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Heraldry

Heraldry is a discipline relating to the design, display and study of armorial bearings (known as armory), as well as related disciplines, such as vexillology, together with the study of ceremony, rank and pedigree.[1][2] Armory, the best-known branch of heraldry, concerns the design and transmission of the heraldic achievement. The achievement, or armorial bearings usually includes a coat of arms on a shield, helmet and crest, together with any accompanying devices, such as supporters, badges, heraldic banners and mottoes.[3]

The German Hyghalmen Roll was made in the late 15th century and illustrates the German practice of repeating themes from the arms in the crest. (See Roll of arms).

Although the use of various devices to signify individuals and groups goes back to antiquity, both the form and use of such devices varied widely, as the concept of regular, hereditary designs, constituting the distinguishing feature of heraldry, did not develop until the High Middle Ages.[4] It is often claimed that the use of helmets with face guards during this period made it difficult to recognize one's commanders in the field when large armies gathered together for extended periods, necessitating the development of heraldry as a symbolic language, but there is little support for this view.[4][5]

The perceived beauty and pageantry of heraldic designs allowed them to survive the gradual abandonment of armour on the battlefield during the seventeenth century. Heraldry has been described poetically as "the handmaid of history",[6] "the shorthand of history",[7] and "the floral border in the garden of history".[8] In modern times, individuals, public and private organizations, corporations, cities, towns, regions, and other entities use heraldry and its conventions to symbolize their heritage, achievements, and aspirations.[9]

History

Precursors

Various symbols have been used to represent individuals or groups for thousands of years. The earliest representations of distinct persons and regions in Egyptian art show the use of standards topped with the images or symbols of various gods, and the names of kings appear upon emblems known as serekhs, representing the king's palace, and usually topped with a falcon representing the god Horus, of whom the king was regarded as the earthly incarnation. Similar emblems and devices are found in ancient Mesopotamian art of the same period, and the precursors of heraldic beasts such as the griffin can also be found.[4] In the Bible, the Book of Numbers refers to the standards and ensigns of the children of Israel, who were commanded to gather beneath these emblems and declare their pedigrees.[10] The Greek and Latin writers frequently describe the shields and symbols of various heroes,[11] and units of the Roman army were sometimes identified by distinctive markings on their shields.[12] At least one pre-historic European object, the Nebra sky disc, is also thought to serve as a heraldic precursor.[13]

Until the nineteenth century, it was common for heraldic writers to cite examples such as these, and metaphorical symbols such as the "Lion of Judah" or "Eagle of the Caesars" as evidence of the antiquity of heraldry itself; and to infer therefrom that the great figures of ancient history bore arms representing their noble status and descent. The Book of Saint Albans, compiled in 1486, declares that Christ himself was a gentleman of coat armour.[14] These claims are now regarded as the fantasy of medieval heralds, as there is no evidence of a distinctive symbolic language akin to that of heraldry during this early period; nor do many of the shields described in antiquity bear a close resemblance to those of medieval heraldry; nor is there any evidence that specific symbols or designs were passed down from one generation to the next, representing a particular person or line of descent.[15]

The medieval heralds also devised arms for various knights and lords from history and literature. Notable examples include the toads attributed to Pharamond, the cross and martlets of Edward the Confessor, and the various arms attributed to the Nine Worthies and the Knights of the Round Table. These too are readily dismissed as fanciful inventions, rather than evidence of the antiquity of heraldry.

Origins of modern heraldry

 
Enamel from the tomb of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, one of the earliest depictions of modern heraldry.

The development of the modern heraldic language cannot be attributed to a single individual, time, or place. Although certain designs that are now considered heraldic were evidently in use during the eleventh century, most accounts and depictions of shields up to the beginning of the twelfth century contain little or no evidence of their heraldic character. For example, the Bayeux Tapestry, illustrating the Norman invasion of England in 1066, and probably commissioned about 1077, when the cathedral of Bayeux was rebuilt,[i] depicts a number of shields of various shapes and designs, many of which are plain, while others are decorated with dragons, crosses, or other typically heraldic figures. Yet no individual is depicted twice bearing the same arms, nor are any of the descendants of the various persons depicted known to have borne devices resembling those in the tapestry.[16][17]

Similarly, an account of the French knights at the court of the Byzantine emperor Alexius I at the beginning of the twelfth century describes their shields of polished metal, devoid of heraldic design. A Spanish manuscript from 1109 describes both plain and decorated shields, none of which appears to have been heraldic.[18] The Abbey of St. Denis contained a window commemorating the knights who embarked on the Second Crusade in 1147, and was probably made soon after the event; but Montfaucon's illustration of the window before it was destroyed shows no heraldic design on any of the shields.[17][19]

In England, from the time of the Norman conquest, official documents had to be sealed. Beginning in the twelfth century, seals assumed a distinctly heraldic character; a number of seals dating from between 1135 and 1155 appear to show the adoption of heraldic devices in England, France, Germany, Spain, and Italy.[20] A notable example of an early armorial seal is attached to a charter granted by Philip I, Count of Flanders, in 1164. Seals from the latter part of the eleventh and early twelfth centuries show no evidence of heraldic symbolism, but by the end of the twelfth century, seals are uniformly heraldic in nature.[18][21]

One of the earliest known examples of armory as it subsequently came to be practiced can be seen on the tomb of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, who died in 1151.[22] An enamel, probably commissioned by Geoffrey's widow between 1155 and 1160, depicts him carrying a blue shield decorated with six golden lions rampant.[ii] He wears a blue helmet adorned with another lion, and his cloak is lined in vair. A medieval chronicle states that Geoffrey was given a shield of this description when he was knighted by his father-in-law, Henry I, in 1128; but this account probably dates to about 1175.[23][24]

The earlier heraldic writers attributed the lions of England to William the Conqueror, but the earliest evidence of the association of lions with the English crown is a seal bearing two lions passant, used by the future King John during the lifetime of his father, Henry II, who died in 1189.[25][26] Since Henry was the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet, it seems reasonable to suppose that the adoption of lions as an heraldic emblem by Henry or his sons might have been inspired by Geoffrey's shield. John's elder brother, Richard the Lionheart, who succeeded his father on the throne, is believed to have been the first to have borne the arms of three lions passant-guardant, still the arms of England, having earlier used two lions rampant combatant, which arms may also have belonged to his father.[27] Richard is also credited with having originated the English crest of a lion statant (now statant-guardant).[26][28]

The origins of heraldry are sometimes associated with the Crusades, a series of military campaigns undertaken by Christian armies from 1096 to 1487, with the goal of reconquering Jerusalem and other former Byzantine territories captured by Muslim forces during the seventh century. While there is no evidence that heraldic art originated in the course of the Crusades, there is no reason to doubt that the gathering of large armies, drawn from across Europe for a united cause, would have encouraged the adoption of armorial bearings as a means of identifying one's commanders in the field, or that it helped disseminate the principles of armory across Europe. At least two distinctive features of heraldry are generally accepted as products of the crusaders: the surcoat, an outer garment worn over the armor to protect the wearer from the heat of the sun, was often decorated with the same devices that appeared on a knight's shield. It is from this garment that the phrase "coat of arms" is derived.[29] Also the lambrequin, or mantling, that depends from the helmet and frames the shield in modern heraldry, began as a practical covering for the helmet and the back of the neck during the Crusades, serving much the same function as the surcoat. Its slashed or scalloped edge, today rendered as billowing flourishes, is thought to have originated from hard wearing in the field, or as a means of deadening a sword blow and perhaps entangling the attacker's weapon.[30]

Heralds and heraldic authorities

The spread of armorial bearings across Europe gave rise to a new occupation: the herald, originally a type of messenger employed by noblemen, assumed the responsibility of learning and knowing the rank, pedigree, and heraldic devices of various knights and lords, as well as the rules governing the design and description, or blazoning of arms, and the precedence of their bearers.[31] As early as the late thirteenth century, certain heralds in the employ of monarchs were given the title "King of Heralds", which eventually became "King of Arms."[31]

 
Two pursuivants wearing tabards, Windsor Castle, 2006.

In the earliest period, arms were assumed by their bearers without any need for heraldic authority. However, by the middle of the fourteenth century, the principle that only a single individual was entitled to bear a particular coat of arms was generally accepted, and disputes over the ownership of arms seems to have led to gradual establishment of heraldic authorities to regulate their use. The earliest known work of heraldic jurisprudence, De Insigniis et Armis, was written about 1350 by Bartolus de Saxoferrato, a professor of law at the University of Padua.[32][33] The most celebrated armorial dispute in English heraldry is that of Scrope v Grosvenor (1390), in which two different men claimed the right to bear azure, a bend or.[34] The continued proliferation of arms, and the number of disputes arising from different men assuming the same arms, led Henry V to issue a proclamation in 1419, forbidding all those who had not borne arms at the Battle of Agincourt from assuming arms, except by inheritance or a grant from the crown.[34][35]

Beginning in the reign of Henry VIII of England, the English Kings of Arms were commanded to make visitations, in which they traveled about the country, recording arms borne under proper authority, and requiring those who bore arms without authority either to obtain authority for them, or cease their use. Arms borne improperly were to be taken down and defaced. The first such visitation began in 1530, and the last was carried out in 1700, although no new commissions to carry out visitations were made after the accession of William III in 1689.[34][36] There is little evidence that Scottish heralds ever went on visitations.

In 1484, during the reign of Richard III, the various heralds employed by the crown were incorporated into England's College of Arms, through which all new grants of arms would eventually be issued.[37][38] The college currently consists of three Kings of Arms, assisted by six Heralds, and four Pursuivants, or junior officers of arms, all under the authority of the Earl Marshal; but all of the arms granted by the college are granted by the authority of the crown.[39] In Scotland Court of the Lord Lyon King of Arms oversees the heraldry, and holds court sessions which are an official part of Scotland's court system. Similar bodies regulate the granting of arms in other monarchies and several members of the Commonwealth of Nations, but in most other countries there is no heraldic authority, and no law preventing anyone from assuming whatever arms they please, provided that they do not infringe upon the arms of another.[38]

Later uses and developments

Although heraldry originated from military necessity, it soon found itself at home in the pageantry of the medieval tournament. The opportunity for knights and lords to display their heraldic bearings in a competitive medium led to further refinements, such as the development of elaborate tournament helms, and further popularized the art of heraldry throughout Europe. Prominent burghers and corporations, including many cities and towns, assumed or obtained grants of arms, with only nominal military associations.[40] Heraldic devices were depicted in various contexts, such as religious and funerary art, and in using a wide variety of media, including stonework, carved wood, enamel, stained glass, and embroidery.[41]

As the rise of firearms rendered the mounted knight increasingly irrelevant during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and the tournament faded into history, the military character of heraldry gave way to its use as a decorative art. Freed from the limitations of actual shields and the need for arms to be easily distinguished in combat, heraldic artists designed increasingly elaborate achievements, culminating in the development of "landscape heraldry", incorporating realistic depictions of landscapes, during the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century. These fell out of fashion during the mid-nineteenth century, when a renewed interest in the history of armory led to the re-evaluation of earlier designs, and a new appreciation for the medieval origins of the art.[42][43] In particular, a late use of heraldic imagery has been in patriotic commemorations and nationalistic propaganda during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[44][45][46] Since the late nineteenth century, heraldry has focused on the use of varied lines of partition and little-used ordinaries to produce new and unique designs.[47]

Heraldic achievement

Elements of an achievement

A heraldic achievement consists of a shield of arms, the coat of arms, or simply coat, together with all of its accompanying elements, such as a crest, supporters, and other heraldic embellishments. The term "coat of arms" technically refers to the shield of arms itself, but the phrase is commonly used to refer to the entire achievement. The one indispensable element of a coat of arms is the shield; many ancient coats of arms consist of nothing else, but no achievement or armorial bearings exists without a coat of arms.[48]

From a very early date, illustrations of arms were frequently embellished with helmets placed above the shields. These in turn came to be decorated with fan-shaped or sculptural crests, often incorporating elements from the shield of arms; as well as a wreath or torse, or sometimes a coronet, from which depended the lambrequin or mantling. To these elements, modern heraldry often adds a motto displayed on a ribbon, typically below the shield. The helmet is borne of right, and forms no part of a grant of arms; it may be assumed without authority by anyone entitled to bear arms, together with mantling and whatever motto the armiger may desire. The crest, however, together with the torse or coronet from which it arises, must be granted or confirmed by the relevant heraldic authority.[48]

If the bearer is entitled to the ribbon, collar, or badge of a knightly order, it may encircle or depend from the shield. Some arms, particularly those of the nobility, are further embellished with supporters, heraldic figures standing alongside or behind the shield; often these stand on a compartment, typically a mound of earth and grass, on which other badges, symbols, or heraldic banners may be displayed. The most elaborate achievements sometimes display the entire coat of arms beneath a pavilion, an embellished tent or canopy of the type associated with the medieval tournament,[48] though this is only very rarely found in English or Scots achievements.

