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Escutcheon (heraldry)

In heraldry, an escutcheon (/ɪˈskʌən/) is a shield that forms the main or focal element in an achievement of arms. The word can be used in two related senses. In the first sense, an escutcheon is the shield upon which a coat of arms is displayed. In the second sense, an escutcheon can itself be a charge within a coat of arms.

Escutcheon shapes are derived from actual shields that were used by knights in combat, and thus are varied and developed by region and by era. Since shields have been regarded as military equipment appropriate for men only, British ladies customarily bear their arms upon a lozenge, or diamond-shape, while clergymen and ladies in continental Europe bear their arms upon a cartouche, or oval. Other shapes are also in use, such as the roundel commonly used for arms granted to Aboriginal Canadians by the Canadian Heraldic Authority, or the Nguni shield used in African heraldry (likewise, Christian organisations and Masonic bodies tend to use the same shape, also known as a vesica piscis).

Although an escutcheon can be used as a charge on its own, the most common use of an escutcheon charge is to display another coat of arms as a form of marshalling. Such escutcheon charges are usually given the same shape as the main shield. When there is only one escutcheon charge, it is sometimes called an inescutcheon.

The word escutcheon (late 15th century) is based on Old North French escuchon ('shield').[a]

Shapes

 
Effigy of William Longespée the Younger (d.1250) in Salisbury Cathedral, showing an early triangular heater shield, the shape used as the "canvas" for the display of arms during the classical age of heraldry

The earliest depictions of proto-heraldic shields in the second half of the 12th century still have the shape of the Norman kite shield used throughout the 11th and 12th centuries. By about the 1230s, shields used by heavy cavalry had become shorter and more triangular, now called heater shields.

Transitional forms intermediate between kite and heater are seen in the late 12th to early 13th centuries. Transition to the heater was essentially complete by 1250. For example, the shield of William II Longespée (d. 1250) shown with his effigy at Salisbury Cathedral is triangular, while the shield shown on the effigy of his father William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury (d. 1226) is still of a more elongated form.

The shield on the enamel monument to Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou (d. 1151) is of almost full-body length. The heater was used in warfare during the apogee of the Age of Chivalry, at about the time of the Battle of Crecy (1346) and the founding of the Order of the Garter (1348). The shape is therefore used in armorials from this "classical age" of heraldry.

Beginning in the 15th century, and even more throughout the early modern period, a great variety of escutcheon shapes develops. In the Tudor era the heraldic escutcheon became more square,[3] taking the shape of an inverted Tudor arch. Continental European designs frequently use the various forms used in jousting, which incorporate "mouths" used as lance rests into the shields; such escutcheons are known as à bouche. The mouth is correctly shown on the dexter side only, as jousting pitches were designed for right-handed knights. Heraldic examples of English shields à bouche can be seen in the spandrels of the trussed timber roof of Lincoln's Inn Hall, London.

The shape of the top, the sides and the base may be separately described, and these elements may be freely combined.[4] The highly complex Baroque style shields of the 17th century come in many artistic variations.

Lozenge

 
Pippa Middleton's coat of arms (granted 2011), based on those of her father. This lozenge shaped version, supported by a blue ribbon, denotes an unmarried woman.[9][10]
 
Male (shield-shaped) and female (lozenge-shaped) coats of arms in relief in Southwark, London.

In English heraldry, the lozenge has been used by women since the 13th century[11] for the display of their coats of arms instead of the escutcheon or shield, which are associated with warfare. In this case the lozenge is shown without crest or helm. For the practical purpose of categorisation the lozenge may be treated as a variety of heraldic escutcheon.

Traditionally, very limited categories of females have been able to display their own arms, for example a female monarch—who uses an escutcheon as a military commander, not a lozenge—and suo jure peeresses, who may display their own arms alone on a lozenge even if married.[12] In general a female was represented by her paternal arms impaled by the arms of her husband on an escutcheon as a form of marshalling.

