans Atlantic slave trade and racial segregation and applicants to the College of Arms of the Society for Creative Anachronism are urged to use them delicately to avoid creating offensive images 23 Human man Angel Angel slaying Demon Moor Biscione Knight Knight on horse King Clergy MemberHuman parts Edit Parts of human bodies occur more often than the whole particularly heads occasionally of exotic nationality hearts always stylized hands torso and armored limbs A famous heraldic hand is the Red Hand of Ulster alluding to an incident in the legendary Milesian invasion Hands also appear in the coat of arms of Antwerp Ribs occur in Iberian armory canting for the Portuguese family da Costa According to Woodward amp Burnett the Counts Colleoni of Milan bear arms blazoned Per pale argent and gules three hearts reversed counterchanged but in less delicate times these were read as canting arms 24 showing three pairs of testicles coglioni testicles in Italian 25 g The community of Colbe in Hesse has a coat of arms with a similar charge Animals Edit See also Category Heraldic beasts and List of heraldic charges Beasts Animals especially lions and eagles feature prominently as heraldic charges Some differences may be observed between an animal s natural form and the conventional attitudes positions into which heraldic animals are contorted additionally various parts of an animal claws horns tongue etc may be differently coloured each with its own terminology Most animals are broadly classified according to their natural form into beasts birds sea creatures and others and the attitudes that apply to them may be grouped accordingly Beasts particularly lions most often appear in the rampant position while birds particularly the eagle most often appear displayed While the lion regarded as the king of beasts is by far the most frequently occurring beast in heraldry the eagle equally regarded as the king of birds is overwhelmingly the most frequently occurring bird and the rivalry between these two is often noted to parallel with the political rivalry between the powers they came to represent in medieval Europe Neubecker notes that in the heroic poem by Heinrich von Veldeke based on the story of Aeneas the bearer of the arms of a lion is set against the bearer of the arms of an eagle If one takes the latter to be the historical and geographical forerunner of the Holy Roman emperor then the bearer of the lion represents the unruly feudal lords to whom the emperor had to make more and more concessions particularly to the powerful duke of Bavaria and Saxony Henry the Lion of the House of Welf 26 The beast most often portrayed in heraldry is the lion When posed passant guardant walking and facing the viewer he is called a leopard in French blazon Other beasts frequently seen include the wolf bear boar horse bull or ox and stag or hart The tiger unless blazoned as a Bengal tiger is a fanciful beast with a wolflike body a mane and a pointed snout Dogs of various types and occasionally of specific breeds occur more often as crests or supporters than as charges According to Neubecker heraldry in the Middle Ages generally distinguished only between pointers hounds and whippets when any distinction was made 27 The unicorn resembles a horse with a single horn but its hooves are usually cloven like those of a deer The griffin combines the head but with ears chest wings and forelegs of the eagle with the hindquarters and legs of a lion The male griffin lacks wings and his body is scattered with spikes The bird most frequently found in armory is by far the eagle Eagles in heraldry are predominantly presented with one or two heads though triple headed eagles are not unknown and one eagle appearing in the Codex Manesse curiously has its wing bones fashioned into additional heads h Eagles and their wings also feature prominently as crests Eagles most frequently appear full bodied with one head in numerous positions including displayed statant passant and rising The demi eagle which is shown only from the waist up occurs less frequently Double headed eagles almost always appear displayed As a result of being the dominant charge on the imperial Byzantine Holy Roman Austrian and Russian coats of arms the double eagle gained enduring renown throughout the Western world Among the present day nations with an eagle charge on their coat of arms are Albania Austria Germany Montenegro Poland Romania Russia and Serbia Additionally the Double Headed Eagle of Lagash is used as an emblem by the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry 28 There are many meanings attached to this symbol and it was introduced in France in the early 1760s as the emblem of the Knight Kadosh degree 29 The martlet a stylized swift or swallow without feet sometimes incorrectly at least in the Anglophone heraldries these days said to have no beak is a mark of cadency in English heraldry but also appears as a simple charge in undifferenced arms Its attitude is usually statant and is never blazoned as such but it can also be found volant The pelican is notable as frequently occurring in a peculiar attitude described as in her piety i e wings raised piercing her own breast to feed her chicks in the nest which is how it is actually often blazoned in its piety being a fairly modern conceit This symbol carries a particular religious meaning as a symbol of Christ sacrificing Himself citation needed and became