Shield

The primary element of a heraldic achievement is the shield, or escutcheon, upon which the coat of arms is depicted.[iii] All of the other elements of an achievement are designed to decorate and complement these arms, but only the shield of arms is required.[49][50][51] The shape of the shield, like many other details, is normally left to the discretion of the heraldic artist,[iv] and many different shapes have prevailed during different periods of heraldic design, and in different parts of Europe.[49][56][57][58]

One shape alone is normally reserved for a specific purpose: the lozenge, a diamond-shaped escutcheon, was traditionally used to display the arms of women, on the grounds that shields, as implements of war, were inappropriate for this purpose.[49][59][60] This distinction was not always strictly adhered to, and a general exception was usually made for sovereigns, whose arms represented an entire nation. Sometimes an oval shield, or cartouche, was substituted for the lozenge; this shape was also widely used for the arms of clerics in French, Spanish, and Italian heraldry, although it was never reserved for their use.[49][57] In recent years, the use of the cartouche for women's arms has become general in Scottish heraldry, while both Scottish and Irish authorities have permitted a traditional shield under certain circumstances, and in Canadian heraldry the shield is now regularly granted.[61]

The whole surface of the escutcheon is termed the field, which may be plain, consisting of a single tincture, or divided into multiple sections of differing tinctures by various lines of partition; and any part of the field may be semé, or powdered with small charges.[62] The edges and adjacent parts of the escutcheon are used to identify the placement of various heraldic charges; the upper edge, and the corresponding upper third of the shield, are referred to as the chief; the lower part is the base. The sides of the shield are known as the dexter and sinister flanks, although it is important to note that these terms are based on the point of view of the bearer of the shield, who would be standing behind it; to the observer, and in all heraldic illustration, the dexter is on the left side, and the sinister on the right.[63][64][65]

The placement of various charges may also refer to a number of specific points, nine in number according to some authorities, but eleven according to others. The three most important are fess point, located in the visual center of the shield;[v] the honour point, located midway between fess point and the chief; and the nombril point, located midway between fess point and the base.[63][64][65] The other points include dexter chief, center chief, and sinister chief, running along the upper part of the shield from left to right, above the honour point; dexter flank and sinister flank, on the sides approximately level with fess point; and dexter base, middle base, and sinister base along the lower part of the shield, below the nombril point.[63][64]

Tinctures

 
Table of the tinctures and furs

One of the most distinctive qualities of heraldry is the use of a limited palette of colours and patterns, usually referred to as tinctures. These are divided into three categories, known as metals, colours, and furs.[vi][66]

The metals are or and argent, representing gold and silver, respectively, although in practice they are usually depicted as yellow and white. Five colours are universally recognized: gules, or red; sable, or black; azure, or blue; vert, or green; and purpure, or purple; and most heraldic authorities also admit two additional colours, known as sanguine or murrey, a dark red or mulberry colour between gules and purpure, and tenné, an orange or dark yellow to brown colour. These last two are quite rare, and are often referred to as stains, from the belief that they were used to represent some dishonourable act, although in fact there is no evidence that this use existed outside of fanciful heraldic writers.[67] Perhaps owing to the realization that there is really no such thing as a stain in genuine heraldry, as well as the desire to create new and unique designs, the use of these colours for general purposes has become accepted in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.[vii][39] Occasionally one meets with other colours, particularly in continental heraldry, although they are not generally regarded among the standard heraldic colours. Among these are cendrée, or ash-colour; brunâtre, or brown; bleu-céleste or bleu de ciel, sky blue; amaranth or columbine, a bright violet-red or pink colour; and carnation, commonly used to represent flesh in French heraldry.[68] A more recent addition is the use of copper as a metal in one or two Canadian coats of arms.

There are two basic types of heraldic fur, known as ermine and vair, but over the course of centuries each has developed a number of variations. Ermine represents the fur of the stoat, a type of weasel, in its white winter coat, when it is called an ermine. It consists of a white, or occasionally silver field, powdered with black figures known as ermine spots, representing the black tip of the animal's tail. Ermine was traditionally used to line the cloaks and caps of the nobility. The shape of the heraldic ermine spot has varied considerably over time, and nowadays is typically drawn as an arrowhead surmounted by three small dots, but older forms may be employed at the artist's discretion. When the field is sable and the ermine spots argent, the same pattern is termed ermines; when the field is or rather than argent, the fur is termed erminois; and when the field is sable and the ermine spots or, it is termed pean.[69][70]

Vair represents the winter coat of the red squirrel, which is blue-grey on top and white underneath. To form the linings of cloaks, the pelts were sewn together, forming an undulating, bell-shaped pattern, with interlocking light and dark rows. The heraldic fur is depicted with interlocking rows of argent and azure, although the shape of the pelts, usually referred to as "vair bells", is usually left to the artist's discretion. In the modern form, the bells are depicted with straight lines and sharp angles, and meet only at points; in the older, undulating pattern, now known as vair ondé or vair ancien, the bells of each tincture are curved and joined at the base. There is no fixed rule as to whether the argent bells should be at the top or the bottom of each row. At one time vair commonly came in three sizes, and this distinction is sometimes encountered in continental heraldry; if the field contains fewer than four rows, the fur is termed gros vair or beffroi; if of six or more, it is menu-vair, or miniver.[71][72]

A common variation is counter-vair, in which alternating rows are reversed, so that the bases of the vair bells of each tincture are joined to those of the same tincture in the row above or below. When the rows are arranged so that the bells of each tincture form vertical columns, it is termed vair in pale; in continental heraldry one may encounter vair in bend, which is similar to vair in pale, but diagonal. When alternating rows are reversed as in counter-vair, and then displaced by half the width of one bell, it is termed vair in point, or wave-vair. A form peculiar to German heraldry is alternate vair, in which each vair bell is divided in half vertically, with half argent and half azure.[71] All of these variations can also be depicted in the form known as potent, in which the shape of the vair bell is replaced by a T-shaped figure, known as a potent from its resemblance to a crutch. Although it is really just a variation of vair, it is frequently treated as a separate fur.[73]

When the same patterns are composed of tinctures other than argent and azure, they are termed vairé or vairy of those tinctures, rather than vair; potenté of other colours may also be found. Usually vairé will consist of one metal and one colour, but ermine or one of its variations may also be used, and vairé of four tinctures, usually two metals and two colours, is sometimes found.[74]

Three additional furs are sometimes encountered in continental heraldry; in French and Italian heraldry one meets with plumeté or plumetty, in which the field appears to be covered with feathers, and papelonné, in which it is decorated with scales. In German heraldry one may encounter kursch, or vair bellies, depicted as brown and furry; all of these probably originated as variations of vair.[75]

Considerable latitude is given to the heraldic artist in depicting the heraldic tinctures; there is no fixed shade or hue to any of them.[viii]

Whenever an object is depicted as it appears in nature, rather than in one or more of the heraldic tinctures, it is termed proper, or the colour of nature. This does not seem to have been done in the earliest heraldry, but examples are known from at least the seventeenth century. While there can be no objection to the occasional depiction of objects in this manner, the overuse of charges in their natural colours is often cited as indicative of bad heraldic practice. The practice of landscape heraldry, which flourished in the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century, made extensive use of non-heraldic colours.[76]

One of the most important conventions of heraldry is the so-called "rule of tincture". To provide for contrast and visibility, metals should never be placed on metals, and colours should never be placed on colours. This rule does not apply to charges which cross a division of the field, which is partly metal and partly colour; nor, strictly speaking, does it prevent a field from consisting of two metals or two colours, although this is unusual. Furs are considered amphibious, and neither metal nor colour; but in practice ermine and erminois are usually treated as metals, while ermines and pean are treated as colours. This rule is strictly adhered to in British armory, with only rare exceptions; although generally observed in continental heraldry, it is not adhered to quite as strictly. Arms which violate this rule are sometimes known as "puzzle arms", of which the most famous example is the arms of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, consisting of gold crosses on a silver field.[77][78]

Variations of the field

The field of a shield, or less often a charge or crest, is sometimes made up of a pattern of colours, or variation. A pattern of horizontal (barwise) stripes, for example, is called barry, while a pattern of vertical (palewise) stripes is called paly. A pattern of diagonal stripes may be called bendy or bendy sinister, depending on the direction of the stripes. Other variations include chevrony, gyronny and chequy. Wave shaped stripes are termed undy. For further variations, these are sometimes combined to produce patterns of barry-bendy, paly-bendy, lozengy and fusilly. Semés, or patterns of repeated charges, are also considered variations of the field.[79] The Rule of tincture applies to all semés and variations of the field.

Divisions of the field

 
A shield parted per pale and per fir twig fess. Coat of arms of former Finnish municipality of Varpaisjärvi.

The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture, as can the various heraldic charges. Many coats of arms consist simply of a division of the field into two contrasting tinctures. These are considered divisions of a shield, so the rule of tincture can be ignored. For example, a shield divided azure and gules would be perfectly acceptable. A line of partition may be straight or it may be varied. The variations of partition lines can be wavy, indented, embattled, engrailed, nebuly, or made into myriad other forms; see Line (heraldry).[80]

Ordinaries

In the early days of heraldry, very simple bold rectilinear shapes were painted on shields. These could be easily recognized at a long distance and could be easily remembered. They therefore served the main purpose of heraldry: identification.[81] As more complicated shields came into use, these bold shapes were set apart in a separate class as the "honourable ordinaries". They act as charges and are always written first in blazon. Unless otherwise specified they extend to the edges of the field. Though ordinaries are not easily defined, they are generally described as including the cross, the fess, the pale, the bend, the chevron, the saltire, and the pall.[82]

There is a separate class of charges called sub-ordinaries which are of a geometrical shape subordinate to the ordinary. According to Friar, they are distinguished by their order in blazon. The sub-ordinaries include the inescutcheon, the orle, the tressure, the double tressure, the bordure, the chief, the canton, the label, and flaunches.[83]

Ordinaries may appear in parallel series, in which case blazons in English give them different names such as pallets, bars, bendlets, and chevronels. French blazon makes no such distinction between these diminutives and the ordinaries when borne singly. Unless otherwise specified an ordinary is drawn with straight lines, but each may be indented, embattled, wavy, engrailed, or otherwise have their lines varied.[84]

Charges

A charge is any object or figure placed on a heraldic shield or on any other object of an armorial composition.[85] Any object found in nature or technology may appear as a heraldic charge in armory. Charges can be animals, objects, or geometric shapes. Apart from the ordinaries, the most frequent charges are the cross – with its hundreds of variations – and the lion and eagle. Other common animals are stags, wild boars, martlets, and fish. Dragons, bats, unicorns, griffins, and other monsters appear as charges and as supporters.

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

In English heraldry the crescent, mullet, martlet, annulet, fleur-de-lis, and rose may be added to a shield to distinguish cadet branches of a family from the senior line. These cadency marks are usually shown smaller than normal charges, but it still does not follow that a shield containing such a charge belongs to a cadet branch. All of these charges occur frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms.[86]

Marshalling

 
An extravagant example of marshalling: the 719 quarterings of the Grenville Armorial at Stowe House

To marshal two or more coats of arms is to combine them in one shield, to express inheritance, claims to property, or the occupation of an office. This can be done in a number of ways, of which the simplest is impalement: dividing the field per pale and putting one whole coat in each half. Impalement replaced the earlier dimidiation – combining the dexter half of one coat with the sinister half of another – because dimidiation can create ambiguity between, for example, a bend and a chevron. "Dexter" (from Latin dextra, "right") means to the right from the viewpoint of the bearer of the arms and "sinister" (from Latin sinistra, "left") means to the bearer's left. The dexter side is considered the side of greatest honour (see also dexter and sinister).

A more versatile method is quartering, division of the field by both vertical and horizontal lines. This practice originated in Spain (Castile and León) after the 13th century.[87] As the name implies, the usual number of divisions is four, but the principle has been extended to very large numbers of "quarters".

Quarters are numbered from the dexter chief (the corner nearest to the right shoulder of a man standing behind the shield), proceeding across the top row, and then across the next row and so on. When three coats are quartered, the first is repeated as the fourth; when only two coats are quartered, the second is also repeated as the third. The quarters of a personal coat of arms correspond to the ancestors from whom the bearer has inherited arms, normally in the same sequence as if the pedigree were laid out with the father's father's ... father (to as many generations as necessary) on the extreme left and the mother's mother's...mother on the extreme right. A few lineages have accumulated hundreds of quarters, though such a number is usually displayed only in documentary contexts.[88] The Scottish and Spanish traditions resist allowing more than four quarters, preferring to subdivide one or more "grand quarters" into sub-quarters as needed.

The third common mode of marshalling is with an inescutcheon, a small shield placed in front of the main shield. In Britain this is most often an "escutcheon of pretence" indicating, in the arms of a married couple, that the wife is an heraldic heiress (i.e., she inherits a coat of arms because she has no brothers). In continental Europe an inescutcheon (sometimes called a "heart shield") usually carries the ancestral arms of a monarch or noble whose domains are represented by the quarters of the main shield.

In German heraldry, animate charges in combined coats usually turn to face the centre of the composition.

Helm and crest

 
German heraldry has examples of shields with numerous crests, as this arms of Saxe-Altenburg featuring a total of seven crests. Some thaler coins display as many as fifteen.

In English the word "crest" is commonly (but erroneously) used to refer to an entire heraldic achievement of armorial bearings. The technical use of the heraldic term crest refers to just one component of a complete achievement. The crest rests on top of a helmet which itself rests on the most important part of the achievement: the shield.

The modern crest has grown out of the three-dimensional figure placed on the top of the mounted knights' helms as a further means of identification. In most heraldic traditions, a woman does not display a crest, though this tradition is being relaxed in some heraldic jurisdictions, and the stall plate of Lady Marion Fraser in the Thistle Chapel in St Giles, Edinburgh, shows her coat on a lozenge but with helmet, crest, and motto.

The crest is usually found on a wreath of twisted cloth and sometimes within a coronet. Crest-coronets are generally simpler than coronets of rank, but several specialized forms exist; for example, in Canada, descendants of the United Empire Loyalists are entitled to use a Loyalist military coronet (for descendants of members of Loyalist regiments) or Loyalist civil coronet (for others).