In modern Canadian heraldry, and certain other modern heraldic jurisdictions, women may be granted their own arms and display these on an escutcheon.[citation needed] Life peeresses in England display their arms on a lozenge.[12] An oval or cartouche is occasionally also used instead of the lozenge for armigerous women.

As a result of rulings of the English Kings of Arms dated 7 April 1995 and 6 November 1997,[13] married women in England, Northern Ireland and Wales and in other countries recognising the jurisdiction of the College of Arms in London (such as New Zealand) also have the option of using their husband's arms alone, marked with a small lozenge as a difference to show that the arms are displayed for the wife and not the husband;[14] or of using their own personal arms alone, marked with a small shield as a brisure for the same reason.[15] Divorced women may theoretically until remarriage use their ex-husband's arms differenced with a mascle.[16] Widowed women normally display a lozenge-shaped shield impaled, unless they are heraldic heiresses, in which case they display a lozenge-shaped shield with the unaltered escutcheon of pretence in the centre.[17] Women in same-sex marriages may use a shield or banner to combine arms, but can use only a lozenge or banner when one of the spouses dies.[18]

Points

The points of the shield refer to specific positions thereon and are used in blazons to describe where a charge should be placed.[19]

 
Points of an escutcheon or heraldic shield
  1. Chief: very top of the shield, corresponding to where the ordinary chief begins
  2. Dexter: right side of shield when worn (viewer's left)
  3. Sinister: left side of shield when worn (viewer's right)
  4. Base: very bottom
  5. Dexter Chief: top-right corner
  6. Middle Chief: top-middle
  7. Sinister Chief: top-left corner
  8. Honour Point: halfway between the middle chief and fess point
  9. Fess Point: exact middle
  10. Nombril Point: halfway between the base and the honour point
  11. Dexter Base: bottom-right
  12. Sinister Base: bottom-left
  13. Middle Base (seldom used): bottom-middle

Inescutcheon

 
Simple example of incorporating an heiress's arms as an escutcheon of pretense

An inescutcheon is a smaller escutcheon that is placed within or superimposed over the main shield of a coat of arms. This may be used in the following cases:

  • as a simple mobile charge, for example as borne by the French family of Abbeville, illustrated below; these may also bear other charges upon them, as shown in the arms of the Swedish Collegium of Arms, illustrated below;
  • in pretence (as a mark of a hereditary claim, usually by right of marriage), bearing assumed arms over one's own hereditary arms;
  • in territorial claim, bearing a monarch's hereditary arms en surtout over the territorial arms of his domains.

Inescutcheons as mobile charges

Inescutcheons may appear in personal and civic armory as simple mobile charges, for example the arms of the House of Mortimer, the Clan Hay or the noble French family of Abbeville. These mobile charges are of a particular tincture but do not necessarily bear further charges and may appear anywhere on the main escutcheon, their placement being specified in the blazon, if in doubt.

Inescutcheons may also be charged with other mobile charges, such as in the arms of the Swedish Collegium of Arms (illustrated above) which bears the three crowns of Sweden, each upon its own escutcheon upon the field of the main shield. These inescutcheons serve as a basis for including other charges that do not serve as an augmentation or hereditary claim. In this case, the inescutcheons azure allow the three crowns of Sweden to be placed upon a field, thus not only remaining clearly visible but also conforming to the rule of tincture.

Inescutcheon of pretence

Inescutcheons may also be used to bear another's arms in "pretence".[e] In English heraldry the husband of a heraldic heiress, the sole daughter and heiress of an armigerous man (i.e. a lady without any brothers), rather than impaling his wife's paternal arms as is usual, must place her paternal arms in an escutcheon of pretence in the centre of his own shield as a claim ("pretence") to be the new head of his wife's family, now extinct in the male line. In the next generation the arms are quartered by the son.

