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Papal coats of arms

Papal coats of arms are the personal coat of arms of popes of the Catholic Church. These have been a tradition since the Late Middle Ages, and has displayed his own, initially that of his family, and thus not unique to himself alone, but in some cases composed by him with symbols referring to his past or his aspirations.[1][2][3] This personal coat of arms coexists with that of the Holy See.

Although Boniface VIII (1294–1303), Eugene IV (1431–1447), Adrian VI (1522–1523) and a few others used no crest above their escutcheon, from John XXII (1316–1334) onward the papal tiara began to appear (a custom maintained until Nicholas V)[4] and, from the time of Nicholas V's successor, Callistus III (1455–1458), the tiara combined with the keys of Peter.[1][5]

Even before the early modern period, a man who did not have a family coat of arms would assume one upon becoming a bishop, as men did when knighted[6] or on achieving some other prominence.[7] Some who already had an episcopal coat of arms altered it on being elected to the papal throne.[1] The last pope who was elected without already being a bishop was Gregory XVI in 1831 and the last who was not even a priest when elected was Leo X in 1513.[8]

In the 16th and 17th century, heraldists also made up coats of arms for earlier popes, especially of the 11th and 12th centuries.[9] This became more restrained by the end of the 17th century.[10]

External ornaments edit

 
Arms of Innocent VIII (Giovanni Battista Cybo, 1484–1492) as shown in the contemporary Wernigerode Armorial. The coat of arms of the House of Cybo is here shown with the papal tiara and two keys argent in one of the earliest examples of these external ornaments of a papal coat of arms (Pope Nicholas V in 1447 was the first to adopt two silver keys as the charges of his adopted coat of arms).[5]

Papal coats of arms are traditionally shown with an image of the papal tiara and the keys of Peter as an external ornament of the escutcheon. The tiara is usually set above the escutcheon, while the keys are in saltire, passing behind it (formerly also en cimier, below the tiara and above the shield). In modern times, the dexter and sinister keys are usually shown in gold (or) and silver (argent), respectively. The first depiction of a tiara, still with a single coronet, in connection with papal arms, is on the tomb of Boniface VIII (d. 1303) in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran.[11] Benedict XVI in 2005 deviated from tradition in replacing the tiara with the mitre and pallium (see Coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI).

The two keys have been given the interpretation of representing the power to bind and to loose on earth (silver) and in heaven (gold), in reference to Matthew 16:18–19:

"You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."

The gold key signifies that the power reaches to heaven and the silver key that it extends to all the faithful on earth, the interlacing indicating the linking between the two aspects of the power, and the arrangement with the handles of the keys at the base symbolizes that the power is in the hands of the pope.[12]

The oldest known representation of the crossed keys beneath the papal tiara in the coat of arms of the Holy See dates from the time of Pope Martin V (1417–1431). His successor Pope Eugene IV (1431–1447) included it in the design of a silver coin.[13] Martin V also included the keys in his personal arms (those of the Colonna family); however he did not show them as external ornaments, instead placing them in chief on the shield (this example was followed by Urban V and VIII and Alexander VII; Nicolas V seems to have used just the crossed keys and the tiara in an escutcheon. The placing of the keys above the shield becomes the fashion in the early 16th century, so shown on the tomb of Pius III (d. 1503). Adrian VI (1522/3) placed the keys in saltire behind the shield.[14]

High Middle Ages edit

 
Pope Adrian IV (d. 1159, born Nicholas Breakspear, the only Englishman to occupy the papal throne) did not use a personal coat of arms; Nevertheless, he was given attributed arms (showing a broken spear) in this 17th-century portrait.

Heraldry developed out of military insignia from the time of the First Crusade.

The first papal coats of arms appeared when heraldry began to be codified in the 12th to 13th centuries. At first, the popes simply used the secular coat of arms of their family. Thus, Innocent IV (1243–1254), who was born Sinibaldo Fieschi, presumably used the Fieschi coat of arms, as did Adrian V (Ottobon de Fieschi), the nephew of Innocent IV.[citation needed] According to Michel Pastoureau, Innocent IV (1243–1254) is likely the first who displayed personal arms, but the first of whom a contemporary coat of arms survives is Boniface VIII (1294–1303).[15]

Modern sources show attributed arms of the popes of the second half of the 12th century; thus, editions of the Annuario Pontificio of the 1960s presented the arms of the popes beginning with Innocent III (1198–1216),[16] and John Woodward gave those of the popes from Lucius II (1144–1145) onward, though he noted that "it seems probably that many of the early popes made little if any use of their family arms".[3] Thus, Innocent III (Lothaire de Segni, 1160–1216) and Gregory IX (Ugolin de Segni, 1145–1241) may have used the coat of arms of the counts of Segni.[17]

The following papal coat of arms should be considered traditional, lacking contemporary attribution. For the popes of noble families, the coats of arms of the family is substituted, and for commoners, the traditional coat of arms as shown in early modern heraldic sources.

Arms Description Pope Notes
Gules a bear rampant proper.[18] Lucius II (Gherardo Caccianemici dal Orso, 1144–1145)
Argent, a crescent azure, in chief a label gules.[18] Eugene III (Bernardo Pignatelli [da Pisa], 1145–1153)
Per fess or and bendy or and vair in chief two lions rampant affrontés vert, overall a fess gules. Anastasius IV (Corrado Demetri della Suburra, 1153–1154)
(Arms unknown.) Adrian IV (Nicholas Breakspear, 1154–1159)
 
Or. Alexander III (Roland of Siena, 1159–1181) Often depicted (as in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran) as Or, diapered.
Lozengy azure and argent. Lucius III (Ubaldo Allucingoli, 1181–1185)
Quarterly gules and argent, in the centre point a sieve in profile or. Urban III (Uberto Crivelli, 1185–1187)
Gules two swords argent in saltire, the hilts in chief or, between four mullets of the last. Gregory VIII (Alberto di Morra, 1187)
Chequy argent and gules a chief of the Empire.[18][clarification needed] Gregory VIII (Paolo Scolari, 1187–1191)
 