When the helm and crest are shown, they are usually accompanied by a mantling. This was originally a cloth worn over the back of the helmet as partial protection against heating by sunlight. Today it takes the form of a stylized cloak hanging from the helmet.[89] Typically in British heraldry, the outer surface of the mantling is of the principal colour in the shield and the inner surface is of the principal metal, though peers in the United Kingdom use standard colourings (Gules doubled Argent - Red/White) regardless of rank or the colourings of their arms. The mantling is sometimes conventionally depicted with a ragged edge, as if damaged in combat, though the edges of most are simply decorated at the emblazoner's discretion.

Clergy often refrain from displaying a helm or crest in their heraldic achievements. Members of the clergy may display appropriate headwear. This often takes the form of a small crowned, wide brimmed hat called a galero with the colours and tassels denoting rank; or, in the case of Papal coats of arms until the inauguration of Pope Benedict XVI in 2005, an elaborate triple crown known as a tiara. Benedict broke with tradition to substitute a mitre in his arms. Orthodox and Presbyterian clergy do sometimes adopt other forms of headgear to ensign their shields. In the Anglican tradition, clergy members may pass crests on to their offspring, but rarely display them on their own shields.

Mottoes

An armorial motto is a phrase or collection of words intended to describe the motivation or intention of the armigerous person or corporation. This can form a pun on the family name as in Thomas Nevile's motto Ne vile velis. Mottoes are generally changed at will and do not make up an integral part of the armorial achievement. Mottoes can typically be found on a scroll under the shield. In Scottish heraldry, where the motto is granted as part of the blazon, it is usually shown on a scroll above the crest, and may not be changed at will. A motto may be in any language.

Supporters and other insignia

 
Flags as supporters and orders in the armory of the Prince of Vergara.

Supporters are human or animal figures or, very rarely, inanimate objects, usually placed on either side of a coat of arms as though supporting it. In many traditions, these have acquired strict guidelines for use by certain social classes. On the European continent, there are often fewer restrictions on the use of supporters.[90] In the United Kingdom, only peers of the realm, a few baronets, senior members of orders of knighthood, and some corporate bodies are granted supporters. Often, these can have local significance or a historical link to the armiger.

If the armiger has the title of baron, hereditary knight, or higher, he may display a coronet of rank above the shield. In the United Kingdom, this is shown between the shield and helmet, though it is often above the crest in Continental heraldry.

Another addition that can be made to a coat of arms is the insignia of a baronet or of an order of knighthood. This is usually represented by a collar or similar band surrounding the shield. When the arms of a knight and his wife are shown in one achievement, the insignia of knighthood surround the husband's arms only, and the wife's arms are customarily surrounded by an ornamental garland of leaves for visual balance.[91]

Differencing and cadency

Since arms pass from parents to offspring, and there is frequently more than one child per couple, it is necessary to distinguish the arms of siblings and extended family members from the original arms as passed on from eldest son to eldest son. Over time several schemes have been used.[92]

Blazon

To "blazon" arms means to describe them using the formal language of heraldry. This language has its own vocabulary and syntax, or rules governing word order, which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms. The verb comes from the Middle English blasoun, itself a derivative of the French blason meaning "shield". The system of blazoning arms used in English-speaking countries today was developed by heraldic officers in the Middle Ages. The blazon includes a description of the arms contained within the escutcheon or shield, the crest, supporters where present, motto and other insignia. Complex rules, such as the rule of tincture, apply to the physical and artistic form of newly created arms, and a thorough understanding of these rules is essential to the art of heraldry. Though heraldic forms initially were broadly similar across Europe, several national styles had developed by the end of the Middle Ages, and artistic and blazoning styles today range from the very simple to extraordinarily complex.

National styles

The emergence of heraldry occurred across western Europe almost simultaneously in the various countries. Originally, heraldic style was very similar from country to country.[93] Over time, heraldic tradition diverged into four broad styles: German-Nordic, Gallo-British, Latin, and Eastern.[94] In addition, it can be argued that newer national heraldic traditions, such as South African and Canadian heraldry, have emerged in the 20th century.[95]

German-Nordic heraldry

 
The coat of arms of Mikkeli, a city of South Savonia, Finland, has been drawn up in honour of the headquarters of the Finnish Army led by Marshal C. G. E. Mannerheim; this was stationed in the city during the Winter War, the Continuation War and the Lapland War. The coat of arms was originally used without the Mannerheim Cross, and is the third coat of arms affixed to the city.[96]

Coats of arms in Germany, the Nordic countries, Estonia, Latvia, the Czech lands and northern Switzerland generally change very little over time. Marks of difference are very rare in this tradition, as are heraldic furs.[97] One of the most striking characteristics of German-Nordic heraldry is the treatment of the crest. Often, the same design is repeated in the shield and the crest. The use of multiple crests is also common.[98] The crest is rarely used separately as in British heraldry, but can sometimes serve as a mark of difference between different branches of a family.[99] Torse is optional.[100] Heraldic courtoisie is observed: that is, charges in a composite shield (or two shields displayed together) usually turn to face the centre.[101]

Coats consisting only of a divided field are somewhat more frequent in Germany than elsewhere.

Dutch heraldry

The Low Countries were great centres of heraldry in medieval times. One of the famous armorials is the Gelre Armorial or Wapenboek, written between 1370 and 1414. Coats of arms in the Netherlands were not controlled by an official heraldic system like the two in the United Kingdom, nor were they used solely by noble families. Any person could develop and use a coat of arms if they wished to do so, provided they did not usurp someone else's arms, and historically, this right was enshrined in Roman Dutch law.[102] As a result, many merchant families had coats of arms even though they were not members of the nobility. These are sometimes referred to as burgher arms, and it is thought that most arms of this type were adopted while the Netherlands was a republic (1581–1806).[citation needed] This heraldic tradition was also exported to the erstwhile Dutch colonies.[103] Dutch heraldry is characterised by its simple and rather sober style, and in this sense, is closer to its medieval origins than the elaborate styles which developed in other heraldic traditions.[104]

Gallo-British heraldry

The use of cadency marks to difference arms within the same family and the use of semy fields are distinctive features of Gallo-British heraldry (in Scotland the most significant mark of cadency being the bordure, the small brisures playing a very minor role). Marks of cadency are mandatory in Scotland, where no two persons can own identical arms at a time. It is common to see heraldic furs used.[97] In the United Kingdom, the style is notably still controlled by royal officers of arms.[105] French heraldry experienced a period of strict rules of construction under Napoleon.[106] English and Scots heraldries make greater use of supporters than other European countries.[98]

Furs, chevrons and five-pointed stars are more frequent in France and Britain than elsewhere.

In Britain, a distinct category of burgher arms does not exist and heraldry is inherently associated with nobility. Armigers and their male-line legitimate descendants (i.e. those entitled to a matriculation, in Scotland with mandatory marks of cadency, rather than a grant of new arms) are considered to be, if possessing no higher dignity, members of the gentry or lower nobility. Men have the rank of Gentleman in the narrow sense of the word. Depending on interpretation, a grant of arms made by one of Britain's two heraldic officers, Garter King of Arms or Lord Lyon King of Arms, to a British subject, is either a grant or a confirmation of hereditary nobility, and recognized as such by CILANE and the Order of Malta. The majority, though not all, families of the hereditary Peerage and traditional Landed Gentry, are armigerous, non-armigerous families usually having inhreited their titles and/or estates in the female line and failed to apply for a grant of arms.

Latin heraldry

The heraldry of southern France, Andorra, Spain, and Italy is characterized by a lack of crests, and uniquely shaped shields. Portuguese heraldry, however, does use crests.[97] Portuguese and Spanish heraldry, which together form a larger Iberian tradition of heraldry, occasionally introduce words to the shield of arms, a practice usually avoided in British heraldry. Latin heraldry is known for extensive use of quartering, because of armorial inheritance via the male and the female lines. Moreover, Italian heraldry is dominated by the Roman Catholic Church, featuring many shields and achievements, most bearing some reference to the Church.[107]

Trees are frequent charges in Latin arms. Charged bordures, including bordures inscribed with words, are seen often in Spain.

Eastern European heraldry

 
Coat of Arms of the Turiec county in Slovakia.

Eastern European heraldry is in the traditions developed in Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia and Ukraine. Eastern coats of arms are characterized by a pronounced, territorial, clan system – often, entire villages or military groups were granted the same coat of arms irrespective of family relationships. In Poland, nearly six hundred unrelated families are known to bear the same Jastrzębiec coat of arms. Marks of cadency are almost unknown, and shields are generally very simple, with only one charge. Many heraldic shields derive from ancient house marks. At least fifteen per cent of all Hungarian personal arms bear a severed Turk's head, referring to their wars against the Ottoman Empire.[108][109]

Quasi-heraldic emblems

True heraldry, as now generally understood, has its roots in medieval Europe. However, there have been other historical cultures which have used symbols and emblems to represent families or individuals, and in some cases these symbols have been adopted into Western heraldry. For example, the coat of arms of the Ottoman Empire incorporated the royal tughra as part of its crest, along with such traditional Western heraldic elements as the escutcheon and the compartment.

Greek symbols

Ancient Greeks were among the first civilizations to use symbols consistently in order to identify a warrior, clan or a state.[110] The first record of a shield blazon is illustrated in Aeschylus' tragedy Seven Against Thebes.

Mon

Mon (), also monshō (紋章), mondokoro (紋所), and kamon (家紋), are Japanese emblems used to decorate and identify an individual or family. While mon is an encompassing term that may refer to any such device, kamon and mondokoro refer specifically to emblems used to identify a family.[further explanation needed] An authoritative mon reference compiles Japan's 241 general categories of mon based on structural resemblance (a single mon may belong to multiple categories), with 5116 distinct individual mon (it is however well acknowledged that there exist lost or obscure mon that are not in this compilation).[111][112]

The devices are similar to the badges and coats of arms in European heraldic tradition, which likewise are used to identify individuals and families. Mon are often referred to as crests in Western literature, another European heraldic device similar to the mon in function.

Japanese helmets (kabuto) also incorporated elements similar to crests, called datemono, which helped identify the wearer while they were concealed by armour. These devices sometimes incorporated mon, and some figures, like Date Masamune, were well-known for their helmet designs.

Socialist emblems

 

Communist states often followed a unique style characterized by communist symbolism. Although commonly called coats of arms, most such devices are not actually coats of arms in the traditional heraldic sense and should therefore, in a strict sense, not be called arms at all.[113] Many communist governments purposely diverged from the traditional forms of European heraldry in order to distance themselves from the monarchies that they usually replaced, with actual coats of arms being seen as symbols of the monarchs.

The Soviet Union was the first state to use this type of emblem, beginning at its creation in 1922. The style became more widespread after World War II, when many other communist states were established. Even a few non-socialist states have adopted the style, for various reasons—usually because communists had helped them to gain independence—but also when no apparent connection to a Communist nation exists, such as the emblem of Italy.[113][114] After the fall of the Soviet Union and the other communist states in Eastern Europe in 1989–1991, this style of heraldry was often abandoned for the old heraldic practices, with many (but not all) of the new governments reinstating the traditional heraldry that was previously cast aside.

Tamgas

A tamga or tamgha "stamp, seal" (Mongolian: тамга, Turkic: tamga) is an abstract seal or stamp used by Eurasian nomadic peoples and by cultures influenced by them. The tamga was normally the emblem of a particular tribe, clan or family. They were common among the Eurasian nomads throughout Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages (including Alans, Mongols, Sarmatians, Scythians and Turkic peoples). Similar "tamga-like" symbols were sometimes also adopted by sedentary peoples adjacent to the Pontic-Caspian steppe both in Eastern Europe and Central Asia,[115] such as the East Slavs, whose ancient royal symbols are sometimes referred to as "tamgas" and have similar appearance.[116]

Unlike European coats of arms, tamgas were not always inherited, and could stand for families or clans (for example, when denoting territory, livestock, or religious items) as well as for specific individuals (such as when used for weapons, or for royal seals). One could also adopt the tamga of one's master or ruler, therefore signifying said master's patronage. Outside of denoting ownership, tamgas also possessed religious significance, and were used as talismans to protect one from curses (it was believed that, as symbols of family, tamgas embodied the power of one's heritage). Tamgas depicted geometric shapes, images of animals, items, or glyphs. As they were usually inscribed using heavy and unwieldy instruments, such as knives or brands, and on different surfaces (meaning that their appearance could vary somewhat), tamgas were always simple and stylised, and needed to be laconic and easily recognisable.[117]

Tughras

Every sultan of the Ottoman Empire had his own monogram, called the tughra, which served as a royal symbol. A coat of arms in the European heraldic sense was created in the late 19th century. Hampton Court requested from Ottoman Empire the coat of arms to be included in their collection. As the coat of arms had not been previously used in Ottoman Empire, it was designed after this request and the final design was adopted by Sultan Abdul Hamid II on April 17, 1882. It included two flags: the flag of the Ottoman Dynasty, which had a crescent and a star on red base, and the flag of the Islamic Caliph, which had three crescents on a green base.