Use by monarchs and states

A monarch's personal or hereditary arms may be borne on an inescutcheon en surtout over the territorial arms of his/her domains,[f] as in the arms of Spain, the coats of arms of the Danish Royal Family members, the greater coat of arms of Sweden, or the arms of Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England (1653–1659). The early Georgian kings of England bore an inescutcheon of the royal arms of Hanover on the arms of the Stuart monarchs of Great Britain, whose territories they now ruled.

Pelta escutcheon

 
Pelta escutcheon as used in the diplomatic emblem of France

The current diplomatic emblem of France incorporates the pelta escutcheon, a wide form of shield (or gorget) with a small animal head pointing inward at each end.[citation needed] This is Roman in origin; although not the shape of their classic shield, many brooches of this shape survive from antiquity.[citation needed] A form of pelta appears as a decoration above the head of every official on the Austerlitz table, commissioned by Napoleon for propaganda purposes.[22]

Console

 
A strapwork heraldic console, fashionable in the second half of the 16th century
 
Console from Chichester tomb, Pilton, Devon, 1569

The term "console" in architecture is generally used for elements which provide support, such as corbels on a console table.[g] A console in heraldry is a decorative frame or support, generally in an architectural or illustrative context, surrounding a heraldic shield or escutcheon, which serves to add interest to and mitigate the harshness of the stark outline of the shield.

Notes

  1. ^ Ultimately from Vulgar Latin scūtiōn-, Latin scūtum, 'shield'.[1] From its use in heraldry, the term escutcheon can be a metaphor for a family's honour. The idiom "a blot on the escutcheon" is used to mean a stain on somebody's reputation.[2]
  2. ^ The gap or bouche represents the opening for the lance in specialised jousting shields, attested (in depictions of actual shields) from the mid 14th century, occasional use as a shape of heraldic escutcheons from the mid-15th century.[6]
  3. ^ Used in the Armorial général de France (1696).[8] The "French" shape of the base is found earlier, in French and English heraldry, from c. 1600 ("Stuart" type).
  4. ^ called ecu suisse in some French sources of the 19th century,[citation needed] as this shape was used in coats of arms on some coins of the Swiss mediation period (1803–1815).
  5. ^ The origin of the inescutcheon of pretense lies in the armorial representation of territorial property. A man coming into lordship by right of his wife would naturally wish to bear the arms associated with that territory, and so would place them inescutcheon over his own; "and arms exclusively of a territorial character have certainly very frequently been placed 'in pretense'."[20] It is also worth noting that the arms thus borne in pretense represent arms of assumption, while those on the larger shield represent arms of descent.
  6. ^ Especially in continental Europe, sovereigns have long held the custom of bearing their hereditary arms in an inescutcheon en surtout over the territorial arms of their dominions.[21] This custom, coupled with the frequency of European sovereigns ruling over several armigerous territories, may have given rise to the common European form of "quarterly with a heart".
  7. ^ The term derives from the compound Latin verb consolor "to alleviate, lighten", from the verb solor, "to assuage, soothe, relieve, mitigate", plus the preposition con/com/cum, "with".[23]