Bendy gules and argent on a chief of the second a rose of the first, the chief soutenu by a divise or, thereon an eel naiant azure. Celestine III (Giacinto Bobone, 1191–1198) Arms of the Orsini family.
  Gules, an eagle chequy sable and or, crowned of the second.[19] Innocent III (Lotario dei Conti di Segni, 1198–1216) Arms of the Conti di Segni. The eagle's crown in the Conti arms arose in the 14th century, but is anachronistically also shown in this 13th-century pope's arms.
  Bendy gules and or; in chief a rose surmounted by a martlet and supported by two lions respectant gules. Honorius III (Cencio Savelli, 1216–1227) Arms of the Savelli family, also used by Honorius IV (Giacomo Savelli, 1285–1287). Woordward blazons the field as per fess argent and or [though this is questionable, given that it violates the tincture rule] rather than bendy gules and or and also includes over all a fess vert on the field and adds in base three bends of the last [gules].[19]
  Arms of the Conti di Segni (vide supra, Innocent III)[16]. Gregory IX (Ugolino dei Conti di Segni, 1227–1241)
  Gules a lion rampant or holding a castle triple-towered or. Celestine IV (Goffredo Castiglioni, 1241)
  Argent three bends azure (or Bendy argent and azure). Innocent IV (Sinibaldo Fieschi; 1241–1254) Also used by his nephew Adrian V (Ottobon de Fieschi, 1276)
  Arms of the Conti di Segni (vide supra, Innocent III and Gregory IX)[16] Alexander IV (Rinaldo dei Conti di Segni, 1254–1261)
  Quarterly 1 and 4 azure a fleur-de-lis or; 2 and 3 argent a rose gules. Urban IV (Jacques Pantaléon, 1261–1264) Woodward blazons with different tinctures: 1 and 4 or a fleur-de-lis azure; 2 and 3 azure a rose or.[19]
  Or an eagle displayed sable vanquishing a dragon gules.[citation needed] Clement IV (Gui Foucois, 1265–1268) His family arms are described by Woodward as Or an eagle displayed sable, on a bordure gules ten bezants (different in the lack of a dragon and the addition instead of a bordure), but the tomb of Clement IV at Viterbo has a shield charged with Or six fleurs-de-lis azure in orle; these do not appear to have been his personal arms and may instead refer to his French origin.[20]
  Per fess embattled gules and azure. Gregory X (Teobaldo Visconti, 1271–1276) Arms of the House of Visconti.
  Azure three pallets or, on each as many fleur-de-lis of the field. Innocent V (Pierre de Tarentaise, 1276-1276)
  Quarterly, 1 and 4 argent three crescents gules; 2 and 3 sable two pallets or. John XXI (Pedro Julião, 1276–1277)
  Arms of the Orsini family (vide supra, Celestine III) Nicholas III (Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, 1277–1280)
  Argent a bend vairy gules and or.[citation needed] Martin IV (Simon de Brion 1281–1285) Woodward records Martin IV's arms as Per fess gules and or, in chief a human arm, issuant from the sinister flank proper, vested and manipled ermine.[21]
  Arms of the Savelli family (vide supra, Honorius III). Honorius IV (Giacomo Savelli, 1285–1287)
  Argent a bend between two estoiles azure, on a chief of the last three fleurs-de-lis or. Nicholas IV (Girolamo Masci, 1288–1292) Sometimes the arms are emblazoned with three (rather than two) estoiles.
  Or a lion rampant azure over all a bend gules. Celestine V (Pietro Angelerio, 1294-1294) Uncertain attribution, likely posthumous or attributed. Occasionally shown with the lion rampant sinister. Not attested before the XVI century.[22][23]

Late Middle Ages and Renaissance edit

Note that some of the images of the coats of arms shown below anachronistically include the external adornments of the papal tiara and the keys of Peter. These ornaments were not in use before the 1450s.

Arms Description Pope Notes
  Or two bends wavy azure. Boniface VIII (Benedetto Gaetani, 1294–1303) The field is also seen blazoned as argent instead of or.[21] This is an early form of the Gaetani coat of arms, and the first coat of arms documented to have been used by a pope in contemporary sources (Boniface VIII is depicted with his arms by Giotto di Bondone).
  Per pale, argent and sable. Benedict XI (Nicolas Boccasini, 1303–1304) Woodward blazons Benedict XI's arms as Gules a pale embattled counter-embattled argent, a chief azure, but questions the tincture of the chief.[21] In the Gesta Pontificum Romanorum by Giovanni Palazzo (Venice 1688)[1], the arms blazoned by Woodward are described, and shown with the chief Per pale, sable and argent; only later sources depict the arms (as shown at left) as blazoned entirely as of the chief described by Palazzo.
  Or, three bars gules. Clement V (Raymond Bertrand de Got, 1305–1314)
  Quarterly 1 and 4 or a lion rampant azure, an orle of hurts, 2 and 3 barry gules and argent. John XXII (1316–1334) Woodward specifies the main charge as specifically being "between six hurts", rather than (as depicted at left) the hurts being in orle. Beginning with John XXII, popes would occasionally surmount their heraldic shield with the tiara (but they did not yet use the keys of Peter).[24]
  Gules an escutcheon argent. Benedict XII (Jacques Fornier, 1334–1342)
  Argent a bend azure between six roses in orle gules. Clement VI (Pierre Roger, 1342–1352) Also used by his nephew, Gregory XI.
  Gules a lion rampant or debruised by a bend azure, on a chief of the field, soutenu by a divise of the last, three escallops of the second. Innocent VI (Étienne Aubert, 1352–1362)
  Gules a chief dancetty or. Urban V (Guillaume de Grimoard, 1362–1370)
  Arms of the Roger de Beaufort family (vide supra, Clement VI). Gregory XI (Pierre Roger de Beaufort, 1370–1378)
  Or an eagle displayed azure. Urban VI (Bartolomeo Prignano, 1378–1389)


Popes of the Early Modern period edit

Most popes of the 16th to 18th centuries came from Italian noble families, but there were some exceptions, such as Sixtus V (1585–1590), who was of low birth.

Popes of the modern period edit

The last person elected as pope who was not already an ordained priest or monk was Leo X (Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici) in 1513. Thus, throughout the Early Modern period, the elected pope already had a coat of arms: if he did not have a family coat of arms to begin with, he would have adopted one upon being made bishop. Upon his election as pope, he would continue using his pre-existing coat of arms, in some cases with heraldic augmentations. This tradition was continued into the modern period.