Modern heraldry

 
Arms created in 1977, featuring a hydrocarbon molecule

Heraldry flourishes in the modern world; institutions, companies, and private persons continue using coats of arms as their pictorial identification.[118][119][120][121] In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the English Kings of Arms, Scotland's Lord Lyon King of Arms, and the Chief Herald of Ireland continue making grants of arms.[122] There are heraldic authorities in Canada,[123] South Africa, Spain, and Sweden that grant or register coats of arms. In South Africa, the right to armorial bearings is also determined by Roman Dutch law, due to its origins as a 17th-century colony of the Netherlands.[124]

Heraldic societies abound in Africa, Asia, Australasia, the Americas and Europe. Heraldry aficionados participate in the Society for Creative Anachronism, medieval revivals, micronations and other related projects. Modern armigers use heraldry to express ancestral and personal heritage as well as professional, academic, civic, and national pride.[125] Little is left of class identification in modern heraldry, where the emphasis is more than ever on expression of identity.[126]

Heraldry continues to build on its rich tradition in academia, government, guilds and professional associations, religious institutions, and the military. Nations and their subdivisions – provinces, states, counties, cities, etc. – continue to build on the traditions of civic heraldry. The Roman Catholic Church, Anglican churches, and other religious institutions maintain the traditions of ecclesiastical heraldry for clergy, religious orders, and schools.

 
Military coat of arms, depicting a red locomotive.

Many of these institutions have begun to employ blazons representing modern objects. For example, some heraldic symbols issued by the United States Army Institute of Heraldry incorporate symbols such as guns, airplanes, or locomotives. Some scientific institutions incorporate symbols of modern science such as the atom or particular scientific instruments. The arms of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority uses traditional heraldic symbols to depict the harnessing of atomic power.[127] Locations with strong associations to particular industries may incorporate associated symbols. The coat of arms of Stenungsund Municipality in Sweden incorporates a hydrocarbon molecule, alluding to the historical significance of the petrochemical industry in the region.

Heraldry in countries with heraldic authorities continues to be regulated generally by laws granting rights to arms and recognizing possession of arms as well as protecting against their misuse. Countries without heraldic authorities usually treat coats of arms as creative property in the manner of logos, offering protection under copyright laws. This is the case in Nigeria, where most of the components of its heraldic system are otherwise unregulated.

See also

  • Heraldic societies, an extended list including non-official heraldic authorities and societies
  • Totem pole, a somewhat similar concept in North America
  • Emblematic, discipline relating to the design of emblems
  • Sigillography, scholarly discipline that studies seals

Footnotes

  1. ^ This was undertaken by Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, and half-brother of William I, whose conquest of England is commemorated by the tapestry.
  2. ^ Only four lions are visible in this depiction, in which the shield is shown in profile, but judging from their position, there must have been six; the tomb of Geoffrey's grandson, William Longspée, shows him bearing an apparently identical shield, but on this all six lions are at least partly visible.
  3. ^ Note that the term "coat of arms" is sometimes used to refer to the entire achievement, of which the shield is the central part.
  4. ^ There are exceptions to this rule, in which the shape of the escutcheon is specified in the blazon; for example, the arms of Nunavut,[52] and the former Republic of Bophuthatswana;[53] in the United States, the arms of North Dakota use an escutcheon in the shape of a stone arrowhead,[54] while the arms of Connecticut require a rococo shield;[55] the Scottish Public Register specifies an oval escutcheon for the Lanarkshire Master Plumbers' and Domestic Engineers' Association, and a square shield for the Anglo Leasing organisation.
  5. ^ Because most shields are widest at the chief, and narrow to a point at the base, fess point is usually slightly higher than the midpoint.
  6. ^ Technically, the word tincture applies specifically to the colours, rather than to the metals or the furs; but for lack of another term including all three, it is regularly used in this extended sense.
  7. ^ For instance, the arms of Lewes Old Grammar School, granted October 25, 2012: "Murrey within an Orle of eight Crosses crosslet Argent a Lion rampant Or holding in the forepaws a Book bound Azure the spine and the edges of the pages Gold" and those of Woolf, granted October 2, 2015: "Murrey a Snow Wolf's Head erased proper on a Chief Argent a Boar's Head coped at the neck between two Fleurs de Lys Azure."
  8. ^ "There are no fixed shades for heraldic colours. If the official description of a coat of arms gives its tinctures as Gules (red), Azure (blue) and Argent (white or silver) then, as long as the blue is not too light and the red not too orange, purple or pink, it is up to the artist to decide which particular shades they think are appropriate."[39]

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  118. ^ Eiland, Murray (2014). "Cigar box heraldry". The Armiger's News. 36 (1): 1–4 – via academia.edu.
  119. ^ Eiland, Murray (2015). "Heraldry on Crate Labels". The Armiger's News. 37 (3): 1–4 – via academia.edu.
  120. ^ Eiland, Murray (2018). "Elvis Presley's Coat of Arms". The Armiger's News. 41 (1): 6 – via academia.edu.
  121. ^ Eiland, Murray (2012). "Postcard from the Supreme Court, London". The Armiger's News. 34 (3): 2–4 – via academia.edu.
  122. ^ See the College of Arms newsletter for quarterly samplings of English grants and the Chief Herald of Ireland's webpage 2006-10-04 at the Wayback Machine for recent Irish grants.
  123. ^ See the Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada.
  124. ^ Cornelius Pama. Heraldry of South African families: coats of arms/crests/ancestry. (Balkema, Cape Town: 1972)
  125. ^ Eiland, Murray (2018). "Gathering the clans in California". The Armiger's News. 40 (1): 1–6 – via academia.edu.
  126. ^ Slater (2003), p. 238
  127. ^ Child, Heather (1976-01-01). Heraldic Design: A Handbook for Students. Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 9780806300719.

Bibliography

  • Boutell, Charles (1890). Aveling, S. T. (ed.). Heraldry, Ancient and Modern: Including Boutell's Heraldry. London: Frederick Warne. OCLC 6102523 – via Internet Archive.
  • Burke, Bernard (1967). The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales; Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing.
  • Dennys, Rodney (1975). The Heraldic Imagination. New York: Clarkson N. Potter.
  • Elvins, Mark Turnham (1988). Cardinals and Heraldry. London: Buckland Publications.
  • Fairbairn, James (1986). Fairbairn's Crests of the Families of Great Britain & Ireland. New York: Bonanza Books.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1904). The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopedia of Armory. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack – via Internet Archive.
  • Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1909). A Complete Guide to Heraldry. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack. LCCN 09023803 – via Internet Archive.
  • Franklyn, Julian (1968). Heraldry. Cranbury, NJ: A.S. Barnes and Company. ISBN 9780498066832.
  • Friar, Stephen, ed. (1987). A Dictionary of Heraldry. New York: Harmony Books. ISBN 9780517566657.
  • Gwynn-Jones, Peter (1998). The Art of Heraldry: Origins, Symbols, and Designs. London: Parkgate Books. ISBN 9780760710821.
  • Hart, Vaughan. 'London’s Standard: Christopher Wren and the Heraldry of the Monument’, in RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics, vol.73/74, Autumn 2020, pp. 325-39
  • Humphery-Smith, Cecil (1973). General Armory Two. London: Tabard Press. ISBN 9780806305837.
  • Innes of Learney, Thomas (1978). Innes of Edingight, Malcolm (ed.). Scots Heraldry (3rd ed.). London: Johnston & Bacon. ISBN 9780717942282.
  • Le Févre, Jean (1971). Pinches, Rosemary; Wood, Anthony (eds.). A European Armorial: An Armorial of Knights of the Golden Fleece and 15th Century Europe. London: Heraldry Today. ISBN 9780900455131.
  • Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1981). Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. New York: Clarkson Potter.
  • Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, George (1680). Scotland's Herauldrie: the Science of Herauldrie treated as a part of the Civil law and Law of Nations. Edinburgh: Heir of Andrew Anderson.
  • Moncreiffe, Iain; Pottinger, Don (1953). Simple Heraldry - Cheerfully Illustrated. London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson and Sons.
  • Neubecker, Ottfried (1976). Heraldry: Sources, Symbols and Meaning. Maidenhead, England: McGraw-Hill.
  • Nisbet, Alexander (1984). A system of Heraldry. Edinburgh: T & A Constable.
  • Parker, James (1970). A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
  • Pastoureau, Michel (1997). Heraldry: An Introduction to a Noble Tradition. "Abrams Discoveries" series. New York: Harry N. Abrams.
  • Paul, James Balfour (1903). An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland. Edinburgh: W. Green & Sons – via Internet Archive.
  • Pinches, J. H. (1994). European Nobility and Heraldry. Heraldry Today. ISBN 0-900455-45-4.
  • Reid of Robertland, David; Wilson, Vivien (1977). An Ordinary of Arms. Vol. Second. Edinburgh: Lyon Office.
  • Rietstap, Johannes B. (1967). Armorial General. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing.
  • Siebmacher, Johann. J. (1890–1901). Siebmacher's Grosses und Allgemeines Wappenbuch Vermehrten Auglage. Nürnberg: Von Bauer & Raspe.
  • Slater, Stephen (2003). The Complete Book of Heraldry. New York: Hermes House. ISBN 9781844772247.
  • von Volborth, Carl-Alexander (1981). Heraldry – Customs, Rules and Styles. Ware, Hertfordshire: Omega Books. ISBN 0-907853-47-1.
  • Wagner, Anthony (1946). Heraldry in England. Penguin. OCLC 878505764.
  • Wagner, Anthony R (1967). Heralds of England: A History of the Office and College of Arms. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
  • von Warnstedt, Christopher (October 1970). "The Heraldic Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms. XI (84).
  • Woodcock, Thomas; Robinson, John Martin (1988). The Oxford Guide to Heraldry. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Woodward, John; Burnett, George (1892) [1884]. Woodward's a treatise on heraldry, British and foreign: with English and French glossaries. Edinburgh: W. & A. B. Johnson. ISBN 0-7153-4464-1. LCCN 02020303 – via Internet Archive.

External links

  • EuropeanHeraldry.org catalogues a large number of European noble titles and heraldry.
  • Heraldry of Greatlitvan Nobility
  • Heraldry of the World (civic heraldry), an overview of thousands of coats of arms of towns and countries
  • Barron, Oswald (1911). "Heraldry" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). pp. 311–330.
  • International heraldry Introduction and examples
  • Heraldisk Selskab The Scandinavian Heraldry Society (one of the oldest and largest societies dedicated to heraldic research)
  • Heraldry for Kids Introducing Heraldry for Kids with free heraldry activity sheets
  • Heraldica The history of heraldry, knighthood and chivalry, glossary of the blazon, themes, coats of arms, etc.
  • Heraldic Arts Founded in 1987, the Society of Heraldic Arts was the first organisation of its kind in the world.