References

  1. ^ . American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 4th ed. Houghton Mifflin Company. 2000. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
  2. ^ "escutcheon". Oxford English Dictionary.
  3. ^ Grazebrook 1890, p.38.
  4. ^ Grazebrook 1890, plate I.
  5. ^ Codex Figdor, Tiroler Landesarchiv, Innsbruck (c. 1400).
  6. ^ Grazebrook 1890, p31–35.
  7. ^ Szymański, Józef (2001) [2001]. Nauki Pomocnicze Historii. Warsaw.
  8. ^ d'Hozier, Louis Pierre (1865) [1696]. Armorial général, ou Registres de la noblesse de France. Paris: Firmin Didot – via Internet Archive.
  9. ^ "Royal wedding: Kate Middleton coat of arms unveiled". BBC News. 19 April 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  10. ^ Bates, Stephen (19 April 2011). "Kate Middleton family gets coat of arms". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  11. ^ Grazebrook (1890), p. 20.
  12. ^ a b The Arms of Women (2002), paragraph 10.
  13. ^ Garter King of Arms; Clarenceux King of Arms; Norroy and Ulster King of Arms (Autumn 2002). "The Arms of Women, a Decree". Coat of Arms. No. 199.
  14. ^ The Arms of Women (2002), paragraph 6.
  15. ^ The Arms of Women (2002), paragraph 3.
  16. ^ The Arms of Women (2002), paragraph 9.
  17. ^ Fearn, Jacqueline (1980). Discovering Heraldry. Shire. p. 61.
  18. ^ Thomas Woodcock, Garter King of Arms; Patric Dickinson, Clarenceux King of Arms; H Bedingfeld, Norroy and Ulster King of Arms (29 March 2014). "The Arms of Individuals in Same-Sex Marriages". college-of-arms.gov.uk.
  19. ^ Boutell (1914), p. 33, figure 27; Woodward & Burnett (1892), p. 58
  20. ^ Fox-Davies 1909, p. 539.
  21. ^ Fox-Davies 1909, p. 541.
  22. ^ "The Austerlitz or 'Maréchaux' Table".
  23. ^ Cassell's Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph F., (Eds.), Revised Edition, 1928

Further reading

  • Boutell, Charles (1914). Fox-Davies, A.C. (ed.). The Handbook to English Heraldry (11th ed.). London: Reeves & Turner. OCLC 81124564 – via Project Gutenberg.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1909). A Complete Guide to Heraldry: Illustrated by Nine Plates and Nearly 800 Other Designs. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack. ISBN 0-517-26643-1. LCCN 09023803.
  • Grazebrook, George (1890). The dates of variously-shaped shields with coincident dates and examples. Liverpool: Brakell.
  • Woodward, John; Burnett, George (1892) [1884]. A treatise on heraldry, British and foreign: with English and French glossaries. Edinburgh: W. & A. B. Johnson. LCCN 02020303 – via Internet Archive.