Arms Description Pope Notes
  Per pale, two coats: 1. Azure, a mountain of three coupeaux in base, thereon a patriarchal cross, its arms patées or; over all the word PAX in fess fimbriated sable; 2. Per bend or and azure, on a bend argent three Moor's heads couped sable wreathed of the third; on a chief of the second three estoiles argent, 1 and 2. Pius VII (Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti, 1800–1823) It combines the coat of arms of the Benedictine order (at dexter) with that of the Chiaramonti family (at sinister).
  Azure, an eagle displayed argent; also described as[clarification needed] Azure, an eagle displayed or crowned of the same Leo XII (Annibale della Genga, 1823–1829)
  Gules, a lion rampant argent holding a castle triple-towered or. Pius VIII (Francesco Castiglione, 1829–1830) The attributed (traditional) arms of Celestine IV, canting arms for the name "Castiglione".
  Per pale two coats; 1. Azure, two doves argent drinking out of a chalice or, in chief an estoile of the second. 2. Per fess azure and argent over all on a fess gules three mullets or, in chief a hat sable. Gregory XVI (Bartolomeo Capellari, 1831–1846) Combines the arms of the Camaldoli order (at dexter) with those of the Capellari family (at sinister).
  Quarterly, 1 and 4 azure a lion rampant crowned or, its hind foot resting on a globe of the last; 2 and 3 argent two bends gules. [27] Pius IX (Giovanni Mastai-Ferretti, 1846–1878) The first and fourth quarters are the arms of the Mastai family, and the second and third quarters those of the Ferretti family.
  Azure, on a mount in base a pine tree proper; between in dexter chief a comet, or radiant star, argent, and in base two fleurs-de-lis or. Over all a fess of the third. Leo XIII (Vincenzo Pecci, 1878–1903) The rays of the comet are usually drawn in bend-sinister, the pine tree is usually drawn like a cypress.[27]
  Azure, a three tined anchor in pale above waves of the sea proper, a six pointed star or in chief, on a chief argent a lion guardant winged and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS. Pius X (Giuseppe Sarto, 1903–1914) Sarto was of humble origin, and he adopted a coat of arms when he became Bishop of Mantua, in 1884, consisting of the main field and charges. When he became Patriarch of Venice in 1893, he added the chief of Venice (the Lion of St. Mark), changing the field from gules (red) to argent (white) to make the heraldic point that this was the "religious emblem of St. Mark's Lion and not the insignia [of the former Republic of Venice]". When he was elected pope in 1903, heraldists expected him to again drop the chief of Venice, but Sarto did not change his coat of arms.[28]
  Party per bend azure and or, a church, the tower at sinister, argent, essorée gules, the tower-cross of the second, in chief or, a demi-eagle displayed issuant sable, langued gules Benedict XV (Giacomo della Chiesa, 1914–1922) The arms of the della Chiesa family with the imperial eagle added in chief.[29]
  Party per fess, in base Argent three torteaux Gules and on a chief Or an eagle displayed Sable armed Gules. Pius XI (Achille Ratti, 1922–1939)
  Azure a dove overt argent armed gules bearing an olive branch proper perched atop a trimount argent, a base wavy argent and azure soutenu by a divise vert. Pius XII (Eugenio Pacelli, 1939–1958)

When a bishop and cardinal Pacelli's arms depicted a dove displayed (i.e., with its wings spread) holding an olive branch in its beak, a reference to his surname, which means "peace". The dove was perched on a trimount and sitting below the arc of a rainbow, an allusion to the story of Noah. After his election to the papacy, the dove was changed to be depicted with folded wings, the rainbow was removed, and the trimount placed atop a green field above waves of water.

  Gules a fess argent, over all a tower between two fleurs-de-lis in chief of the same, on a chief argent a lion guardant, winged, and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS. John XXIII (Angelo Roncalli, 1958–1963) John XXIII used the Roncalli family's coat of arms with the addition of the chief of Venice for the Patriarch of Venice (1953), following Pius X.
  Gules a collee argent issuant from base beneath three fleurs-de-lis in chevron of the same. Paul VI (Giovanni Montini, 1963–1978) The collee, or stylized mountains or hillocks are a cant of Paul VI's family name, Montini, which means "little mountains".
  Azure a collee argent issuant from base beneath three mullets of five points or in chevron, points to chief, on a chief argent a lion guardant, winged, and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS. John Paul I (Albino Luciani, 1978) John Paul I's coat of arms was put together to reflect both of the names he chose to take. The chief containing St. Mark's lion reflects not only his own service as Patriarch of Venice (1969), but also that of John XXIII (and Pius X, who also used this chief in his own arms). Cardinal Luciani's original arms replaced the fleurs-de-lis above the collee in his immediate predecessor's arms with four-pointed stars; when Luciani was elevated to Pope they were modified to become five-pointed stars which are a heraldic symbol of Our Lady, specifically of the Assumption.
  Azure a cross or, the upright placed to dexter and the crossbar enhanced, in sinister base an M of the same. John Paul II (Karol Wojtyła, 1978–2005) Wojtyła adopted his coat of arms in 1958, when he was created bishop, but with the charges in black instead of gold. As this violated the heraldic "tincture's canon" (black on blue, color on color) upon Wojtyła's election as pope, Vatican heraldist Monsignor Bruno Bernard Heim suggested he replace black by gold.[30] The design shows the "Marian Cross", a cross with a capital M for Mary inscribed in one quarter, recalling "the presence of Mary beneath the cross".[31]
  Gules, chape ployé or, with the scallop shell or; the dexter chape with a moor's head proper, crowned and collared gules, the sinister chape a bear trippant (*passant) Proper, carrying a pack gules belted sable.' Benedict XVI (Joseph Ratzinger, 2005–2013) Designed by Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo in 2005. The charges, a scallop shell, Moor's head, Corbinian's bear, are taken from his previous coat of arms, used when he was Archbishop of Munich and Freising. Both the Moor's head and Corbinian's bear are charges associated with Freising in Bavaria, Germany.
  Azure on a sun in splendour or the IHS Christogram ensigned with a cross paty fitchy piercing the H gules all above three nails fanwise points to centre sable, and in dexter base a mullet of eight points and in sinister base a spikenard flower or.[32] Francis (Jorge Mario Bergoglio, 2013–) The gold star represents the Virgin Mary, the grape-like plant – the spikenard – is associated with Saint Joseph and the IHS emblem is the symbol of the Jesuits.[33][34][35]