heraldry, discipline, relating, design, display, study, armorial, bearings, known, armory, well, related, disciplines, such, vexillology, together, with, study, ceremony, rank, pedigree, armory, best, known, branch, heraldry, concerns, design, transmission, he. Heraldry is a discipline relating to the design display and study of armorial bearings known as armory as well as related disciplines such as vexillology together with the study of ceremony rank and pedigree 1 2 Armory the best known branch of heraldry concerns the design and transmission of the heraldic achievement The achievement or armorial bearings usually includes a coat of arms on a shield helmet and crest together with any accompanying devices such as supporters badges heraldic banners and mottoes 3 The German Hyghalmen Roll was made in the late 15th century and illustrates the German practice of repeating themes from the arms in the crest See Roll of arms Although the use of various devices to signify individuals and groups goes back to antiquity both the form and use of such devices varied widely as the concept of regular hereditary designs constituting the distinguishing feature of heraldry did not develop until the High Middle Ages 4 It is often claimed that the use of helmets with face guards during this period made it difficult to recognize one s commanders in the field when large armies gathered together for extended periods necessitating the development of heraldry as a symbolic language but there is little support for this view 4 5 The perceived beauty and pageantry of heraldic designs allowed them to survive the gradual abandonment of armour on the battlefield during the seventeenth century Heraldry has been described poetically as the handmaid of history 6 the shorthand of history 7 and the floral border in the garden of history 8 In modern times individuals public and private organizations corporations cities towns regions and other entities use heraldry and its conventions to symbolize their heritage achievements and aspirations 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Precursors 1 2 Origins of modern heraldry 1 3 Heralds and heraldic authorities 1 4 Later uses and developments 2 Heraldic achievement 2 1 Elements of an achievement 2 1 1 Shield 2 1 2 Tinctures 2 1 3 Variations of the field 2 1 4 Divisions of the field 2 1 5 Ordinaries 2 1 6 Charges 2 1 7 Marshalling 2 2 Helm and crest 2 3 Mottoes 2 4 Supporters and other insignia 2 5 Differencing and cadency 2 6 Blazon 3 National styles 3 1 German Nordic heraldry 3 1 1 Dutch heraldry 3 2 Gallo British heraldry 3 3 Latin heraldry 3 4 Eastern European heraldry 4 Quasi heraldic emblems 4 1 Greek symbols 4 2 Mon 4 3 Socialist emblems 4 4 Tamgas 4 5 Tughras 5 Modern heraldry 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditMain article History of heraldry Precursors Edit Various symbols have been used to represent individuals or groups for thousands of years The earliest representations of distinct persons and regions in Egyptian art show the use of standards topped with the images or symbols of various gods and the names of kings appear upon emblems known as serekhs representing the king s palace and usually topped with a falcon representing the god Horus of whom the king was regarded as the earthly incarnation Similar emblems and devices are found in ancient Mesopotamian art of the same period and the precursors of heraldic beasts such as the griffin can also be found 4 In the Bible the Book of Numbers refers to the standards and ensigns of the children of Israel who were commanded to gather beneath these emblems and declare their pedigrees 10 The Greek and Latin writers frequently describe the shields and symbols of various heroes 11 and units of the Roman army were sometimes identified by distinctive markings on their shields 12 At least one pre historic European object the Nebra sky disc is also thought to serve as a heraldic precursor 13 Until the nineteenth century it was common for heraldic writers to cite examples such as these and metaphorical symbols such as the Lion of Judah or Eagle of the Caesars as evidence of the antiquity of heraldry itself and to infer therefrom that the great figures of ancient history bore arms representing their noble status and descent The Book of Saint Albans compiled in 1486 declares that Christ himself was a gentleman of coat armour 14 These claims are now regarded as the fantasy of medieval heralds as there is no evidence of a distinctive symbolic language akin to that of heraldry during this early period nor do many of the shields described in antiquity bear a close resemblance to those of medieval heraldry nor is there any evidence that specific symbols or designs were passed down from one generation to the next representing a particular person or line of descent 15 The medieval heralds also devised arms for various knights and lords from history and literature Notable examples include the toads attributed to Pharamond the cross and martlets of Edward the Confessor and the various arms attributed to the Nine Worthies and the Knights of the Round Table These too are readily dismissed as fanciful inventions rather than evidence of the antiquity of heraldry Reverse of the Narmer Palette circa 3100 BC The top row depicts four men carrying standards Directly above them is a serekh containing the name of the king Narmer Fresco depicting a shield of a type common in Mycenaean Greece Vase with Greek soldiers in armor circa 550 BC A reconstruction of a shield that would have been carried by a Roman Legionary Shields from the Magister Militum Praesentalis II From the Notitia Dignitatum a medieval copy of a Late Roman register of military commands However it is likely the art on the shields are made to fit the time age and not from the original The death of King Harold from the Bayeux Tapestry The shields look heraldic but do not seem to have been personal or hereditary emblems Origins of modern heraldry Edit See also List of oldest heraldry Enamel from the tomb of Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou one of the earliest depictions of modern heraldry The development of the modern heraldic language cannot be attributed to a single individual time or place Although certain designs that are now considered heraldic were evidently in use during the eleventh century most accounts and depictions of shields up to the beginning of the twelfth century contain little or no evidence of their heraldic character For example the Bayeux Tapestry illustrating the Norman invasion of England in 1066 and probably commissioned about 1077 when the cathedral of Bayeux was rebuilt i depicts a number of shields of various shapes and designs many of which are plain while others are decorated with dragons crosses or other typically heraldic figures Yet no individual is depicted twice bearing the same arms nor are any of the descendants of the various persons depicted known to have borne devices resembling those in the tapestry 16 17 Similarly an account of the French knights at the court of the Byzantine emperor Alexius I at the beginning of the twelfth century describes their shields of polished metal devoid of heraldic design A Spanish manuscript from 1109 describes both plain and decorated shields none of which appears to have been heraldic 18 The Abbey of St Denis contained a window commemorating the knights who embarked on the Second Crusade in 1147 and was probably made soon after the event but Montfaucon s illustration of the window before it was destroyed shows no heraldic design on any of the shields 17 19 In England from the time of the Norman conquest official documents had to be sealed Beginning in the twelfth century seals assumed a distinctly heraldic character a number of seals dating from between 1135 and 1155 appear to show the adoption of heraldic devices in England France Germany Spain and Italy 20 A notable example of an early armorial seal is attached to a charter granted by Philip I Count of Flanders in 1164 Seals from the latter part of the eleventh and early twelfth centuries show no evidence of heraldic symbolism but by the end of the twelfth century seals are uniformly heraldic in nature 18 21 One of the earliest known examples of armory as it subsequently came to be practiced can be seen on the tomb of Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou who died in 1151 22 An enamel probably commissioned by Geoffrey s widow between 1155 and 1160 depicts him carrying a blue shield decorated with six golden lions rampant ii He wears a blue helmet adorned with another lion and his cloak is lined in vair A medieval chronicle states that Geoffrey was given a shield of this description when he was knighted by his father in law Henry I in 1128 but this account probably dates to about 1175 23 24 The earlier heraldic writers attributed the lions of England to William the Conqueror but the earliest evidence of the association of lions with the English crown is a seal bearing two lions passant used by the future King John during the lifetime of his father Henry II who died in 1189 25 26 Since Henry was the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet it seems reasonable to suppose that the adoption of lions as an heraldic emblem by Henry or his sons might have been inspired by Geoffrey s shield John s elder brother Richard the Lionheart who succeeded his father on the throne is believed to have been the first to have borne the arms of three lions passant guardant still the arms of England having earlier used two lions rampant combatant which arms may also have belonged to his father 27 Richard is also credited with having originated the English crest of a lion statant now statant guardant 26 28 The origins of heraldry are sometimes associated with the Crusades a series of military campaigns undertaken by Christian armies from 1096 to 1487 with the goal of reconquering Jerusalem and other former Byzantine territories captured by Muslim forces during the seventh century While there is no evidence that heraldic art originated in the course of the Crusades there is no reason to doubt that the gathering of large armies drawn from across Europe for a united cause would have encouraged the adoption of armorial bearings as a means of identifying one s commanders in the field or that it helped disseminate the principles of armory across Europe At least two distinctive features of heraldry are generally accepted as products of the crusaders the surcoat an outer garment worn over the armor to protect the wearer from the heat of the sun was often decorated with the same devices that appeared on a knight s shield It is from this garment that the phrase coat of arms is derived 29 Also the lambrequin or mantling that depends from the helmet and frames the shield in modern heraldry began as a practical covering for the helmet and the back of the neck during the Crusades serving much the same function as the surcoat Its slashed or scalloped edge today rendered as billowing flourishes is thought to have originated from hard wearing in the field or as a means of deadening a sword blow and perhaps entangling the attacker s weapon 30 Heralds and heraldic authorities Edit The spread of armorial bearings across Europe gave rise to a new occupation the herald originally a type of messenger employed by noblemen assumed the responsibility of learning and knowing the rank pedigree and heraldic devices of various knights and lords as well as the rules governing the design and description or blazoning of arms and the precedence of their bearers 31 As early as the late thirteenth century certain heralds in the employ of monarchs were given the title King of Heralds which eventually became King of Arms 31 Two pursuivants wearing tabards Windsor Castle 2006 In the earliest period arms were assumed by their bearers without any need for heraldic authority However by the middle of the fourteenth century the principle that only a single individual was entitled to bear a particular coat of arms was generally accepted and disputes over the ownership of arms seems to have led to gradual establishment of heraldic authorities to regulate their use The earliest known work of heraldic jurisprudence De Insigniis et Armis was written about 1350 by Bartolus de Saxoferrato a professor of law at the University of Padua 32 33 The most celebrated armorial dispute in English heraldry is that of Scrope v Grosvenor 1390 in which two different men claimed the right to bear azure a bend or 34 The continued proliferation of arms and the number of disputes arising from different men assuming the same arms led Henry V to issue a proclamation in 1419 forbidding all those who had not borne arms at the Battle of Agincourt from assuming arms except by inheritance or a grant from the crown 34 35 Beginning in the reign of Henry VIII of England the English Kings of Arms were commanded to make visitations in which they traveled about the country recording arms borne under proper authority and requiring those who bore arms without authority either to obtain authority for them or cease their use Arms borne improperly were to be taken down and defaced The first such visitation began in 1530 and the last was carried out in 1700 although no new commissions to carry out visitations were made after the accession of William III in 1689 34 36 There is little evidence that Scottish heralds ever went on visitations In 1484 during the reign of Richard III the various heralds employed by the crown were incorporated into England s College of Arms through which all new grants of arms would eventually be issued 37 38 The college currently consists of three Kings of Arms assisted by six Heralds and four Pursuivants or junior officers of arms all under the authority of the Earl Marshal but all of the arms granted by the college are granted by the authority of the crown 39 In Scotland Court of the Lord Lyon King of Arms oversees the heraldry and holds court sessions which are an official part of Scotland s court system Similar bodies regulate the granting of arms in other monarchies and several members of the Commonwealth of Nations but in most other countries there is no heraldic authority and no law preventing anyone from assuming whatever arms they please provided that they do not infringe upon the arms of another 38 Later uses and developments Edit Although heraldry originated from military necessity it soon found itself at home in the pageantry of the medieval tournament The opportunity for knights and lords to display their heraldic bearings in a competitive medium led to further refinements such as the development of elaborate tournament helms and further popularized the art of heraldry throughout Europe Prominent burghers and corporations including many cities and towns assumed or obtained grants of arms with only nominal military associations 40 Heraldic devices were depicted in various contexts such as religious and funerary art and in using a wide variety of media including stonework carved wood enamel stained glass and embroidery 41 As the rise of firearms rendered the mounted knight increasingly irrelevant during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and the tournament faded into history the military character of heraldry gave way to its use as a decorative art Freed from the limitations of actual shields and the need for arms to be easily distinguished in combat heraldic artists designed increasingly elaborate achievements culminating in the development of landscape heraldry incorporating realistic depictions of landscapes during the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century These fell out of fashion during the mid nineteenth century when a renewed interest in the history of armory led to the re evaluation of earlier designs and a new appreciation for the medieval origins of the art 42 43 In particular a late use of heraldic imagery has been in patriotic commemorations and nationalistic propaganda during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries 44 45 46 Since the late nineteenth century heraldry has focused on the use of varied lines of partition and little used ordinaries to produce new and unique designs 47 Heraldic achievement EditMain article Achievement heraldry Elements of an achievement Edit A heraldic achievement consists of a shield of arms the coat of arms or simply coat together with all of its accompanying elements such as a crest supporters and other heraldic embellishments The term coat of arms technically refers to the shield of arms itself but the phrase is commonly used to refer to the entire achievement The one indispensable element of a coat of arms is the shield many ancient coats of arms consist of nothing else but no achievement or armorial bearings exists without a coat of arms 48 From a very early date illustrations of arms were frequently embellished with helmets placed above the shields These in turn came to be decorated with fan shaped or sculptural crests often incorporating elements from the shield of arms as well as a wreath or torse or sometimes a coronet from which depended the lambrequin or mantling To these elements modern heraldry often adds a motto displayed on a ribbon typically below the shield The helmet is borne of right and forms no part of a grant of arms it may be assumed without authority by anyone entitled to bear arms together with mantling and whatever motto the armiger may desire The crest however together with the torse or coronet from which it arises must be granted or confirmed by the relevant heraldic authority 48 If the bearer is entitled to the ribbon collar or badge of a knightly order it may encircle or depend from the shield Some arms particularly those of the nobility are further embellished with supporters heraldic