escutcheon, heraldry, heraldry, escutcheon, shield, that, forms, main, focal, element, achievement, arms, word, used, related, senses, first, sense, escutcheon, shield, upon, which, coat, arms, displayed, second, sense, escutcheon, itself, charge, within, coat. In heraldry an escutcheon ɪ ˈ s k ʌ tʃ en is a shield that forms the main or focal element in an achievement of arms The word can be used in two related senses In the first sense an escutcheon is the shield upon which a coat of arms is displayed In the second sense an escutcheon can itself be a charge within a coat of arms Escutcheon shapes are derived from actual shields that were used by knights in combat and thus are varied and developed by region and by era Since shields have been regarded as military equipment appropriate for men only British ladies customarily bear their arms upon a lozenge or diamond shape while clergymen and ladies in continental Europe bear their arms upon a cartouche or oval Other shapes are also in use such as the roundel commonly used for arms granted to Aboriginal Canadians by the Canadian Heraldic Authority or the Nguni shield used in African heraldry likewise Christian organisations and Masonic bodies tend to use the same shape also known as a vesica piscis Although an escutcheon can be used as a charge on its own the most common use of an escutcheon charge is to display another coat of arms as a form of marshalling Such escutcheon charges are usually given the same shape as the main shield When there is only one escutcheon charge it is sometimes called an inescutcheon The word escutcheon late 15th century is based on Old North French escuchon shield a Contents 1 Shapes 1 1 Lozenge 2 Points 3 Inescutcheon 3 1 Inescutcheons as mobile charges 3 2 Inescutcheon of pretence 3 3 Use by monarchs and states 4 Pelta escutcheon 5 Console 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingShapes Edit Effigy of William Longespee the Younger d 1250 in Salisbury Cathedral showing an early triangular heater shield the shape used as the canvas for the display of arms during the classical age of heraldry The earliest depictions of proto heraldic shields in the second half of the 12th century still have the shape of the Norman kite shield used throughout the 11th and 12th centuries By about the 1230s shields used by heavy cavalry had become shorter and more triangular now called heater shields Transitional forms intermediate between kite and heater are seen in the late 12th to early 13th centuries Transition to the heater was essentially complete by 1250 For example the shield of William II Longespee d 1250 shown with his effigy at Salisbury Cathedral is triangular while the shield shown on the effigy of his father William Longespee 3rd Earl of Salisbury d 1226 is still of a more elongated form The shield on the enamel monument to Geoffrey V Count of Anjou d 1151 is of almost full body length The heater was used in warfare during the apogee of the Age of Chivalry at about the time of the Battle of Crecy 1346 and the founding of the Order of the Garter 1348 The shape is therefore used in armorials from this classical age of heraldry Beginning in the 15th century and even more throughout the early modern period a great variety of escutcheon shapes develops In the Tudor era the heraldic escutcheon became more square 3 taking the shape of an inverted Tudor arch Continental European designs frequently use the various forms used in jousting which incorporate mouths used as lance rests into the shields such escutcheons are known as a bouche The mouth is correctly shown on the dexter side only as jousting pitches were designed for right handed knights Heraldic examples of English shields a bouche can be seen in the spandrels of the trussed timber roof of Lincoln s Inn Hall London The shape of the top the sides and the base may be separately described and these elements may be freely combined 4 The highly complex Baroque style shields of the 17th century come in many artistic variations Kite shield 12th 13th century Norman style 13th century Heater shape 13th 14th century Square Old French shape Square Iberian or Iberian style square top rounded base 15th century 5 Bouched or bouche side German or Dutch style 15th century b Scroll eared top lobed base 16th century Square eared nicked top rounded base 16th century Wedge top Polish style 17th century 7 Eared top French base French style 17th century c Cardiodid shape example needed 18th century Two engrailed top 19th century d oval or Iberian shape Lozenge shape see Lozenge section Lozenge Edit Pippa Middleton s coat of arms granted 2011 based on those of her father This lozenge shaped version supported by a blue ribbon denotes an unmarried woman 9 10 Male shield shaped and female lozenge shaped coats of arms in relief in Southwark London In English heraldry the lozenge has been used by women since the 13th century 11 for the display of their coats of arms instead of the escutcheon or shield which are associated with warfare In this case the lozenge is shown without crest or helm For the practical purpose of categorisation the lozenge may be treated as a variety of heraldic escutcheon Traditionally very limited categories of females have been able to display their own arms for example a female monarch who uses an escutcheon as a military commander not a lozenge and suo jure peeresses who