Related coats of arms edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Coat of Arms of His Holiness Benedict XVI Vatican. Accessed 2008-03-15.
  2. ^ Christoph F. Weber, "Heraldry", in Christopher Kleinhenz, Medieval Italy (Routledge 2004 ISBN 978-0-41593930-0), vol. 1, p. 496
  3. ^ a b "Arms of the Popes from 1144–1893" in John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry (London and Edinburgh 1894), pp. 158–167
  4. ^ Collenberg, p. 692
  5. ^ a b Collenberg, p. 693]
  6. ^ David Brewster, The Edinburgh Encyclopædia (Routledge 1999 ISBN 978-0-41518026-9), vol. 1, p. 342
  7. ^ Christine de Pizan (1364 – c. 1430), The Book of Deeds of Arms and of Chivalry (English translation: Penn State Press 1999 ISBN 9780271043050, p. 216
  8. ^ Religion News Service, "Popes and conclaves: everything you need to know"
  9. ^ Pastoureau 1997, pp. 283–284
  10. ^ Ottfried Neubecker (1976). Heraldry: Sources, Symbols and Meaning. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-046308-5, p. 224
  11. ^ John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 151.
  12. ^ "The symbolism of the keys is brought out in an ingenious and interpretative fashion by heraldic art. One of the keys is of gold , the other of silver. The golden key, which points upwards on the dexter side, signifies the power that extends even to Heaven. The silver key, which must point up to the sinister side, symbolizes the power over all the faithful on earth. The two are often linked by a cordon Gules as a sign of the union of the two powers. The handles are turned downwards, for they are in the hand of the Pope, Christ's lieutenant on earth. The wards point upwards, for the power of binding and loosing engages Heaven itself." Bruno Bernhard Heim, Heraldry in the Catholic Church: Its Origin, Customs and Laws (Van Duren 1978 ISBN 9780391008731), p. 54)
  13. ^ Claudio Ceresa, "Una sintesi di simboli ispirati alla Scrittura" on L'Osservatore Romano, 10 August 2008 Archived 18 February 2013 at archive.today
  14. ^ a b John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 153f.
  15. ^ Michel Pastoureau (1997). Traité d'Héraldique (3e édition ed.). Picard. p. 49. ISBN 2-7084-0520-9.
  16. ^ a b c "Stemmi dei Sommi Pontefici dal sec. XII ad oggi" in Annuario Pontificio 1969 (Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, Vatican City 1969), pp. 23*-27*
  17. ^ So presented at heraldique-europeenne.org 2008-05-21 at the Wayback Machine and araldicavaticana.com
  18. ^ a b c John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 158
  19. ^ a b c John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 159
  20. ^ John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 159.
  21. ^ a b c John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 160.
  22. ^ Maiorano F., Mari S., Gli stemmi superstiti dell’Abbazia di S. Spirito del Morrone e l’enigma di un’insegna trecentesca, in Bullettino della Deputazione Abruzzese di Storia Patria.
  23. ^ fondazioneterradotranto (2017-09-25). "Oria. Un caso di araldica pontificia immaginaria". Fondazione Terra D'Otranto (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  24. ^ a b c "Heraldry" in: Philippe Levillain (ed.), Volume 2 of The Papacy: An Encyclopedia (Gaius-Proxies), Routledge, 2002, p. 693.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 162f.
  26. ^ araldico, Collegio (1903). "Rivista" (in Italian). Presso il Collegio araldico.
  27. ^ a b John Woodward, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry, 1894, p. 167
  28. ^ Martin, Cardinal Jacques. Heraldry in the Vatican. Gerrards Cross: Van Duren Publishers, 1987.
  29. ^ The "ghibbeline" tradition of the imperial eagle in chief here shown in the variant, "not unique in Italian heraldry", of showing only the upper half of the eagle, presumably for reasons of space, to make the eagle's feature more visible. De Chaignon la Rose (1915), pp. 1, 7.
  30. ^ (Raul Pardo, 2 April 2005, Joe McMillan, 20 April 2005). Personal Flag and Arms of John Paul II (crwflags.com)
  31. ^ Coat of Arms of Pope John Paul II (vatican.va). "The coat of arms for Pope John Paul II is intended to be a homage to the central mystery of Christianity, that of Redemption. It mainly represents a cross, whose form however does not correspond to any of the usual heraldry models. The reason for the unusual shift of the vertical part of the cross is striking, if one considers the second object included in the Coat of Arms: the large and majestic capital M, which recalls the presence of the Madonna under the Cross and Her exceptional participation in Redemption. The Pontiff's intense devotion to the Holy Virgin is manifested in this manner." L'Osservatore Romano, 9 November 1978.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-12-06.
  33. ^ . The Telegraph. 18 March 2013. Archived from the original on 21 March 2013. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  34. ^ "Lo Stemma di Papa Francesco". L'Osservatore Romano (Vatican website). Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  35. ^ "Pope stresses simplicity, ecumenism in inaugural Mass plans". National Catholic Reporter. 18 March 2013. Retrieved 18 March 2013.

References edit

  • Michael McCarthy, Armoria Pontificalium: A Roll of Papal Arms 1012–2006 (2007), ISBN 9780957794795.
  • Donald Lindsay Galbreath, A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry. Part I. Papal Heraldry (1930), revised ed. by G. Briggs, as Papal heraldry, Heraldry Today (1972).
  • P. de Chaignon la Rose, The arms of Benedict XV : an introduction to the study of papal armorials (1915), archive.org.

External links edit

  • Photographs of Roman monuments displaying coats of arms of individual popes
  • Images of papal coats of arms in Rome