so popular in heraldry that pelicans rarely exist in heraldry in any other position 30 Distinction is however observed between a pelican vulning herself alone piercing her breast and in her piety surrounded by and feeding her chicks 31 The swan is also often seen and the peacock in heraldry is described as being in its pride The domestic cock or rooster is sometimes called dunghill cock to distinguish it from the game cock which has a cut comb and exaggerated spurs and the moor cock which is the farmyard cock with a game bird s tail 32 Other birds occur less frequently The category of sea creatures may be seen to include various fish a highly stylized dolphin and various fanciful creatures sea monsters which are shown as half fish and half beast as well as mermaids and the like The sea lion and sea horse for example do not appear as natural sea lions and seahorses but rather as half lion half fish and half horse half fish respectively Fish of various species often appear in canting arms e g pike also called luce for Pike or Lucy dolphin a conventional kind of fish rather than the natural mammal for the Dauphin de Viennois The escallop scallop shell became popular as a token of pilgrimage to the shrine of Santiago de Compostela The sea lion and sea horse like the mermaid combine the foreparts of a mammal with the tail of a fish and a dorsal fin in place of the mane When the natural seahorse is meant it is blazoned as a hippocampus The sea dog and sea wolf are quadrupeds but with scales webbed feet and often a flat tail resembling that of the beaver Reptiles and invertebrates occurring in heraldry include serpents lizards salamanders and others but the most frequently occurring of these are various forms of dragons The dragon thus termed is a large monstrous reptile with often a forked or barbed tongue membraned wings like a bat s and four legs The wyvern and lindworm are dragons with only two legs The salamander is typically shown as a simple lizard surrounded by flames Also notably occurring undoubtedly owing much of its fame to Napoleon though it also appears in much earlier heraldry is the bee i Lion rampant Two lions passant Eagle argent Swan gorged with a coronet Three salmon naiant Six martlets Unicorn Griffin segreant Sea lion crowned SalamanderAnimal parts Edit Animals heads are also very frequent charges as are the paw or leg gamb of the lion the wing often paired of the eagle and the antlers attire of the stag Sometimes only the top half of a beast is shown for example the demi lion is among the most common forms occurring in heraldic crests Heads may appear cabossed also caboshed or caboched with the head cleanly separated from the neck so that only the face shows couped with the neck cleanly separated from the body so that the whole head and neck are present or erased with the neck showing a ragged edge as if forcibly torn from the body While cabossed heads are shown facing forward affronte heads that are couped or erased face dexter unless otherwise specified for differencing Heads of horned beasts are often shown cabossed to display the horns but instances can be found in any of these circumstances A lion s head cabossed is called simply a face and a fox s head cabossed a mask 33 Hart s head cabossed Three leopard s faces Fox s mask Boar s head erased Bull s head coupedAttitude of animals Edit Main article Attitude heraldry The attitude or position of the creature s body is usually explicitly stated in English blazon When such description is omitted a lion can be assumed to be rampant a leopard or herbivore passant By default the charge faces dexter left as seen by the viewer this would be forward on a shield worn on the left arm In German armory animate charges in the dexter half of a composite display are usually turned to face the center An animal toward sinister or contourny is turned toward the right of the shield as seen by the observer i e the shield bearer s left the sinister An animal affronte or full faced faces the viewer An animal guardant faces dexter with its head turned to face the viewer An animal regardant faces dexter with its head turned toward sinister as if looking over its shoulder Certain features of an animal are often of a contrasting tincture The charge is then said to be armed claws and horns and tusks langued tongue vilene 34 or pizzled 35 penis attired antlers or very occasionally horns unguled hooves crined horse s mane or human hair of a specified tincture Many attitudes have developed from the herald s imagination and ever increasing need for differentiation but only the principal attitudes found in heraldry need be discussed here These in the case of beasts include the erect positions the seated positions and the prone positions In the case of birds these include the displayed positions the flying positions and the resting positions Additionally birds are frequently described by the position of their wings A few other attitudes warrant discussion including those particular to fish serpents griffins and dragons The principal attitude of beasts is rampant i e standing on one hind leg with forepaws raised as if to climb or mount sometimes including an erect member Beasts also frequently appear walking passant or in the case of stags and the occasional unicorn trippant and may appear statant standing salient or springing leaping sejant seated couchant or lodged lying prone with head raised or occasionally