may display their own arms alone on a lozenge even if married 12 In general a female was represented by her paternal arms impaled by the arms of her husband on an escutcheon as a form of marshalling In modern Canadian heraldry and certain other modern heraldic jurisdictions women may be granted their own arms and display these on an escutcheon citation needed Life peeresses in England display their arms on a lozenge 12 An oval or cartouche is occasionally also used instead of the lozenge for armigerous women As a result of rulings of the English Kings of Arms dated 7 April 1995 and 6 November 1997 13 married women in England Northern Ireland and Wales and in other countries recognising the jurisdiction of the College of Arms in London such as New Zealand also have the option of using their husband s arms alone marked with a small lozenge as a difference to show that the arms are displayed for the wife and not the husband 14 or of using their own personal arms alone marked with a small shield as a brisure for the same reason 15 Divorced women may theoretically until remarriage use their ex husband s arms differenced with a mascle 16 Widowed women normally display a lozenge shaped shield impaled unless they are heraldic heiresses in which case they display a lozenge shaped shield with the unaltered escutcheon of pretence in the centre 17 Women in same sex marriages may use a shield or banner to combine arms but can use only a lozenge or banner when one of the spouses dies 18 Points EditThe points of the shield refer to specific positions thereon and are used in blazons to describe where a charge should be placed 19 Points of an escutcheon or heraldic shield Chief very top of the shield corresponding to where the ordinary chief beginsDexter right side of shield when worn viewer s left Sinister left side of shield when worn viewer s right Base very bottomDexter Chief top right cornerMiddle Chief top middleSinister Chief top left cornerHonour Point halfway between the middle chief and fess pointFess Point exact middleNombril Point halfway between the base and the honour pointDexter Base bottom rightSinister Base bottom leftMiddle Base seldom used bottom middleInescutcheon Edit Simple example of incorporating an heiress s arms as an escutcheon of pretense It has been suggested that this article should be split into a new article titled inescutcheon because it can be better linked to the other languages and Commons e g see wikidata escutcheon Q1227885 discuss January 2023 An inescutcheon is a smaller escutcheon that is placed within or superimposed over the main shield of a coat of arms This may be used in the following cases as a simple mobile charge for example as borne by the French family of Abbeville illustrated below these may also bear other charges upon them as shown in the arms of the Swedish Collegium of Arms illustrated below in pretence as a mark of a hereditary claim usually by right of marriage bearing assumed arms over one s own hereditary arms in territorial claim bearing a monarch s hereditary arms en surtout over the territorial arms of his domains Escutcheons as mobile charges as borne by the French family of Abbeville Inescutcheons for style in the arms of the Swedish Heraldry Society sv An escutcheon of pretence as borne by the French family de Champagne La Suze Inherited arms borne en surtout over territorial arms Arms of Eric of Pomerania as monarch of the Kalmar Union c 15th century Inescutcheons as mobile charges Edit Inescutcheons may appear in personal and civic armory as simple mobile charges for example the arms of the House of Mortimer the Clan Hay or the noble French family of Abbeville These mobile charges are of a particular tincture but do not necessarily bear further charges and may appear anywhere on the main escutcheon their placement being specified in the blazon if in doubt Inescutcheons may also be charged with other mobile charges such as in the arms of the Swedish Collegium of Arms illustrated above which bears the three crowns of Sweden each upon its own escutcheon upon the field of the main shield These inescutcheons serve as a basis for including other charges that do not serve as an augmentation or hereditary claim In this case the inescutcheons azure allow the three crowns of Sweden to be placed upon a field thus not only remaining clearly visible but also conforming to the rule of tincture Inescutcheon of pretence Edit Inescutcheons may also be used to bear another s arms in pretence e In English heraldry the husband of a heraldic heiress the sole daughter and heiress of an armigerous man i e a lady without any brothers rather than impaling his wife s paternal arms as is usual must place her paternal arms in an escutcheon of pretence in the centre of his own shield as a claim pretence to be the new head of his wife s family now extinct in the male line In the next generation the arms are quartered by the son Use by monarchs and states Edit A monarch s personal or hereditary arms may be borne on an inescutcheon en surtout over the territorial arms of his her domains f as in the arms of Spain the coats of arms of the Danish Royal Family members the greater coat of arms of Sweden or the arms of Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England 1653 1659 The early Georgian kings of England bore an inescutcheon of the royal arms of Hanover on the arms of the