papal, coats, arms, coat, arms, holy, coat, arms, holy, personal, coat, arms, popes, catholic, church, these, have, been, tradition, since, late, middle, ages, displayed, initially, that, family, thus, unique, himself, alone, some, cases, composed, with, symbo. For the coat of arms of the Holy See see Coat of arms of the Holy See Papal coats of arms are the personal coat of arms of popes of the Catholic Church These have been a tradition since the Late Middle Ages and has displayed his own initially that of his family and thus not unique to himself alone but in some cases composed by him with symbols referring to his past or his aspirations 1 2 3 This personal coat of arms coexists with that of the Holy See Although Boniface VIII 1294 1303 Eugene IV 1431 1447 Adrian VI 1522 1523 and a few others used no crest above their escutcheon from John XXII 1316 1334 onward the papal tiara began to appear a custom maintained until Nicholas V 4 and from the time of Nicholas V s successor Callistus III 1455 1458 the tiara combined with the keys of Peter 1 5 Even before the early modern period a man who did not have a family coat of arms would assume one upon becoming a bishop as men did when knighted 6 or on achieving some other prominence 7 Some who already had an episcopal coat of arms altered it on being elected to the papal throne 1 The last pope who was elected without already being a bishop was Gregory XVI in 1831 and the last who was not even a priest when elected was Leo X in 1513 8 In the 16th and 17th century heraldists also made up coats of arms for earlier popes especially of the 11th and 12th centuries 9 This became more restrained by the end of the 17th century 10 Contents 1 External ornaments 2 High Middle Ages 3 Late Middle Ages and Renaissance 4 Popes of the Early Modern period 5 Popes of the modern period 6 Related coats of arms 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksExternal ornaments edit nbsp Arms of Innocent VIII Giovanni Battista Cybo 1484 1492 as shown in the contemporary Wernigerode Armorial The coat of arms of the House of Cybo is here shown with the papal tiara and two keys argent in one of the earliest examples of these external ornaments of a papal coat of arms Pope Nicholas V in 1447 was the first to adopt two silver keys as the charges of his adopted coat of arms 5 Papal coats of arms are traditionally shown with an image of the papal tiara and the keys of Peter as an external ornament of the escutcheon The tiara is usually set above the escutcheon while the keys are in saltire passing behind it formerly also en cimier below the tiara and above the shield In modern times the dexter and sinister keys are usually shown in gold or and silver argent respectively The first depiction of a tiara still with a single coronet in connection with papal arms is on the tomb of Boniface VIII d 1303 in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran 11 Benedict XVI in 2005 deviated from tradition in replacing the tiara with the mitre and pallium see Coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI The two keys have been given the interpretation of representing the power to bind and to loose on earth silver and in heaven gold in reference to Matthew 16 18 19 You are Peter and upon this rock I will build my church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven The gold key signifies that the power reaches to heaven and the silver key that it extends to all the faithful on earth the interlacing indicating the linking between the two aspects of the power and the arrangement with the handles of the keys at the base symbolizes that the power is in the hands of the pope 12 The oldest known representation of the crossed keys beneath the papal tiara in the coat of arms of the Holy See dates from the time of Pope Martin V 1417 1431 His successor Pope Eugene IV 1431 1447 included it in the design of a silver coin 13 Martin V also included the keys in his personal arms those of the Colonna family however he did not show them as external ornaments instead placing them in chief on the shield this example was followed by Urban V and VIII and Alexander VII Nicolas V seems to have used just the crossed keys and the tiara in an escutcheon The placing of the keys above the shield becomes the fashion in the early 16th century so shown on the tomb of Pius III d 1503 Adrian VI 1522 3 placed the keys in saltire behind the shield 14 High Middle Ages edit nbsp Pope Adrian IV d 1159 born Nicholas Breakspear the only Englishman to occupy the papal throne did not use a personal coat of arms Nevertheless he was given attributed arms showing a broken spear in this 17th century portrait Heraldry developed out of military insignia from the time of the First Crusade The first papal coats of arms appeared when heraldry began to be codified in the 12th to 13th centuries At first the popes simply used the secular coat of arms of their family Thus Innocent IV 1243 1254 who was born Sinibaldo Fieschi presumably used the Fieschi coat of arms as did Adrian V Ottobon de Fieschi the nephew of Innocent IV citation needed According to Michel Pastoureau Innocent IV 1243 1254 is likely the first who displayed personal arms but the first of whom a contemporary coat of arms survives is Boniface VIII 1294 1303 15 Modern sources show attributed arms of the popes of the second half of the 12th century thus editions of the Annuario Pontificio of the 1960s presented the arms of the popes beginning with Innocent III 1198 1216 16 and John Woodward gave those of the popes from Lucius II 1144 1145 onward though he noted that it seems probably that many of the early popes made little if any use of their family arms 3 Thus Innocent III Lothaire de Segni 1160 1216 and Gregory IX Ugolin de Segni 1145 1241 may have used the coat of arms of the counts of Segni 17 The following papal coat of arms should be considered traditional lacking contemporary attribution For the popes of noble families the coats of arms of the family is substituted and for commoners the traditional coat of arms as shown in early modern heraldic sources Arms Description Pope Notes Gules a bear rampant proper 18 Lucius II Gherardo Caccianemici dal Orso 1144 1145 Argent a crescent azure in chief a label gules 18 Eugene III Bernardo Pignatelli da Pisa 1145 1153 Per fess or and bendy or and vair in chief two lions rampant affrontes vert overall a fess gules Anastasius IV Corrado Demetri della Suburra 1153 1154 Arms unknown Adrian IV Nicholas Breakspear 1154 1159 nbsp Or Alexander III Roland of Siena 1159 1181 Often depicted as in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran as Or diapered Lozengy azure and argent Lucius III Ubaldo Allucingoli 1181 1185 Quarterly gules and argent in the centre point a sieve in profile or Urban III Uberto Crivelli 1185 1187 Gules two swords argent in saltire the hilts in chief or between four mullets of the last Gregory VIII Alberto di Morra 1187 Chequy argent and gules a chief of the Empire 18 clarification needed Gregory VIII Paolo Scolari 1187 1191 nbsp Bendy gules and argent on a chief of the second a rose of the first the chief soutenu by a divise or thereon an eel naiant azure Celestine III Giacinto Bobone 1191 1198 Arms of the Orsini family nbsp Gules an eagle chequy sable and or crowned of the second 19 Innocent III Lotario dei Conti di Segni 1198 1216 Arms of the Conti di Segni The eagle s crown in the Conti arms arose in the 14th century but is anachronistically also shown in this 13th century pope s arms nbsp Bendy gules and or in chief a rose surmounted by a martlet and supported by two lions respectant gules Honorius III Cencio Savelli 1216 1227 Arms of the Savelli family also used by Honorius IV Giacomo