dormant sleeping The principal attitude of birds namely the eagle is displayed i e facing the viewer with the head turned toward dexter and wings raised and upturned to show the full underside of both wings Birds also appear rising or rousant i e wings raised and head upturned as if about to take flight volant flying statant standing with wings raised close at rest with wings folded and waterfowl may appear naiant swimming while cranes may appear vigilant standing on one leg Fish often appear naiant swimming horizontally or hauriant upwards or urinant downwards but may also appear addorsed two fish hauriant back to back Serpents may appear glissant gliding in a wavy form or nowed as a figure eight knot Griffins and quadrupedal dragons constantly appear segreant i e rampant with wings addorsed and elevated and together with lions may appear combatant i e two of them turned to face each other in the rampant position Plants Edit Plants are extremely common in heraldry and figure among the earliest charges The turnip for instance makes an early appearance as does wheat Trees also appear in heraldry the most frequent tree by far is the oak drawn with large leaves and acorns followed by the pine Apples and bunches of grapes occur very frequently other fruits less so When the fruit is mentioned as to indicate a different tincture the tree is said to be fructed of the tincture If a tree is eradicated it is shown as if it has been ripped up from the ground the roots being exposed Erased is rarely used for a similar treatment j In Portuguese heraldry but rarely in other countries trees are sometimes found decorticated The most famous heraldic flower particularly in French heraldry is the fleur de lis which is often stated to be a stylised lily though despite the name there is considerable debate on this citation needed The natural lily somewhat stylised also occurs as together with the fleur de lis in the arms of Eton College The rose is perhaps even more widely seen in English heraldry than the fleur de lis Its heraldic form is derived from the wild type with only five petals and it is often barbed the hull of the bud its points showing between the petals and seeded in contrasting tinctures The thistle frequently appears as a symbol of Scotland The trefoil quatrefoil and cinquefoil are abstract forms resembling flowers or leaves The trefoil is always shown slipped i e with a stem unless blazoned otherwise The cinquefoil is sometimes blazoned fraise strawberry flower most notably when canting for Fraser The trillium flower occurs occasionally in a Canadian context and the protea flower constantly appears in South Africa since it is the national flower symbol Wheat constantly occurs in the form of garbs or sheaves and in fields e g in the arms of the province of Alberta Canada though less often as ears which are shown unwhiskered though some varieties of wheat are naturally whiskered Ears of rye are depicted exactly as wheat except the ears droop down and are often whiskered e g in the arms of the former Ruislip Northwood Urban District Barley cannabis maize and oats also occur The garb in the arms of Gustav Vasa and in the Coat of Arms of Sweden is not a wheatsheaf although it was pictured in that way from the 16th to 19th century rather this vasa is a bundle but of unknown sort Tree fructed and eradicated Fleur de lis Heraldic rose Three trefoils Vasa Cannabis Three maple leavesInanimate objects Edit Very few inanimate objects in heraldry carry a special significance distinct from that of the object itself but among such objects are the escarbuncle the fasces and the key The escarbuncle developed from the radiating iron bands used to strengthen a round shield eventually becoming a heraldic charge 36 The fasces not to be confused with the French term for a bar or fess is emblematic of the Roman magisterial office and has often been granted to mayors 36 Keys taking a form similar to a skeleton key are emblematic of Saint Peter and by extension the papacy and thus frequently appear in ecclesiastical heraldry 36 Because St Peter is the patron saint of fishermen keys also notably appear in the arms of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers 36 The sun is a disc with twelve or more wavy rays or alternating wavy and straight rays often represented in his splendour i e with a face The moon in her plenitude full sometimes appears distinguished from a roundel argent by having a face but crescents occur much more frequently Estoiles are stars with six wavy rays while stars when they occur under that name have straight rays usually numbering five in British and North American heraldry and six in continental European heraldry Clouds often occur though more frequently for people or animals to stand on or issue from than as isolated charges k The raindrop as such is unknown though drops of fluid goutte is known These occasionally appear as a charge but more frequently constitute a field seme known as goutte The snowflake occurs in modern heraldry sometimes blazoned as a snow crystal or ice crystal The oldest geological charge is the mount typically a green hilltop rising from the lower edge of the field providing a place for a beast building or tree to stand This feature is exceedingly common in Hungarian arms Natural mountains and boulders are not unknown though ranges of mountains are differently shown An example is the arms of Edinburgh portraying