Stuart monarchs of Great Britain whose territories they now ruled Pelta escutcheon EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pelta escutcheon as used in the diplomatic emblem of France The current diplomatic emblem of France incorporates the pelta escutcheon a wide form of shield or gorget with a small animal head pointing inward at each end citation needed This is Roman in origin although not the shape of their classic shield many brooches of this shape survive from antiquity citation needed A form of pelta appears as a decoration above the head of every official on the Austerlitz table commissioned by Napoleon for propaganda purposes 22 Console Edit A strapwork heraldic console fashionable in the second half of the 16th century Console from Chichester tomb Pilton Devon 1569 The term console in architecture is generally used for elements which provide support such as corbels on a console table g A console in heraldry is a decorative frame or support generally in an architectural or illustrative context surrounding a heraldic shield or escutcheon which serves to add interest to and mitigate the harshness of the stark outline of the shield Notes Edit Ultimately from Vulgar Latin scutiōn Latin scutum shield 1 From its use in heraldry the term escutcheon can be a metaphor for a family s honour The idiom a blot on the escutcheon is used to mean a stain on somebody s reputation 2 The gap or bouche represents the opening for the lance in specialised jousting shields attested in depictions of actual shields from the mid 14th century occasional use as a shape of heraldic escutcheons from the mid 15th century 6 Used in the Armorial general de France 1696 8 The French shape of the base is found earlier in French and English heraldry from c 1600 Stuart type called ecu suisse in some French sources of the 19th century citation needed as this shape was used in coats of arms on some coins of the Swiss mediation period 1803 1815 The origin of the inescutcheon of pretense lies in the armorial representation of territorial property A man coming into lordship by right of his wife would naturally wish to bear the arms associated with that territory and so would place them inescutcheon over his own and arms exclusively of a territorial character have certainly very frequently been placed in pretense 20 It is also worth noting that the arms thus borne in pretense represent arms of assumption while those on the larger shield represent arms of descent Especially in continental Europe sovereigns have long held the custom of bearing their hereditary arms in an inescutcheon en surtout over the territorial arms of their dominions 21 This custom coupled with the frequency of European sovereigns ruling over several armigerous territories may have given rise to the common European form of quarterly with a heart The term derives from the compound Latin verb consolor to alleviate lighten from the verb solor to assuage soothe relieve mitigate plus the preposition con com cum with 23 References Edit Escutcheon American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th ed Houghton Mifflin Company 2000 Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2009 escutcheon Oxford English Dictionary Grazebrook 1890 p 38 Grazebrook 1890 plate I Codex Figdor Tiroler Landesarchiv Innsbruck c 1400 Grazebrook 1890 p31 35 Szymanski Jozef 2001 2001 Nauki Pomocnicze Historii Warsaw d Hozier Louis Pierre 1865 1696 Armorial general ou Registres de la noblesse de France Paris Firmin Didot via Internet Archive Royal wedding Kate Middleton coat of arms unveiled BBC News 19 April 2011 Retrieved 19 April 2011 Bates Stephen 19 April 2011 Kate Middleton family gets coat of arms The Guardian UK Retrieved 19 April 2011 Grazebrook 1890 p 20 a b The Arms of Women 2002 paragraph 10 Garter King of Arms Clarenceux King of Arms Norroy and Ulster King of Arms Autumn 2002 The Arms of Women a Decree Coat of Arms No 199 The Arms of Women 2002 paragraph 6 The Arms of Women 2002 paragraph 3 The Arms of Women 2002 paragraph 9 Fearn Jacqueline 1980 Discovering Heraldry Shire p 61 Thomas Woodcock Garter King of Arms Patric Dickinson Clarenceux King of Arms H Bedingfeld Norroy and Ulster King of Arms 29 March 2014 The Arms of Individuals in Same Sex Marriages college of arms gov uk Boutell 1914 p 33 figure 27 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 58 Fox Davies 1909 p 539 Fox Davies 1909 p 541 The Austerlitz or Marechaux Table Cassell s Latin Dictionary Marchant J R V amp Charles Joseph F Eds Revised Edition 1928Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heraldic shields Boutell Charles 1914 Fox Davies A C ed The Handbook to English Heraldry 11th ed London Reeves amp Turner OCLC 81124564 via Project Gutenberg Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry Illustrated by Nine Plates and Nearly 800 Other Designs London T C amp E C Jack ISBN 0 517 26643 1 LCCN 09023803 Grazebrook George 1890 The dates of variously shaped shields with coincident dates and examples Liverpool Brakell Woodward John Burnett George 1892 1884 A treatise on heraldry British and foreign with English and French glossaries Edinburgh W amp A B Johnson LCCN 02020303 via Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Escutcheon heraldry amp oldid 1151047244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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