Savelli 1285 1287 Woordward blazons the field as per fess argent and or though this is questionable given that it violates the tincture rule rather than bendy gules and or and also includes over all a fess vert on the field and adds in base three bends of the last gules 19 nbsp Arms of the Conti di Segni vide supra Innocent III 16 Gregory IX Ugolino dei Conti di Segni 1227 1241 nbsp Gules a lion rampant or holding a castle triple towered or Celestine IV Goffredo Castiglioni 1241 nbsp Argent three bends azure or Bendy argent and azure Innocent IV Sinibaldo Fieschi 1241 1254 Also used by his nephew Adrian V Ottobon de Fieschi 1276 nbsp Arms of the Conti di Segni vide supra Innocent III and Gregory IX 16 Alexander IV Rinaldo dei Conti di Segni 1254 1261 nbsp Quarterly 1 and 4 azure a fleur de lis or 2 and 3 argent a rose gules Urban IV Jacques Pantaleon 1261 1264 Woodward blazons with different tinctures 1 and 4 or a fleur de lis azure 2 and 3 azure a rose or 19 nbsp Or an eagle displayed sable vanquishing a dragon gules citation needed Clement IV Gui Foucois 1265 1268 His family arms are described by Woodward as Or an eagle displayed sable on a bordure gules ten bezants different in the lack of a dragon and the addition instead of a bordure but the tomb of Clement IV at Viterbo has a shield charged with Or six fleurs de lis azure in orle these do not appear to have been his personal arms and may instead refer to his French origin 20 nbsp Per fess embattled gules and azure Gregory X Teobaldo Visconti 1271 1276 Arms of the House of Visconti nbsp Azure three pallets or on each as many fleur de lis of the field Innocent V Pierre de Tarentaise 1276 1276 nbsp Quarterly 1 and 4 argent three crescents gules 2 and 3 sable two pallets or John XXI Pedro Juliao 1276 1277 nbsp Arms of the Orsini family vide supra Celestine III Nicholas III Giovanni Gaetano Orsini 1277 1280 nbsp Argent a bend vairy gules and or citation needed Martin IV Simon de Brion 1281 1285 Woodward records Martin IV s arms as Per fess gules and or in chief a human arm issuant from the sinister flank proper vested and manipled ermine 21 nbsp Arms of the Savelli family vide supra Honorius III Honorius IV Giacomo Savelli 1285 1287 nbsp Argent a bend between two estoiles azure on a chief of the last three fleurs de lis or Nicholas IV Girolamo Masci 1288 1292 Sometimes the arms are emblazoned with three rather than two estoiles nbsp Or a lion rampant azure over all a bend gules Celestine V Pietro Angelerio 1294 1294 Uncertain attribution likely posthumous or attributed Occasionally shown with the lion rampant sinister Not attested before the XVI century 22 23 Late Middle Ages and Renaissance editNote that some of the images of the coats of arms shown below anachronistically include the external adornments of the papal tiara and the keys of Peter These ornaments were not in use before the 1450s Arms Description Pope Notes nbsp Or two bends wavy azure Boniface VIII Benedetto Gaetani 1294 1303 The field is also seen blazoned as argent instead of or 21 This is an early form of the Gaetani coat of arms and the first coat of arms documented to have been used by a pope in contemporary sources Boniface VIII is depicted with his arms by Giotto di Bondone nbsp Per pale argent and sable Benedict XI Nicolas Boccasini 1303 1304 Woodward blazons Benedict XI s arms as Gules a pale embattled counter embattled argent a chief azure but questions the tincture of the chief 21 In the Gesta Pontificum Romanorum by Giovanni Palazzo Venice 1688 1 the arms blazoned by Woodward are described and shown with the chief Per pale sable and argent only later sources depict the arms as shown at left as blazoned entirely as of the chief described by Palazzo nbsp Or three bars gules Clement V Raymond Bertrand de Got 1305 1314 nbsp Quarterly 1 and 4 or a lion rampant azure an orle of hurts 2 and 3 barry gules and argent John XXII 1316 1334 Woodward specifies the main charge as specifically being between six hurts rather than as depicted at left the hurts being in orle Beginning with John XXII popes would occasionally surmount their heraldic shield with the tiara but they did not yet use the keys of Peter 24 nbsp Gules an escutcheon argent Benedict XII Jacques Fornier 1334 1342 nbsp Argent a bend azure between six roses in orle gules Clement VI Pierre Roger 1342 1352 Also used by his nephew Gregory XI nbsp Gules a lion rampant or debruised by a bend azure on a chief of the field soutenu by a divise of the last three escallops of the second Innocent VI Etienne Aubert 1352 1362 nbsp Gules a chief dancetty or Urban V Guillaume de Grimoard 1362 1370 nbsp Arms of the Roger de Beaufort family vide supra Clement VI Gregory XI Pierre Roger de Beaufort 1370 1378 nbsp Or an eagle displayed azure Urban VI Bartolomeo Prignano 1378 1389 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2013 nbsp Nicholas V Tommaso Parentucelli 1447 1455 was the first to use the keys of Peter as heraldic device He would remain the only pope to choose a coat of arms upon his election and not use his family arms until the 18th century Pope Pius VI Whether this choice was a demonstration of humility or due to a lack of a family coat of arms Parentucelli was the son of a physician is not known 24 need quotation to verify nbsp Coat of arms used by Callixtus III Alfons de Borja 1455 1458 Beginning with Callixtus III successor of Nicholas V who used the keys of Peter as heraldic charges popes began using the keys of Peter with the tiara placed above them as external ornaments of their coats of arms 24 nbsp Coat of arms used by Pius II Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini 1458 1464 and by Pius III 1503 born Francesco Todeschini Piccolomini Francesco Todeschini was received as a boy into the household of Aeneas Silvius who permitted him to assume the name and arms of the Piccolomini family his brother Antonio being made Duke of Amalfi during the pontificate of Pius II nbsp Coat of arms used by Paul II 1464 1471 nbsp Coat of arms used by Sixtus IV Francesco della Rovere 1471 1484 and by his nephew Julius II Giuliano della Rovere 1503 1513 nbsp Coat of arms used by Innocent VIII 1484 1492 nbsp Coat of arms used by Alexander VI 1492 1503 the second Borgia pope a coat of arms derived from that of the Borgia family with two keys saltire and a tiara nbsp Coat of arms used by Julius II 1503 1513 the second Della Rovere pope Popes of the Early Modern period editFurther information Ecclesiastical heraldry Most popes of the 16th to 18th centuries came from Italian noble families but there were some exceptions such as Sixtus V 1585 1590 who was of low birth nbsp Leo X 1513 1521 the first of the Medici popes The augmented coat of arms of the House of Medici Or five balls in orle gules in chief a larger one of the arms of France viz Azure three fleurs de lis or was granted by Louis XI in 1465 25 nbsp Adrian VI Adriaan Florenszoon Boeyens or Dedel 1522 1523 was a commoner of Utrecht The tinctures he used are doubtful The arms showed quarterly 1 and 4 three tent hooks 2 and 4 a lion rampant The hooks may be sable or vert the lion may be azure or argent 25 Adrian VI was the first pope to display his arms in the fashion which became standard with the crossed keys in saltire passing behind the shield 14 nbsp Clement VII 1523 1534 the second of the Medici popes nbsp Paul III 1534 1549 Or six fleurs de lis azure 3 2 1 25 nbsp Julius III 1550 1555 Azure on a bend gules fimbriated and between two olive sometimes laurel wreaths or three mountains each of as many summits of the last 25 nbsp Marcellus II 1555 Azure on a terrace in base vert a deer lodged argent between six wheat stalks or bulrushes in reference to Psalm 42 or 25 Marcellus