figures standing alongside or behind the shield often these stand on a compartment typically a mound of earth and grass on which other badges symbols or heraldic banners may be displayed The most elaborate achievements sometimes display the entire coat of arms beneath a pavilion an embellished tent or canopy of the type associated with the medieval tournament 48 though this is only very rarely found in English or Scots achievements Shield Edit Main article Escutcheon heraldry The primary element of a heraldic achievement is the shield or escutcheon upon which the coat of arms is depicted iii All of the other elements of an achievement are designed to decorate and complement these arms but only the shield of arms is required 49 50 51 The shape of the shield like many other details is normally left to the discretion of the heraldic artist iv and many different shapes have prevailed during different periods of heraldic design and in different parts of Europe 49 56 57 58 One shape alone is normally reserved for a specific purpose the lozenge a diamond shaped escutcheon was traditionally used to display the arms of women on the grounds that shields as implements of war were inappropriate for this purpose 49 59 60 This distinction was not always strictly adhered to and a general exception was usually made for sovereigns whose arms represented an entire nation Sometimes an oval shield or cartouche was substituted for the lozenge this shape was also widely used for the arms of clerics in French Spanish and Italian heraldry although it was never reserved for their use 49 57 In recent years the use of the cartouche for women s arms has become general in Scottish heraldry while both Scottish and Irish authorities have permitted a traditional shield under certain circumstances and in Canadian heraldry the shield is now regularly granted 61 The whole surface of the escutcheon is termed the field which may be plain consisting of a single tincture or divided into multiple sections of differing tinctures by various lines of partition and any part of the field may be seme or powdered with small charges 62 The edges and adjacent parts of the escutcheon are used to identify the placement of various heraldic charges the upper edge and the corresponding upper third of the shield are referred to as the chief the lower part is the base The sides of the shield are known as the dexter and sinister flanks although it is important to note that these terms are based on the point of view of the bearer of the shield who would be standing behind it to the observer and in all heraldic illustration the dexter is on the left side and the sinister on the right 63 64 65 The placement of various charges may also refer to a number of specific points nine in number according to some authorities but eleven according to others The three most important are fess point located in the visual center of the shield v the honour point located midway between fess point and the chief and the nombril point located midway between fess point and the base 63 64 65 The other points include dexter chief center chief and sinister chief running along the upper part of the shield from left to right above the honour point dexter flank and sinister flank on the sides approximately level with fess point and dexter base middle base and sinister base along the lower part of the shield below the nombril point 63 64 Tinctures Edit Main article Tincture heraldry Table of the tinctures and furs One of the most distinctive qualities of heraldry is the use of a limited palette of colours and patterns usually referred to as tinctures These are divided into three categories known as metals colours and furs vi 66 The metals are or and argent representing gold and silver respectively although in practice they are usually depicted as yellow and white Five colours are universally recognized gules or red sable or black azure or blue vert or green and purpure or purple and most heraldic authorities also admit two additional colours known as sanguine or murrey a dark red or mulberry colour between gules and purpure and tenne an orange or dark yellow to brown colour These last two are quite rare and are often referred to as stains from the belief that they were used to represent some dishonourable act although in fact there is no evidence that this use existed outside of fanciful heraldic writers 67 Perhaps owing to the realization that there is really no such thing as a stain in genuine heraldry as well as the desire to create new and unique designs the use of these colours for general purposes has become accepted in the twentieth and twenty first centuries vii 39 Occasionally one meets with other colours particularly in continental heraldry although they are not generally regarded among the standard heraldic colours Among these are cendree or ash colour brunatre or brown bleu celeste or bleu de ciel sky blue amaranth or columbine a bright violet red or pink colour and carnation commonly used to represent flesh in French heraldry 68 A more recent addition is the use of copper as a metal in one or two Canadian coats of arms There are two basic types of heraldic fur known as ermine and vair but over the course of centuries each has developed a number of variations Ermine represents the fur of the stoat a type of weasel in its white winter coat when it is called an ermine It consists of a white or occasionally silver field powdered with black figures known as ermine spots representing the black tip of the animal s tail Ermine was traditionally used to line the cloaks and caps of the nobility The shape of the heraldic ermine spot has varied considerably over time and nowadays is typically drawn as an arrowhead surmounted by three small dots but older forms may be employed at the artist s discretion When the field is sable and the ermine spots argent the same pattern is termed ermines when the field is or rather than argent the fur is termed erminois and when the field is sable and the ermine spots or it is termed pean 69 70 Vair represents the winter coat of the red squirrel which is blue grey on top and white underneath To form the linings of cloaks the pelts were sewn together forming an undulating bell shaped pattern with interlocking light and dark rows The heraldic fur is depicted with interlocking rows of argent and azure although the shape of the pelts usually referred to as vair bells is usually left to the artist s discretion In the modern form the bells are depicted with straight lines and sharp angles and meet only at points in the older undulating pattern now known as vair onde or vair ancien the bells of each tincture are curved and joined at the base There is no fixed rule as to whether the argent bells should be at the top or the bottom of each row At one time vair commonly came in three sizes and this distinction is sometimes encountered in continental heraldry if the field contains fewer than four rows the fur is termed gros vair or beffroi if of six or more it is menu vair or miniver 71 72 A common variation is counter vair in which alternating rows are reversed so that the bases of the vair bells of each tincture are joined to those of the same tincture in the row above or below When the rows are arranged so that the bells of each tincture form vertical columns it is termed vair in pale in continental heraldry one may encounter vair in bend which is similar to vair in pale but diagonal When alternating rows are reversed as in counter vair and then displaced by half the width of one bell it is termed vair in point or wave vair A form peculiar to German heraldry is alternate vair in which each vair bell is divided in half vertically with half argent and half azure 71 All of these variations can also be depicted in the form known as potent in which the shape of the vair bell is replaced by a T shaped figure known as a potent from its resemblance to a crutch Although it is really just a variation of vair it is frequently treated as a separate fur 73 When the same patterns are composed of tinctures other than argent and azure they are termed vaire or vairy of those tinctures rather than vair potente of other colours may also be found Usually vaire will consist of one metal and one colour but ermine or one of its variations may also be used and vaire of four tinctures usually two metals and two colours is sometimes found 74 Three additional furs are sometimes encountered in continental heraldry in French and Italian heraldry one meets with plumete or plumetty in which the field appears to be covered with feathers and papelonne in which it is decorated with scales In German heraldry one may encounter kursch or vair bellies depicted as brown and furry all of these probably originated as variations of vair 75 Considerable latitude is given to the heraldic artist in depicting the heraldic tinctures there is no fixed shade or hue to any of them viii Whenever an object is depicted as it appears in nature rather than in one or more of the heraldic tinctures it is termed proper or the colour of nature This does not seem to have been done in the earliest heraldry but examples are known from at least the seventeenth century While there can be no objection to the occasional depiction of objects in this manner the overuse of charges in their natural colours is often cited as indicative of bad heraldic practice The practice of landscape heraldry which flourished in the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth century made extensive use of non heraldic colours 76 One of the most important conventions of heraldry is the so called rule of tincture To provide for contrast and visibility metals should never be placed on metals and colours should never be placed on colours This rule does not apply to charges which cross a division of the field which is partly metal and partly colour nor strictly speaking does it prevent a field from consisting of two metals or two colours although this is unusual Furs are considered amphibious and neither metal nor colour but in practice ermine and erminois are usually treated as metals while ermines and pean are treated as colours This rule is strictly adhered to in British armory with only rare exceptions although generally observed in continental heraldry it is not adhered to quite as strictly Arms which violate this rule are sometimes known as puzzle arms of which the most famous example is the arms of the Kingdom of Jerusalem consisting of gold crosses on a silver field 77 78 Variations of the field Edit Main article Variation of the field The field of a shield or less often a charge or crest is sometimes made up of a pattern of colours or variation A pattern of horizontal barwise stripes for example is called barry while a pattern of vertical palewise stripes is called paly A pattern of diagonal stripes may be called bendy or bendy sinister depending on the direction of the stripes Other variations include chevrony gyronny and chequy Wave shaped stripes are termed undy For further variations these are sometimes combined to produce patterns of barry bendy paly bendy lozengy and fusilly Semes or patterns of repeated charges are also considered variations of the field 79 The Rule of tincture applies to all semes and variations of the field Divisions of the field Edit Main article Division of the field A shield parted per pale and per fir twig fess Coat of arms of former Finnish municipality of Varpaisjarvi The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture as can the various heraldic charges Many coats of arms consist simply of a division of the field into two contrasting tinctures These are considered divisions of a shield so the rule of tincture can be ignored For example a shield divided azure and gules would be perfectly acceptable A line of partition may be straight or it may be varied The variations of partition lines can be wavy indented embattled engrailed nebuly or made into myriad other forms see Line heraldry 80 Ordinaries Edit Main article Ordinary heraldry In the early days of heraldry very simple bold rectilinear shapes were painted on shields These could be easily recognized at a long distance and could be easily remembered They therefore served the main purpose of heraldry identification 81 As more complicated shields came into use these bold shapes were set apart in a separate class as the honourable ordinaries They act as charges and are always written first in blazon Unless otherwise specified they extend to the edges of the field Though ordinaries are not easily defined they are generally described as including the cross the fess the pale the bend the chevron the saltire and the pall 82 There is a separate class of charges called sub ordinaries which are of a geometrical shape subordinate to the ordinary According to Friar they are distinguished by their order in blazon The sub ordinaries include the inescutcheon the orle the tressure the double tressure the bordure the chief the canton the label and flaunches 83 Ordinaries may appear in parallel series in which case blazons in English give them different names such as pallets bars bendlets and chevronels French blazon makes no such distinction between these diminutives and the ordinaries when borne singly Unless otherwise specified an ordinary is drawn with straight lines but each may be indented embattled wavy engrailed or otherwise have their lines varied 84 Charges Edit Main article Charge heraldry A charge is any object or figure placed on a heraldic shield or on any other object of an armorial composition 85 Any object found in nature or technology may appear as a heraldic charge in armory Charges can be animals objects or geometric shapes Apart from the ordinaries the most frequent charges are the cross with its hundreds of variations and the lion and eagle Other common animals are stags wild boars martlets and fish Dragons bats unicorns griffins and other monsters appear as charges and as supporters Animals are found in various stereotyped positions or attitudes Quadrupeds can often be found rampant standing on the left hind foot Another frequent position is passant or walking like the lions of the coat of arms of England Eagles are almost always shown with their wings spread or displayed A pair of wings conjoined is called a vol In English heraldry the crescent mullet martlet annulet fleur de lis and rose may be added to a shield to distinguish cadet branches of a family from the senior line These cadency marks are usually shown smaller than normal charges but it still does not follow that a shield containing such a charge belongs to a cadet branch All of these charges occur frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms 86 Marshalling Edit It has been suggested that this section be merged into Division of the field Marshalling Discuss Proposed since January 2023 An extravagant example of marshalling the 719 quarterings of the Grenville Armorial at Stowe House To marshal two or more coats of arms is to combine them in one shield to express inheritance claims to property or the occupation of an office This can be done in a number of ways of which the simplest is impalement dividing the field per pale and putting one whole coat in each half Impalement replaced the earlier dimidiation combining the dexter half of one coat with the sinister half of another because dimidiation can create ambiguity between for example a bend and a chevron Dexter from Latin dextra right means to the right from the viewpoint of the bearer of the arms and sinister from Latin sinistra left means to the bearer s left The dexter side is considered the side of greatest honour see also dexter and sinister A more versatile method is quartering division of the field by both vertical and horizontal lines This practice originated in Spain Castile and Leon after the 13th century 87 As the name implies the usual number of divisions is four but the principle has been extended to very large numbers of quarters Quarters are numbered from the dexter chief the corner nearest to the right shoulder of a man standing behind the shield proceeding across the top row and then across the next row and so on When three coats are quartered the first is repeated as the fourth when only two coats are quartered the second is also repeated as the third The quarters of a personal coat of arms correspond to the ancestors from whom the bearer has inherited arms normally in the same sequence as if the pedigree were laid out with the father s father s father to as many generations as necessary on the extreme left and the mother s mother s mother on the extreme right A few lineages have accumulated hundreds of quarters though such a number is usually displayed only in documentary contexts 88 The Scottish and Spanish traditions resist allowing more than four quarters preferring to subdivide one or more grand quarters into sub quarters as needed The third common mode of marshalling is with an inescutcheon a small shield placed in front of the main shield In Britain this is most often an escutcheon of pretence indicating in the arms of a married couple that the wife is an heraldic heiress i e she inherits a coat of arms because she has no brothers In continental Europe an inescutcheon sometimes called a heart shield usually carries the ancestral arms of a monarch or noble whose domains are represented by the quarters of the main shield In German heraldry animate charges in combined coats usually turn to face the centre of the composition Dimidiation Dimidiation worse case Impalement Impalement worse case Escutcheon of pretence QuarteringHelm and crest Edit Main articles Helmet heraldry and Crest heraldry German heraldry has examples of shields with numerous crests as this arms of Saxe Altenburg featuring a total of seven crests Some thaler coins