Edinburgh Castle atop Castle Rock Volcanos are shown almost without exception as erupting and the eruption is generally quite stylised In the 18th century landscapes began to appear in armory often depicting the sites of battles For example Admiral Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson received a chief of augmentation containing a landscape alluding to the Battle of the Nile By far the most frequent building in heraldry is the tower a tapering cylinder of masonry topped with battlements usually having a door and a few windows The canting arms of the Kingdom of Castile are Gules a tower triple turreted Or i e three small towers standing atop a larger one A castle is generally shown as two towers joined by a wall the doorway often shown secured by a portcullis The portcullis was used as a canting badge by the House of Tudor two doors and has since come to represent the British Parliament The modern chess rook would be indistinguishable from a tower the heraldic chess rook based on the medieval form of the piece instead of battlements has two outward splayed horns Civic and ecclesiastical armory sometimes shows a church or a whole town and cities towns and Scots burghs often bear a mural crown a crown in the form of a wall with battlements or turrets in place of a crown over the shield Ships of various types often appear the most frequent being the ancient galley often called from the Gaelic a lymphad Also frequent are anchors and oars The maunch is a 12th century lady s sleeve style Its use in heraldry arose from the custom of the knights who attended tournaments wearing their ladies sleeves as gages d amour tokens of love This fashion of sleeve would later evolve into Tippet style stoles In French blazon this charge is sometimes informally referred to as manche mal taillee a sleeve badly cut 38 Spurs also occur sometimes winged but more frequently occurring is the spur rowel or spur revel which is said to more often termed a mullet of five points pierced by English heralds 39 Crowns and coronets of various kinds are constantly seen The ecclesiastical hat and bishop s mitre are nearly ubiquitous in ecclesiastical heraldry The sword is sometimes a symbol of authority as in the royal arms of the Netherlands but may also allude to Saint Paul as the patron of a town e g London or dedicatee of a church Sometimes it is shown with a key owing to the fact that Saints Peter and Paul are paired together Other weapons occur more often in modern than in earlier heraldry The mace also appears as a weapon the war mace in addition to its appearance as a symbol of authority plain mace The globus cruciger also variously called an orb a royal orb or a mound from French monde Latin mundus the world is a ball or globe surmounted by a cross which is part of the regalia of an emperor or king and is the emblem of sovereign authority and majesty 40 Books constantly occur most frequently in the arms of colleges and universities though the Gospel and Bible are sometimes distinguished Books if open may be inscribed with words Words and phrases are otherwise rare except in Spanish and Portuguese armory Letters of the various alphabets are also relatively rare Arms of merchants in Poland and eastern Germany are often based on house marks abstract symbols resembling runes though they are almost never blazoned as runes but as combinations of other heraldic charges Musical instruments commonly seen are the harp as in the coat of arms of Ireland bell and trumpet The drum almost without exception is of the field drum type Since musical notation is a comparatively recent invention it is not found in early heraldry though it does appear in 20th century heraldry Japanese mon are sometimes used as heraldic charges They are blazoned in traditional heraldic style rather than in the Japanese style 41 Anchor Book with letters Caduceus Chess rook Three clarions Crown Escarbuncle Fasces Harp Keys addorsed Lymphad Maunch Moon in her plenitude Portcullis Snow crystal Spur Sun in his splendour Sword Tower on a mount WheelSee also EditList of heraldic charges Ordinary heraldry Attitude heraldry Eagle heraldry Lion heraldry Notes Edit As in the coat of arms of the 432d Reconnaissance Group of the United States Air Force 1 Woodcock himself apparently one such author lists Leigh Holme Guillim and Edmondson among these while other prominent authors such as Fox Davies shun the distinction as an arbitrary and unuseful practice Marks of cadency differ from country to country but are largely the same in Britain and France and similar in other European countries outside of the German speaking and Nordic countries where brisures on the shield were less common and different crests were often adopted to indicate the difference 15 It should also be noted that the English system of cadency by which the use of the label to indicate the first son is best known was not developed until the Tudor dynasty 16 See the arms of William de Valence Earl of Pembroke in Fox Davies 1909 fig 120 for an example of this The arms of Marija Bistrica depicting the black Madonna can be found at Heimer 2018 In his July 15 2005 blog article Is that a Moor s head Mathew N Schmalz refers to a discussion on the American Heraldry Society s web site where at least one participant described the moor s head as a potentially explosive image See also Coats of arms of the House of Colleoni at Wikimedia Commons The town of