family name was Cervini degli Spannocchi In Italian Cervo means deer and Spannocchi references the stalks of wheat 26 nbsp Paul IV 1555 1559 Gules three bands argent 25 nbsp Pius IV 1559 1566 the third of the Medici popes seems to have assumed the unaugmented coat of arms Or six balls in orle gules 25 Pius IV was of the Medici family of Melegnano alleged branch of the Florentine Medici s As such this Lombard Milanese branch used the unaugmented arms of Medici until later period when they assumed the arms of ducal branch with the augmentation of France nbsp Pius V 1566 1572 nbsp Gregory XIII 1572 1585 nbsp Sixtus V 1585 1590 born Felice son of Pier Gentile also known as Peretto Peretti into a poor family He later adopted Peretti as his family name in 1551 and was known as Cardinal Montalto His coat of arms was D azur au lion d or arme et lampasse de gueules tenant un rameau d or a la bande de gueules chargee en chef d une etoile d or et en pointe d un mont a trois cimes d argent clarification needed nbsp Urban VII Giovanni Battista Castagna pope for just thirteen days in 1590 nbsp Gregory XIV Niccolo Sfondrati 1590 1591 son of Francesco Sfondrati nbsp Innocent IX Giovanni Antonio Facchinetti 1591 nbsp Clement VIII Ippolito Aldobrandini 1592 1605 used the coat of arms of the Aldobrandini family of Florence nbsp Leo XI 1605 the fourth of the Medici popes nbsp Paul V Camillo Borghese 1605 1621 Paul V shows the imperial eagle of the Hohenstaufen in chief a tradition in Italian heraldry adopted by the Ghibelline faction during the War of the Guelphs and Ghibellines nbsp Gregory XV 1621 1623 nbsp Urban VIII 1623 1644 nbsp Innocent X 1644 1655 with a Guelph chief modified version of the arms of the king of Naples nbsp Alexander VII 1655 1667 nbsp Clement IX 1667 1669 nbsp Clement X 1670 1676 nbsp Innocent XI 1676 1689 nbsp Alexander VIII Pietro Vito Ottoboni 1689 1691 nbsp Innocent XII 1691 1700 nbsp Clement XI 1700 1721 nbsp Innocent XIII Michelangelo Conti 1721 1724 like Pope Innocent III 1198 1216 Pope Gregory IX 1227 1241 and Pope Alexander IV 1254 1261 was a member of the Conti di Segni using its coat of arms which since the 14th century had been mostly shown with the eagle crowned oriental or also described as in chief a ducal coronet or as the crown is shown somewhat above the eagle s head nbsp Benedict XIII 1724 1730 nbsp Clement XII 1730 1740 nbsp Benedict XIV 1740 1758 nbsp Clement XIII 1758 1769 nbsp Clement XIV 1769 1774 nbsp Pius VI 1775 1799 Popes of the modern period editThe last person elected as pope who was not already an ordained priest or monk was Leo X Giovanni di Lorenzo de Medici in 1513 Thus throughout the Early Modern period the elected pope already had a coat of arms if he did not have a family coat of arms to begin with he would have adopted one upon being made bishop Upon his election as pope he would continue using his pre existing coat of arms in some cases with heraldic augmentations This tradition was continued into the modern period Arms Description Pope Notes nbsp Per pale two coats 1 Azure a mountain of three coupeaux in base thereon a patriarchal cross its arms patees or over all the word PAX in fess fimbriated sable 2 Per bend or and azure on a bend argent three Moor s heads couped sable wreathed of the third on a chief of the second three estoiles argent 1 and 2 Pius VII Barnaba Niccolo Maria Luigi Chiaramonti 1800 1823 It combines the coat of arms of the Benedictine order at dexter with that of the Chiaramonti family at sinister nbsp Azure an eagle displayed argent also described as clarification needed Azure an eagle displayed or crowned of the same Leo XII Annibale della Genga 1823 1829 nbsp Gules a lion rampant argent holding a castle triple towered or Pius VIII Francesco Castiglione 1829 1830 The attributed traditional arms of Celestine IV canting arms for the name Castiglione nbsp Per pale two coats 1 Azure two doves argent drinking out of a chalice or in chief an estoile of the second 2 Per fess azure and argent over all on a fess gules three mullets or in chief a hat sable Gregory XVI Bartolomeo Capellari 1831 1846 Combines the arms of the Camaldoli order at dexter with those of the Capellari family at sinister nbsp Quarterly 1 and 4 azure a lion rampant crowned or its hind foot resting on a globe of the last 2 and 3 argent two bends gules 27 Pius IX Giovanni Mastai Ferretti 1846 1878 The first and fourth quarters are the arms of the Mastai family and the second and third quarters those of the Ferretti family nbsp Azure on a mount in base a pine tree proper between in dexter chief a comet or radiant star argent and in base two fleurs de lis or Over all a fess of the third Leo XIII Vincenzo Pecci 1878 1903 The rays of the comet are usually drawn in bend sinister the pine tree is usually drawn like a cypress 27 nbsp Azure a three tined anchor in pale above waves of the sea proper a six pointed star or in chief on a chief argent a lion guardant winged and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS Pius X Giuseppe Sarto 1903 1914 Sarto was of humble origin and he adopted a coat of arms when he became Bishop of Mantua in 1884 consisting of the main field and charges When he became Patriarch of Venice in 1893 he added the chief of Venice the Lion of St Mark changing the field from gules red to argent white to make the heraldic point that this was the religious emblem of St Mark s Lion and not the insignia of the former Republic of Venice When he was elected pope in 1903 heraldists expected him to again drop the chief of Venice but Sarto did not change his coat of arms 28 nbsp Party per bend azure and or a church the tower at sinister argent essoree gules the tower cross of the second in chief or a demi eagle displayed issuant sable langued gules Benedict XV Giacomo della Chiesa 1914 1922 The arms of the della Chiesa family with the imperial eagle added in chief 29 nbsp Party per fess in base Argent three torteaux Gules and on a chief Or an eagle displayed Sable armed Gules Pius XI Achille Ratti 1922 1939 nbsp Azure a dove overt argent armed gules bearing an olive branch proper perched atop a trimount argent a base wavy argent and azure soutenu by a divise vert Pius XII Eugenio Pacelli 1939 1958 When a bishop and cardinal Pacelli s arms depicted a dove displayed i e with its wings spread holding an olive branch in its beak a reference to his surname which means peace The dove was perched on a trimount and sitting below the arc of a rainbow an allusion to the story of Noah After his election to the papacy the dove was changed to be depicted with folded wings the rainbow was removed and the trimount placed atop a green field above waves of water nbsp Gules a fess argent over all a tower between two fleurs de lis in chief of the same on a chief argent a lion guardant winged and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS John XXIII Angelo Roncalli 1958 1963 John XXIII used the Roncalli family s coat of arms with the addition of the chief of Venice for the Patriarch of Venice 1953 following Pius X nbsp Gules a collee argent issuant from base beneath three fleurs de lis in chevron of the same Paul VI Giovanni Montini 1963 1978 The collee or stylized mountains or hillocks are a cant of Paul VI s family name Montini which means little mountains nbsp Azure a collee argent issuant from base beneath three mullets of five points or in chevron points to chief on a chief argent a lion guardant winged and with nimbus or fimbriated sable displaying an open book inscribed PAX TIBI MARCE EVANGELISTA MEUS John Paul I Albino Luciani 1978 John Paul I s coat of arms was put together to reflect both of the names he chose to take The chief containing St Mark s lion reflects not only his