display as many as fifteen In English the word crest is commonly but erroneously used to refer to an entire heraldic achievement of armorial bearings The technical use of the heraldic term crest refers to just one component of a complete achievement The crest rests on top of a helmet which itself rests on the most important part of the achievement the shield The modern crest has grown out of the three dimensional figure placed on the top of the mounted knights helms as a further means of identification In most heraldic traditions a woman does not display a crest though this tradition is being relaxed in some heraldic jurisdictions and the stall plate of Lady Marion Fraser in the Thistle Chapel in St Giles Edinburgh shows her coat on a lozenge but with helmet crest and motto The crest is usually found on a wreath of twisted cloth and sometimes within a coronet Crest coronets are generally simpler than coronets of rank but several specialized forms exist for example in Canada descendants of the United Empire Loyalists are entitled to use a Loyalist military coronet for descendants of members of Loyalist regiments or Loyalist civil coronet for others When the helm and crest are shown they are usually accompanied by a mantling This was originally a cloth worn over the back of the helmet as partial protection against heating by sunlight Today it takes the form of a stylized cloak hanging from the helmet 89 Typically in British heraldry the outer surface of the mantling is of the principal colour in the shield and the inner surface is of the principal metal though peers in the United Kingdom use standard colourings Gules doubled Argent Red White regardless of rank or the colourings of their arms The mantling is sometimes conventionally depicted with a ragged edge as if damaged in combat though the edges of most are simply decorated at the emblazoner s discretion Clergy often refrain from displaying a helm or crest in their heraldic achievements Members of the clergy may display appropriate headwear This often takes the form of a small crowned wide brimmed hat called a galero with the colours and tassels denoting rank or in the case of Papal coats of arms until the inauguration of Pope Benedict XVI in 2005 an elaborate triple crown known as a tiara Benedict broke with tradition to substitute a mitre in his arms Orthodox and Presbyterian clergy do sometimes adopt other forms of headgear to ensign their shields In the Anglican tradition clergy members may pass crests on to their offspring but rarely display them on their own shields Mottoes Edit An armorial motto is a phrase or collection of words intended to describe the motivation or intention of the armigerous person or corporation This can form a pun on the family name as in Thomas Nevile s motto Ne vile velis Mottoes are generally changed at will and do not make up an integral part of the armorial achievement Mottoes can typically be found on a scroll under the shield In Scottish heraldry where the motto is granted as part of the blazon it is usually shown on a scroll above the crest and may not be changed at will A motto may be in any language Supporters and other insignia Edit Flags as supporters and orders in the armory of the Prince of Vergara Supporters are human or animal figures or very rarely inanimate objects usually placed on either side of a coat of arms as though supporting it In many traditions these have acquired strict guidelines for use by certain social classes On the European continent there are often fewer restrictions on the use of supporters 90 In the United Kingdom only peers of the realm a few baronets senior members of orders of knighthood and some corporate bodies are granted supporters Often these can have local significance or a historical link to the armiger If the armiger has the title of baron hereditary knight or higher he may display a coronet of rank above the shield In the United Kingdom this is shown between the shield and helmet though it is often above the crest in Continental heraldry Another addition that can be made to a coat of arms is the insignia of a baronet or of an order of knighthood This is usually represented by a collar or similar band surrounding the shield When the arms of a knight and his wife are shown in one achievement the insignia of knighthood surround the husband s arms only and the wife s arms are customarily surrounded by an ornamental garland of leaves for visual balance 91 Differencing and cadency Edit Main article Cadency Since arms pass from parents to offspring and there is frequently more than one child per couple it is necessary to distinguish the arms of siblings and extended family members from the original arms as passed on from eldest son to eldest son Over time several schemes have been used 92 Blazon Edit Main article Blazon To blazon arms means to describe them using the formal language of heraldry This language has its own vocabulary and syntax or rules governing word order which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms The verb comes from the Middle English blasoun itself a derivative of the French blason meaning shield The system of blazoning arms used in English speaking countries today was developed by heraldic officers in the Middle Ages The blazon includes a description of the arms contained within the escutcheon or shield the crest supporters where present motto and other insignia Complex rules such as the rule of tincture apply to the physical and artistic form of newly created arms and a thorough understanding of these rules is essential to the art of heraldry Though heraldic forms initially were broadly similar across Europe several national styles had developed by the end of the Middle Ages and artistic and blazoning styles today range from the very simple to extraordinarily complex National styles EditThe emergence of heraldry occurred across western Europe almost simultaneously in the various countries Originally heraldic style was very similar from country to country 93 Over time heraldic tradition diverged into four broad styles German Nordic Gallo British Latin and Eastern 94 In addition it can be argued that newer national heraldic traditions such as South African and Canadian heraldry have emerged in the 20th century 95 German Nordic heraldry Edit Main articles Czech heraldry Danish heraldry Finnish heraldry German heraldry Icelandic heraldry Liechtenstein heraldry Norwegian heraldry and Swedish heraldry The coat of arms of Mikkeli a city of South Savonia Finland has been drawn up in honour of the headquarters of the Finnish Army led by Marshal C G E Mannerheim this was stationed in the city during the Winter War the Continuation War and the Lapland War The coat of arms was originally used without the Mannerheim Cross and is the third coat of arms affixed to the city 96 Coats of arms in Germany the Nordic countries Estonia Latvia the Czech lands and northern Switzerland generally change very little over time Marks of difference are very rare in this tradition as are heraldic furs 97 One of the most striking characteristics of German Nordic heraldry is the treatment of the crest Often the same design is repeated in the shield and the crest The use of multiple crests is also common 98 The crest is rarely used separately as in British heraldry but can sometimes serve as a mark of difference between different branches of a family 99 Torse is optional 100 Heraldic courtoisie is observed that is charges in a composite shield or two shields displayed together usually turn to face the centre 101 Coats consisting only of a divided field are somewhat more frequent in Germany than elsewhere Dutch heraldry Edit Main articles Dutch heraldry South African heraldry and Belgian heraldry The Low Countries were great centres of heraldry in medieval times One of the famous armorials is the Gelre Armorial or Wapenboek written between 1370 and 1414 Coats of arms in the Netherlands were not controlled by an official heraldic system like the two in the United Kingdom nor were they used solely by noble families Any person could develop and use a coat of arms if they wished to do so provided they did not usurp someone else s arms and historically this right was enshrined in Roman Dutch law 102 As a result many merchant families had coats of arms even though they were not members of the nobility These are sometimes referred to as burgher arms and it is thought that most arms of this type were adopted while the Netherlands was a republic 1581 1806 citation needed This heraldic tradition was also exported to the erstwhile Dutch colonies 103 Dutch heraldry is characterised by its simple and rather sober style and in this sense is closer to its medieval origins than the elaborate styles which developed in other heraldic traditions 104 Gallo British heraldry Edit Main articles American heraldry Australian heraldry Belgian heraldry British heraldry Canadian heraldry Cornish heraldry Devon heraldry English heraldry French heraldry Irish heraldry New Zealand heraldry Northern Irish heraldry Scottish heraldry and Welsh heraldry The use of cadency marks to difference arms within the same family and the use of semy fields are distinctive features of Gallo British heraldry in Scotland the most significant mark of cadency being the bordure the small brisures playing a very minor role Marks of cadency are mandatory in Scotland where no two persons can own identical arms at a time It is common to see heraldic furs used 97 In the United Kingdom the style is notably still controlled by royal officers of arms 105 French heraldry experienced a period of strict rules of construction under Napoleon 106 English and Scots heraldries make greater use of supporters than other European countries 98 Furs chevrons and five pointed stars are more frequent in France and Britain than elsewhere In Britain a distinct category of burgher arms does not exist and heraldry is inherently associated with nobility Armigers and their male line legitimate descendants i e those entitled to a matriculation in Scotland with mandatory marks of cadency rather than a grant of new arms are considered to be if possessing no higher dignity members of the gentry or lower nobility Men have the rank of Gentleman in the narrow sense of the word Depending on interpretation a grant of arms made by one of Britain s two heraldic officers Garter King of Arms or Lord Lyon King of Arms to a British subject is either a grant or a confirmation of hereditary nobility and recognized as such by CILANE and the Order of Malta The majority though not all families of the hereditary Peerage and traditional Landed Gentry are armigerous non armigerous families usually having inhreited their titles and or estates in the female line and failed to apply for a grant of arms Latin heraldry Edit Main articles Brazilian heraldry Ecclesiastical heraldry Mexican heraldry Monegasque heraldry Portuguese heraldry Spanish heraldry and Vatican heraldry The heraldry of southern France Andorra Spain and Italy is characterized by a lack of crests and uniquely shaped shields Portuguese heraldry however does use crests 97 Portuguese and Spanish heraldry which together form a larger Iberian tradition of heraldry occasionally introduce words to the shield of arms a practice usually avoided in British heraldry Latin heraldry is known for extensive use of quartering because of armorial inheritance via the male and the female lines Moreover Italian heraldry is dominated by the Roman Catholic Church featuring many shields and achievements most bearing some reference to the Church 107 Trees are frequent charges in Latin arms Charged bordures including bordures inscribed with words are seen often in Spain Eastern European heraldry Edit Main articles Belarusian heraldry Croatian heraldry Hungarian heraldry Albanian heraldry Polish heraldry Romanian heraldry Russian heraldry and Serbian heraldry Coat of Arms of the Turiec county in Slovakia Eastern European heraldry is in the traditions developed in Albania Belarus Bulgaria Croatia Hungary Lithuania Poland Romania Russia Serbia Slovakia and Ukraine Eastern coats of arms are characterized by a pronounced territorial clan system often entire villages or military groups were granted the same coat of arms irrespective of family relationships In Poland nearly six hundred unrelated families are known to bear the same Jastrzebiec coat of arms Marks of cadency are almost unknown and shields are generally very simple with only one charge Many heraldic shields derive from ancient house marks At least fifteen per cent of all Hungarian personal arms bear a severed Turk s head referring to their wars against the Ottoman Empire 108 109 Quasi heraldic emblems EditTrue heraldry as now generally understood has its roots in medieval Europe However there have been other historical cultures which have used symbols and emblems to represent families or individuals and in some cases these symbols have been adopted into Western heraldry For example the coat of arms of the Ottoman Empire incorporated the royal tughra as part of its crest along with such traditional Western heraldic elements as the escutcheon and the compartment Greek symbols Edit Main article Greek heraldry Ancient Greeks were among the first civilizations to use symbols consistently in order to identify a warrior clan or a state 110 The first record of a shield blazon is illustrated in Aeschylus tragedy Seven Against Thebes Mon Edit Main article Mon emblem Mon 紋 also monshō 紋章 mondokoro 紋所 and kamon 家紋 are Japanese emblems used to decorate and identify an individual or family While mon is an encompassing term that may refer to any such device kamon and mondokoro refer specifically to emblems used to identify a family further explanation needed An authoritative mon reference compiles Japan s 241 general categories of mon based on structural resemblance a single mon may belong to multiple categories with 5116 distinct individual mon it is however well acknowledged that there exist lost or obscure mon that are not in this compilation 111 112 The devices are similar to the badges and coats of arms in European heraldic tradition which likewise are used to identify individuals and families Mon are often referred to as crests in Western literature another European heraldic device similar to the mon in function Japanese helmets kabuto also incorporated elements similar to crests called datemono which helped identify the wearer while they were concealed by armour These devices sometimes incorporated mon and some figures like Date Masamune were well known for their helmet designs Socialist emblems Edit Main article Socialist state emblems State Emblem of the Soviet Union 1956 1991 version Communist states often followed a unique style characterized by communist symbolism Although commonly called coats of arms most such devices are not actually coats of arms in the traditional heraldic sense and should therefore in a strict sense not be called arms at all 113 Many communist governments purposely diverged from the traditional forms of European heraldry in order to distance themselves from the monarchies that they usually replaced with actual coats of arms being seen as symbols of the monarchs The Soviet Union was the first state to use this type of emblem beginning at its creation in 1922 The style became more widespread after World War II when many other communist states were established Even a few non socialist states have adopted the style for various reasons usually because communists had helped them to gain independence but also when no apparent connection to a Communist nation exists such as the emblem of Italy 113 114 After the fall of the Soviet Union and the other communist states in Eastern Europe in 1989 1991 this style of heraldry was often abandoned for the old heraldic practices with many but not all of the new governments reinstating the traditional heraldry that was previously cast aside Tamgas Edit Main article Tamga A tamga or tamgha stamp seal Mongolian tamga Turkic tamga is an abstract seal or stamp used by Eurasian nomadic peoples and by cultures influenced by them The tamga was normally the emblem of a particular tribe clan or family They were common among the Eurasian nomads throughout Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages including Alans Mongols Sarmatians Scythians and Turkic peoples Similar tamga like symbols were sometimes also adopted by sedentary peoples adjacent to the Pontic Caspian steppe both in Eastern Europe and Central Asia 115 such as the East Slavs whose ancient royal symbols are sometimes referred to as tamgas and have similar appearance 116 Unlike European coats of arms tamgas were not always inherited and could stand for families or clans for example when denoting territory livestock or religious items as well as for specific individuals such as when used for weapons or for royal seals One could also adopt the tamga of one s master or ruler therefore signifying said master s patronage Outside of denoting ownership tamgas also possessed religious significance and were used as talismans to protect one from curses it was believed that as symbols of family tamgas embodied the power of one s heritage Tamgas depicted geometric shapes images of animals items or glyphs As they were usually inscribed using heavy and unwieldy instruments such as knives or brands and on different surfaces meaning that their appearance could vary somewhat tamgas were always simple and stylised and needed to be laconic and easily recognisable 117 Tughras Edit Main article Tughra Further information Coat of arms of the Ottoman Empire Every sultan of the Ottoman Empire had his own monogram called the tughra which served as a royal symbol A coat of arms in the European heraldic sense was created in the late 19th