Waiblingen was granted arms in 1957 displaying a triple headed eagle said to represent the dukes of Swabia seen here and the arms of Reinmar von Zweter depicted in the Codex Manesse can be seen here Gyronny of eight ermine and gules in each of the last four gyrons a bee volant en arriere argent was recorded in the 1670s well before Napoleon Bonaparte s time An example of a tree erased can be found here Any notion of a mushroom or atomic cloud is of relatively recent vintage 37 References Edit Maurer 1983 p 303 Maurer 1983 p 393 Maurer 1983 p 21 Maurer 1983 p 261 961st Engineer Battalion Archived from the original on 2016 08 13 Maurer 1983 p 339 Maurer 1983 p 163 a b The UK Linguistics Olympiad 2018 on www uklo org a b Fox Davies 1909 p 107 a b Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 58 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 pp 58 61 von Volborth 1981 pp 18 19 Boutell 1890 p 20 Clark 1892 p 16 von Volborth 1981 p 76 Woodward amp Burnett 1894 p 444 Fox Davies 1909 pp 295 296 Fox Davies 1909 p 127 Fox Davies 1909 pp 128 9 Douglas Robert 1764 The peerage of Scotland containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom from their origin to the present generation collected from the public records and ancient chartularies of this nation the charters and other writings of the nobility and the works of our best historians Edinburgh R Fleming Parker James Man A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry Retrieved 2012 01 23 a b c Africans in medieval amp Renaissance art the Moor s head Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 2012 01 23 Part IX Offensive Armory Rules for Submissions of the College of Arms of the Society for Creative Anachronism Inc 2008 04 02 Retrieved 2012 01 23 Woodward amp Burnett 1894 p 203 Altieri Ferdinando 1726 Dizionario italiano ed inglese A dictionary Italian and English Neubecker 1976 p 110 Neubecker 1976 p 83 FXで儲けを得るための手段とは Pierre Mollier 2004 The Double Headed Eagle iconographic sources of the masonic symbol PDF The Chain of Union Special issue No 3 5 15 Retrieved 2011 10 30 Fox Davies 1909 p 242 Cussans 2003 p 93 Jacqueline Fearn Discovering Heraldry 1988 ed Shire Publications Ltd pp 35 6 MacKinnon Charles 1966 The Observer s Book of Heraldry Frederick Warne and Co p 67 Rietstap 1884 XXXI Vilene se dit un animal qui a la marque du sexe d un autre email que le corps translating roughly to Vilene when an animal has its genitals in another color than the body Velde Francois R Sex in Heraldry a b c d Fox Davies 1909 p 291 Maurer 1983 p 372 Rietstap 1884 page XXV Woodward amp Burnett 1894 p 376 Fox Davies 1909 p 286 Clark 1892 p 164 Tsubouchi David Hiroshi Canadian register of arms Bibliography Edit Boutell Charles 1890 Heraldry Ancient and Modern Including Boutell s Heraldry London Frederick Warne OCLC 6102523 via Internet Archive Brooke Little J P 1985 1975 An heraldic alphabet New and revised ed London Robson Books ISBN 9780860513209 Cussans John E 2003 Handbook of Heraldry Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0 7661 7338 0 LCCN 04024470 via Internet Archive Clark Hugh 1892 1775 Planche J R ed An Introduction to Heraldry 18th ed London George Bell amp Sons ISBN 1 4325 3999 X LCCN 26005078 via Internet Archive Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry New York Dodge Publishing ISBN 0 517 26643 1 LCCN 09023803 via Internet Archive Heimer Zeljko 9 December 2018 Krapina and Zagorje County Communities The Flags amp Arms of the Modern Era Maurer Maurer ed 1983 Air Force Combat Units of World War II Washington DC Office of Air Force History ISBN 9780 912799025 Neubecker Ottfried 1976 Heraldry Sources Symbols and Meaning Maidenhead England McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 046312 3 Rietstap J B 1884 Armorial general precede d un Dictionnaire des termes du blason in French Vol 1 G B van Goor zonen OCLC 551247698 via Internet Archive von Volborth Carl Alexander 1981 Heraldry Customs Rules and Styles Poole England Blandford Press ISBN 0 7137 0940 5 LCCN 81670212 Woodcock Thomas Robinson John Martin 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211658 4 LCCN 88023554 Woodward John Burnett George 1894 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 Further reading EditBureau of Heraldry Gallery National Archives amp Records Service of South Africa Archived from the original on 2019 07 24 Retrieved 2019 07 24 Canadian Heraldic Authority Public Register of Arms Flags and Badges of Canada Friar Stephen ed 1987 A New Dictionary of Heraldry Sherborne Alphabooks Some illustrations of attitudes Greaves Kevin 2000 A Canadian Heraldic Primer Ottawa Heraldry Society of Canada Heraldry Society England Members Roll of Arms Heraldry Society of Scotland HSS Members Scots Arms Archived from the original on 2013 05 07 Retrieved 2010 06 05 Innes Sir Thomas 1956 Scots Heraldry second ed Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd Moncreiffe Iain Pottinger Don 1953 Simple Heraldry London and Edinburgh Thomas Nelson and Sons Many illustrations Royal Heraldry Society of Canada Members Roll of Arms Young Robert 12 May 2005 Civic Heraldry of England and Wales Retrieved 24 July 2019 External links Edit Media related to Charges in heraldry at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charge heraldry amp oldid 1149641943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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