own service as Patriarch of Venice 1969 but also that of John XXIII and Pius X who also used this chief in his own arms Cardinal Luciani s original arms replaced the fleurs de lis above the collee in his immediate predecessor s arms with four pointed stars when Luciani was elevated to Pope they were modified to become five pointed stars which are a heraldic symbol of Our Lady specifically of the Assumption nbsp Azure a cross or the upright placed to dexter and the crossbar enhanced in sinister base an M of the same John Paul II Karol Wojtyla 1978 2005 Wojtyla adopted his coat of arms in 1958 when he was created bishop but with the charges in black instead of gold As this violated the heraldic tincture s canon black on blue color on color upon Wojtyla s election as pope Vatican heraldist Monsignor Bruno Bernard Heim suggested he replace black by gold 30 The design shows the Marian Cross a cross with a capital M for Mary inscribed in one quarter recalling the presence of Mary beneath the cross 31 nbsp Gules chape ploye or with the scallop shell or the dexter chape with a moor s head proper crowned and collared gules the sinister chape a bear trippant passant Proper carrying a pack gules belted sable Benedict XVI Joseph Ratzinger 2005 2013 Designed by Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo in 2005 The charges a scallop shell Moor s head Corbinian s bear are taken from his previous coat of arms used when he was Archbishop of Munich and Freising Both the Moor s head and Corbinian s bear are charges associated with Freising in Bavaria Germany nbsp Azure on a sun in splendour or the IHS Christogram ensigned with a cross paty fitchy piercing the H gules all above three nails fanwise points to centre sable and in dexter base a mullet of eight points and in sinister base a spikenard flower or 32 Francis Jorge Mario Bergoglio 2013 The gold star represents the Virgin Mary the grape like plant the spikenard is associated with Saint Joseph and the IHS emblem is the symbol of the Jesuits 33 34 35 Related coats of arms edit nbsp Coat of arms of the Vatican City nbsp Flag of Vatican City nbsp Ecclesiastical heraldryNotes edit a b c Coat of Arms of His Holiness Benedict XVI Vatican Accessed 2008 03 15 Christoph F Weber Heraldry in Christopher Kleinhenz Medieval Italy Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0 41593930 0 vol 1 p 496 a b Arms of the Popes from 1144 1893 in John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry London and Edinburgh 1894 pp 158 167 Collenberg p 692 a b Collenberg p 693 David Brewster The Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Routledge 1999 ISBN 978 0 41518026 9 vol 1 p 342 Christine de Pizan 1364 c 1430 The Book of Deeds of Arms and of Chivalry English translation Penn State Press 1999 ISBN 9780271043050 p 216 Religion News Service Popes and conclaves everything you need to know Pastoureau 1997 pp 283 284 Ottfried Neubecker 1976 Heraldry Sources Symbols and Meaning McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 046308 5 p 224 John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 151 The symbolism of the keys is brought out in an ingenious and interpretative fashion by heraldic art One of the keys is of gold the other of silver The golden key which points upwards on the dexter side signifies the power that extends even to Heaven The silver key which must point up to the sinister side symbolizes the power over all the faithful on earth The two are often linked by a cordon Gules as a sign of the union of the two powers The handles are turned downwards for they are in the hand of the Pope Christ s lieutenant on earth The wards point upwards for the power of binding and loosing engages Heaven itself Bruno Bernhard Heim Heraldry in the Catholic Church Its Origin Customs and Laws Van Duren 1978 ISBN 9780391008731 p 54 Claudio Ceresa Una sintesi di simboli ispirati alla Scrittura on L Osservatore Romano 10 August 2008 Archived 18 February 2013 at archive today a b John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 153f Michel Pastoureau 1997 Traite d Heraldique 3e edition ed Picard p 49 ISBN 2 7084 0520 9 a b c Stemmi dei Sommi Pontefici dal sec XII ad oggi in Annuario Pontificio 1969 Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana Vatican City 1969 pp 23 27 So presented at heraldique europeenne org Archived 2008 05 21 at the Wayback Machine and araldicavaticana com a b c John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 158 a b c John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 159 John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 159 a b c John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 160 Maiorano F Mari S Gli stemmi superstiti dell Abbazia di S Spirito del Morrone e l enigma di un insegna trecentesca in Bullettino della Deputazione Abruzzese di Storia Patria fondazioneterradotranto 2017 09 25 Oria Un caso di araldica pontificia immaginaria Fondazione Terra D Otranto in Italian Retrieved 2023 04 21 a b c Heraldry in Philippe Levillain ed Volume 2 of The Papacy An Encyclopedia Gaius Proxies Routledge 2002 p 693 a b c d e f g John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 162f araldico Collegio 1903 Rivista in Italian Presso il Collegio araldico a b John Woodward A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry 1894 p 167 Martin Cardinal Jacques Heraldry in the Vatican Gerrards Cross Van Duren Publishers 1987 The ghibbeline tradition of the imperial eagle in chief here shown in the variant not unique in Italian heraldry of showing only the upper half of the eagle presumably for reasons of space to make the eagle s feature more visible De Chaignon la Rose 1915 pp 1 7 Raul Pardo 2 April 2005 Joe McMillan 20 April 2005 Personal Flag and Arms of John Paul II crwflags com Coat of Arms of Pope John Paul II vatican va The coat of arms for Pope John Paul II is intended to be a homage to the central mystery of Christianity that of Redemption It mainly represents a cross whose form however does not correspond to any of the usual heraldry models The reason for the unusual shift of the vertical part of the cross is striking if one considers the second object included in the Coat of Arms the large and majestic capital M which recalls the presence of the Madonna under the Cross and Her exceptional participation in Redemption The Pontiff s intense devotion to the Holy Virgin is manifested in this manner L Osservatore Romano 9 November 1978 Wedvick of Jarlsby Religious Francis H H Pope 3 Archived from the original on 2013 12 06 Vatican releases Pope Francis coat of arms motto and ring The Telegraph 18 March 2013 Archived from the original on 21 March 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2013 Lo Stemma di Papa Francesco L Osservatore Romano Vatican website Retrieved 18 March 2012 Pope stresses simplicity ecumenism in inaugural Mass plans National Catholic Reporter 18 March 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2013 References editMichael McCarthy Armoria Pontificalium A Roll of Papal Arms 1012 2006 2007 ISBN 9780957794795 Donald Lindsay Galbreath A Treatise on Ecclesiastical Heraldry Part I Papal Heraldry 1930 revised ed by G Briggs as Papal heraldry Heraldry Today 1972 P de Chaignon la Rose The arms of Benedict XV an introduction to the study of papal armorials 1915 archive org External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Papal coats of arms Photographs of Roman monuments displaying coats of arms of individual popes Images of papal coats of arms in Rome Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Papal coats of arms amp oldid 1218931917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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