century Hampton Court requested from Ottoman Empire the coat of arms to be included in their collection As the coat of arms had not been previously used in Ottoman Empire it was designed after this request and the final design was adopted by Sultan Abdul Hamid II on April 17 1882 It included two flags the flag of the Ottoman Dynasty which had a crescent and a star on red base and the flag of the Islamic Caliph which had three crescents on a green base Modern heraldry Edit Arms created in 1977 featuring a hydrocarbon molecule Heraldry flourishes in the modern world institutions companies and private persons continue using coats of arms as their pictorial identification 118 119 120 121 In the United Kingdom and Ireland the English Kings of Arms Scotland s Lord Lyon King of Arms and the Chief Herald of Ireland continue making grants of arms 122 There are heraldic authorities in Canada 123 South Africa Spain and Sweden that grant or register coats of arms In South Africa the right to armorial bearings is also determined by Roman Dutch law due to its origins as a 17th century colony of the Netherlands 124 Heraldic societies abound in Africa Asia Australasia the Americas and Europe Heraldry aficionados participate in the Society for Creative Anachronism medieval revivals micronations and other related projects Modern armigers use heraldry to express ancestral and personal heritage as well as professional academic civic and national pride 125 Little is left of class identification in modern heraldry where the emphasis is more than ever on expression of identity 126 Heraldry continues to build on its rich tradition in academia government guilds and professional associations religious institutions and the military Nations and their subdivisions provinces states counties cities etc continue to build on the traditions of civic heraldry The Roman Catholic Church Anglican churches and other religious institutions maintain the traditions of ecclesiastical heraldry for clergy religious orders and schools Military coat of arms depicting a red locomotive Many of these institutions have begun to employ blazons representing modern objects For example some heraldic symbols issued by the United States Army Institute of Heraldry incorporate symbols such as guns airplanes or locomotives Some scientific institutions incorporate symbols of modern science such as the atom or particular scientific instruments The arms of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority uses traditional heraldic symbols to depict the harnessing of atomic power 127 Locations with strong associations to particular industries may incorporate associated symbols The coat of arms of Stenungsund Municipality in Sweden incorporates a hydrocarbon molecule alluding to the historical significance of the petrochemical industry in the region Heraldry in countries with heraldic authorities continues to be regulated generally by laws granting rights to arms and recognizing possession of arms as well as protecting against their misuse Countries without heraldic authorities usually treat coats of arms as creative property in the manner of logos offering protection under copyright laws This is the case in Nigeria where most of the components of its heraldic system are otherwise unregulated See also Edit Heraldry portalHeraldic societies an extended list including non official heraldic authorities and societies Totem pole a somewhat similar concept in North America Emblematic discipline relating to the design of emblems Sigillography scholarly discipline that studies sealsFootnotes Edit This was undertaken by Odo Bishop of Bayeux and half brother of William I whose conquest of England is commemorated by the tapestry Only four lions are visible in this depiction in which the shield is shown in profile but judging from their position there must have been six the tomb of Geoffrey s grandson William Longspee shows him bearing an apparently identical shield but on this all six lions are at least partly visible Note that the term coat of arms is sometimes used to refer to the entire achievement of which the shield is the central part There are exceptions to this rule in which the shape of the escutcheon is specified in the blazon for example the arms of Nunavut 52 and the former Republic of Bophuthatswana 53 in the United States the arms of North Dakota use an escutcheon in the shape of a stone arrowhead 54 while the arms of Connecticut require a rococo shield 55 the Scottish Public Register specifies an oval escutcheon for the Lanarkshire Master Plumbers and Domestic Engineers Association and a square shield for the Anglo Leasing organisation Because most shields are widest at the chief and narrow to a point at the base fess point is usually slightly higher than the midpoint Technically the word tincture applies specifically to the colours rather than to the metals or the furs but for lack of another term including all three it is regularly used in this extended sense For instance the arms of Lewes Old Grammar School granted October 25 2012 Murrey within an Orle of eight Crosses crosslet Argent a Lion rampant Or holding in the forepaws a Book bound Azure the spine and the edges of the pages Gold and those of Woolf granted October 2 2015 Murrey a Snow Wolf s Head erased proper on a Chief Argent a Boar s Head coped at the neck between two Fleurs de Lys Azure There are no fixed shades for heraldic colours If the official description of a coat of arms gives its tinctures as Gules red Azure blue and Argent white or silver then as long as the blue is not too light and the red not too orange purple or pink it is up to the artist to decide which particular shades they think are appropriate 39 References Edit Fox Davies 1909 p 1 Friar 1987 p 183 Webster s Third New International Dictionary C amp G Merriam Company Cambridge Massachusetts 1960 Fox Davies 1909 pp 1 57 59 a b c Fox Davies 1909 pp 1 18 John Brooke Little An Heraldic Alphabet Macdonald London 1973 p 2 Boutell 1890 p 5 Fox Davies 1909 p v Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk amp Pottinger Simple Heraldry Thomas Nelson 1953 Fox Davies 1909 pp 19 26 Numbers i 2 18 52 ii 2 34 quoted by William Sloane Sloane Evans in A Grammar of British Heraldry John Russell Smith London 1854 p ix quoted by Fox Davies 1909 pp 6 Fox Davies 1909 pp 6 10 Notitia Dignitatum Bodleian Library Eiland Murray 2003 Pre heraldry on the Sangerhausen Disc The Armiger s News 25 2 1 9 via academia edu Fox Davies 1909 p 6 Fox Davies 1909 pp 11 16 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 pp 29 31 a b Fox Davies 1909 pp 14 16 a b Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 26 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 31 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 1 Wagner 1946 p 8 Fox Davies 1909 pp 62 C A Stothard Monumental Effigies of Great Britain 1817 pl 2 illus in Wagner 1946 pl I Pastoureau 1997 p 18 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 32 a b Fox Davies 1909 pp 173 174 Pastoureau 1997 p 59 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 37 Fox Davies 1909 pp 17 18 Fox Davies 1909 pp 17 18 383 a b Fox Davies 1909 pp 27 29 De Insigniis et Armis George Squibb The Law of Arms in England in The Coat of Arms vol II no 15 Spring 1953 p 244 a b c Fox Davies 1909 pp 21 22 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 35 36 Julian Franklyn Shield and Crest An Account of the Art and Science of Heraldry MacGibbon amp Kee London 1960 p 386 Fox Davies 1909 p 38 a b Pastoureau 1997 pp 39 41 a b c College of Arms official website accessed 3 March 2016 Gwynn Jones 1998 pp 18 20 Neubecker 1976 pp 253 258 Fox Davies 1909 pp 87 88 Gwynn Jones 1998 pp 110 112 Eiland Murray 2018 Heraldry on American Patriotic Postcards The Armiger s News 41 1 1 3 via academia edu Eiland Murray 2019 Heraldry on German Patriotic Postcards The Armiger s News 41 2 1 5 via academia edu Eiland Murray 2010 Heraldry on German Notgeld The Armiger s News 23 3 1 3 12 via academia edu Gwynn Jones 1998 pp 113 121 a b c Fox Davies 1909 pp 57 59 a b c d Fox Davies 1909 pp 57 60 61 Boutell 1890 p 6 William Whitmore The Elements of Heraldry Weathervane Books New York 1968 p 9 Government of Nunavut n d About the Flag and Coat of Arms Government of Nunavut Iqaluit NU Canada Accessed October 19 2006 Available at GOV nu ca Archived 2006 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Hartemink R 1996 South African Civic Heraldry Bophuthatswana Ralf Hartemink The Netherlands Accessed October 19 2006 Available at NGW nl US Heraldic Registry US Heraldic Registry Retrieved 2012 06 19 American Heraldry Society Arms of Connecticut Americanheraldry org Archived from the original on 2012 07 22 Retrieved 2012 06 19 Boutell 1890 pp 6 7 a b Woodward amp Burnett 1892 pp 54 58 Neubecker 1976 pp 72 77 Boutell 1890 p 9 Slater 2003 p 56 Slater 2003 p 231 Fox Davies 1909 pp 89 96 98 a b c Boutell 1890 p 8 a b c Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 59 60 a b Fox Davies 1909 pp 104 105 Fox Davies 1909 p 70 Fox Davies 1909 pp 70 74 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 61 62 Fox Davies 1909 pp 74 Woodward amp Burnett 1892 p 63 Fox Davies 1909 pp 77 79 a b Fox Davies 1909 pp 79 83 Innes of Learney 1978 p 28 Fox Davies 1909 pp 84 85 Fox Davies 1909 pp 80 85 Fox Davies 1909 pp 83 85 Fox Davies 1909 pp 75 87 88 Fox Davies 1909 pp 85 87 Bruno Heim Or and Argent Gerrards Cross Buckingham 1994 Fox Davies 1909 pp 101 Stephen Friar and John Ferguson Basic Heraldry W W Norton amp Company New York 1993 148 von Volborth 1981 p 18 Friar 1987 p 259 Friar 1987 p 330 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 60 Boutell 1890 p 311 Moncreiffe Iain Pottinger Don 1953 Simple Heraldry Cheerfully Illustrated London Thomas Nelson and Sons p 20 OCLC 1119559413 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 14 Edmundas Rimsa Heraldry Past to Present Versus Aureus Vilnius 2005 38 Gwynn Jones 1998 p 124 Neubecker 1976 pp 186 Julian Franklyn Shield and Crest MacGibbon amp Kee London 1960 358 Baronage co uk Baronage co uk Retrieved 2012 06 19 Davies T R Spring 1976 Did National Heraldry Exist The Coat of Arms NS II 97 16 von Warnstedt 1970 p 128 Alan Beddoe revised by Strome Galloway Beddoe s Canadian Heraldry Mika Publishing Company Belleville 1981 Jussi Iltanen 2013 Suomen kuntavaakunat Kommunvapnen i Finland in Finnish Helsinki Karttakeskus pp 133 134 ISBN 978 952 266 092 3 a b c von Warnstedt 1970 p 129 a b Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 15 Neubecker 1976 p 158 Pinches 1994 p 82 von Volborth 1981 p 88 de Boo J A 1977 Familiewapens oud en nieuw Een inleiding tot de Familieheraldiek in Dutch The Hague Centraal Bureau voor Genealogie OCLC 63382927 McMillan Joseph Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt 26th and 32nd Presidents of the United States American Heraldry Society Cornelius Pama Heraldiek in Suid Afrika Balkema Cape Town 1956 Carl Alexander von Volborth Heraldry of the World Blandford Press Dorset 1979 192 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 p 21 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 pp 24 30 von Warnstedt 1970 pp 129 30 Woodcock amp Robinson 1988 pp 28 32 Claus Patricia 6 May 2022 Aincent Greek Shields Struck Fear Into Enemy Greek Reporter Greek Reporter Retrieved 10 March 2023 日本の家紋大全 梧桐書院 2004 ISBN 434003102X Some 6939 mon are listed here Archived 2016 10 28 at the Wayback Machine a b von Volborth 1981 p 11 von Volborth Carl Alexander 1972 Alverdens heraldik i farver in Danish Editor and translator from English to Danish Sven Tito Achen Copenhagen Politikens Forlag p 158 ISBN 87 567 1685 0 Ottfried Neubecker Heraldik Orbis 2002 Brook 154 Franklin and Shepard 120 121 Pritsak 78 79 Noonan Thomas Schaub 2006 Pre modern Russia and Its World Essays in Honor of Thomas S Noonan ISBN 9783447054256 Retrieved 2016 06 13 TAMGA k funkcii znaka V S Olhovskij Istoriko arheologicheskij almanah No 7 Armavir 2001 str 75 86 Eiland Murray 2014 Cigar box heraldry The Armiger s News 36 1 1 4 via academia edu Eiland Murray 2015 Heraldry on Crate Labels The Armiger s News 37 3 1 4 via academia edu Eiland Murray 2018 Elvis Presley s Coat of Arms The Armiger s News 41 1 6 via academia edu Eiland Murray 2012 Postcard from the Supreme Court London The Armiger s News 34 3 2 4 via academia edu See the College of Arms newsletter for quarterly samplings of English grants and the Chief Herald of Ireland s webpage Archived 2006 10 04 at the Wayback Machine for recent Irish grants See the Public Register of Arms Flags and Badges of Canada Cornelius Pama Heraldry of South African families coats of arms crests ancestry Balkema Cape Town 1972 Eiland Murray 2018 Gathering the clans in California The Armiger s News 40 1 1 6 via academia edu Slater 2003 p 238 Child Heather 1976 01 01 Heraldic Design A Handbook for Students Genealogical Publishing Com ISBN 9780806300719 Bibliography EditBoutell Charles 1890 Aveling S T ed Heraldry Ancient and Modern Including Boutell s Heraldry London Frederick Warne OCLC 6102523 via Internet Archive Burke Bernard 1967 The General Armory of England Scotland Ireland and Wales Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Dennys Rodney 1975 The Heraldic Imagination New York Clarkson N Potter Elvins Mark Turnham 1988 Cardinals and Heraldry London Buckland Publications Fairbairn James 1986 Fairbairn s Crests of the Families of Great Britain amp Ireland New York Bonanza Books Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1904 The Art of Heraldry An Encyclopedia of Armory London T C amp E C Jack via Internet Archive Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry London T C amp E C Jack LCCN 09023803 via Internet Archive Franklyn Julian 1968 Heraldry Cranbury NJ A S Barnes and Company ISBN 9780498066832 Friar Stephen ed 1987 A Dictionary of Heraldry New York Harmony Books ISBN 9780517566657 Gwynn Jones Peter 1998 The Art of Heraldry Origins Symbols and Designs London Parkgate Books ISBN 9780760710821 Hart Vaughan London s Standard Christopher Wren and the Heraldry of the Monument in RES Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics vol 73 74 Autumn 2020 pp 325 39 Humphery Smith Cecil 1973 General Armory Two London Tabard Press ISBN 9780806305837 Innes of Learney Thomas 1978 Innes of Edingight Malcolm ed Scots Heraldry 3rd ed London Johnston amp Bacon ISBN 9780717942282 Le Fevre Jean 1971 Pinches Rosemary Wood Anthony eds A European Armorial An Armorial of Knights of the Golden Fleece and 15th Century Europe London Heraldry Today ISBN 9780900455131 Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1981 Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe New York Clarkson Potter Mackenzie of Rosehaugh George 1680 Scotland s Herauldrie the Science of Herauldrie treated as a part of the Civil law and Law of Nations Edinburgh Heir of Andrew Anderson Moncreiffe Iain Pottinger Don 1953 Simple Heraldry Cheerfully Illustrated London and Edinburgh Thomas Nelson and Sons Neubecker Ottfried 1976 Heraldry Sources Symbols and Meaning Maidenhead England McGraw Hill Nisbet Alexander 1984 A system of Heraldry Edinburgh T amp A Constable Parker James 1970 A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry Newton Abbot David amp Charles Pastoureau Michel 1997 Heraldry An Introduction to a Noble Tradition Abrams Discoveries series New York Harry N Abrams Paul James Balfour 1903 An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland Edinburgh W Green amp Sons via Internet Archive Pinches J H 1994 European Nobility and Heraldry Heraldry Today ISBN 0 900455 45 4 Reid of Robertland David Wilson Vivien 1977 An Ordinary of Arms Vol Second Edinburgh Lyon Office Rietstap Johannes B 1967 Armorial General Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Siebmacher Johann J 1890 1901 Siebmacher s Grosses und Allgemeines Wappenbuch Vermehrten Auglage Nurnberg Von Bauer amp Raspe Slater Stephen 2003 The Complete Book of Heraldry New York Hermes House ISBN 9781844772247 von Volborth Carl Alexander 1981 Heraldry Customs Rules and Styles Ware Hertfordshire Omega Books ISBN 0 907853 47 1 Wagner Anthony 1946 Heraldry in England Penguin OCLC 878505764 Wagner Anthony R 1967 Heralds of England A History of the Office and College of Arms London Her Majesty s Stationery Office von Warnstedt Christopher October 1970 The Heraldic Provinces of Europe The Coat of Arms XI 84 Woodcock Thomas Robinson John Martin 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry New York Oxford University Press Woodward John Burnett George 1892 1884 Woodward s a treatise on heraldry British and foreign with English and French glossaries Edinburgh W amp A B Johnson ISBN 0 7153 4464 1 LCCN 02020303 via Internet Archive External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heraldry Look up heraldry in Wiktionary the free dictionary EuropeanHeraldry org catalogues a large number of European noble titles and heraldry Heraldry of Greatlitvan Nobility Heraldry of the World civic heraldry an overview of thousands of coats of arms of towns and countries Barron Oswald 1911 Heraldry Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed pp 311 330 International heraldry Introduction and examples Heraldisk Selskab The Scandinavian Heraldry Society one of the oldest and largest societies dedicated to heraldic research Heraldry for Kids Introducing Heraldry for Kids with free heraldry activity sheets Heraldica The history of heraldry knighthood and chivalry glossary of the blazon themes coats of arms etc Heraldic Arts Founded in 1987 the Society of Heraldic Arts was the first organisation of its kind in the world Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heraldry amp oldid 1143815651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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