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Seal (emblem)

A seal is a device for making an impression in wax, clay, paper, or some other medium, including an embossment on paper, and is also the impression thus made. The original purpose was to authenticate a document, or to prevent interference with a package or envelope by applying a seal which had to be broken to open the container (hence the modern English verb "to seal", which implies secure closing without an actual wax seal).

Town seal (matrix) of Náchod (now in the Czech Republic) from 1570
Present-day impression of a Late Bronze Age seal

The seal-making device is also referred to as the seal matrix or die; the imprint it creates as the seal impression (or, more rarely, the sealing).[1] If the impression is made purely as a relief resulting from the greater pressure on the paper where the high parts of the matrix touch, the seal is known as a dry seal; in other cases ink or another liquid or liquefied medium is used, in another color than the paper.

In most traditional forms of dry seal the design on the seal matrix is in intaglio (cut below the flat surface) and therefore the design on the impressions made is in relief (raised above the surface). The design on the impression will reverse (be a mirror-image of) that of the matrix, which is especially important when script is included in the design, as it very often is. This will not be the case if paper is embossed from behind, where the matrix and impression read the same way, and both matrix and impression are in relief. However engraved gems were often carved in relief, called cameo in this context, giving a "counter-relief" or intaglio impression when used as seals. The process is essentially that of a mould.

Most seals have always given a single impression on an essentially flat surface, but in medieval Europe two-sided seals with two matrices were often used by institutions or rulers (such as towns, bishops and kings) to make two-sided or fully three-dimensional impressions in wax, with a "tag", a piece of ribbon or strip of parchment, running through them. These "pendent" seal impressions dangled below the documents they authenticated, to which the attachment tag was sewn or otherwise attached (single-sided seals were treated in the same way).

Some jurisdictions consider rubber stamps[2] or specified signature-accompanying words such as "seal" or "L.S." (abbreviation of locus sigilli, "place of the seal") to be the legal equivalent of, i.e., an equally effective substitute for, a seal.[3]

In the United States, the word "seal" is sometimes assigned to a facsimile of the seal design (in monochrome or color), which may be used in a variety of contexts including architectural settings, on flags, or on official letterheads. Thus, for example, the Great Seal of the United States, among other uses, appears on the reverse of the one-dollar bill; and several of the seals of the U.S. states appear on their respective state flags. In Europe, although coats of arms and heraldic badges may well feature in such contexts as well as on seals, the seal design in its entirety rarely appears as a graphical emblem and is used mainly as originally intended: as an impression on documents.

The study of seals is known as sigillography or sphragistics.

Ancient Near East edit

 
Mesopotamian limestone cylinder seal and the impression made by it—worship of Shamash

Seals were used in the earliest civilizations and are of considerable importance in archaeology and art history. In ancient Mesopotamia carved or engraved cylinder seals in stone or other materials were used. These could be rolled along to create an impression on clay (which could be repeated indefinitely), and used as labels on consignments of trade goods, or for other purposes. They are normally hollow and it is presumed that they were worn on a string or chain round the neck. Many have only images, often very finely carved, with no writing, while others have both. From ancient Egypt seals in the form of § Signet rings, including some with the names of kings, have been found; these tend to show only names in hieroglyphics.

Recently[citation needed], seals have come to light in South Arabia datable to the Himyarite age. One example shows a name written in Aramaic (Yitsḥaq bar Ḥanina) engraved in reverse so as to read correctly in the impression.

Ancient Greece and Rome edit

From the beginning of the 3rd millennium BC until the Middle Ages, seals of various kinds were in production in the Aegean islands and mainland Greece. In the Early Minoan age these were formed of soft stone and ivory and show particular characteristic forms. By the Middle Minoan age a new set for seal forms, motifs and materials appear. Hard stone requires new rotary carving techniques. The Late Bronze Age is the time par excellence of the lens-shaped seal and the seal ring, which continued into the Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods, in the form of pictorial engraved gems. These were a major luxury art form and became keenly collected, with King Mithridates VI of Pontus the first major collector according to Pliny the Elder. His collection fell as booty to Pompey the Great, who deposited it in a temple in Rome. Engraved gems continued to be produced and collected until the 19th century. Pliny also explained the significance of the signet ring, and how over time this ring was worn on the little finger.[4][failed verification]

East Asia edit

 
Front
 
Inscription
Joseon-era Korean royal seal with knob in the form of a turtle, late 16th-17th century, cast bronze with gilding, 6.98 x 15.24 x 15.24 cm, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (US)
 
徐永裕印; Xú Yǒngyù yìn, rotating character seal of Xú Yǒngyù
 
A demonstration of the use of a standardized seal (Chinese: 公章) (red colour) for organizations in China

Known as yinzhang (Chinese: 印章) in Greater China, injang in Korea, inshō in Japan, ấn triện (or ấn chương) in Vietnam, seals have been used in East Asia as a form of written identification since the Qin dynasty (221 BC–). The seals of the Han dynasty were impressed in a soft clay, but from the Tang dynasty a red ink made from cinnabar was normally used.[5] Even in modern times, seals, often known as "chops" in local colloquial English, are still commonly used instead of handwritten signatures to authenticate official documents or financial transactions. Both individuals and organizations have official seals, and they often have multiple seals in different sizes and styles for different situations. East Asian seals usually bear the names of the people or organizations represented, but they can also bear poems or personal mottoes. Sometimes both types of seals, or large seals that bear both names and mottoes, are used to authenticate official documents. Seals are so important in East Asia that foreigners who frequently conduct business there also commission the engraving of personal seals.

East Asian seals are carved from a variety of hard materials, including wood, soapstone, sea glass and jade. East Asian seals are traditionally used with a red oil-based paste consisting of finely ground cinnabar, which contrasts with the black ink traditionally used for the ink brush. Red chemical inks are more commonly used in modern times for sealing documents. Seal engraving is considered a form of calligraphy in East Asia. Like ink-brush calligraphy, there are several styles of engraving. Some engraving styles emulate calligraphy styles, but many styles are so highly stylized that the characters represented on the seal are difficult for untrained readers to identify. Seal engravers are considered artists, and, in the past, several famous calligraphers also became famous as engravers. Some seals, carved by famous engravers, or owned by famous artists or political leaders, have become valuable as historical works of art.

Because seals are commissioned by individuals and carved by artists, every seal is unique, and engravers often personalize the seals that they create. The materials of seals and the styles of the engraving are typically matched to the personalities of the owners. Seals can be traditional or modern, or conservative or expressive. Seals are sometimes carved with the owners' zodiac animals on the tops of the seals. Seals are also sometimes carved with images or calligraphy on the sides.

Although it is a utilitarian instrument of daily business in East Asia, westerners and other non-Asians seldom see Asian seals except on Asian paintings and calligraphic art. All traditional paintings in China, Japan, Korea, and the rest of East Asia are watercolor paintings on silk, paper, or some other surface to which the red ink from seals can adhere. East Asian paintings often bear multiple seals, including one or two seals from the artist, and the seals from the owners of the paintings.

East Asian seals are the predecessors to block printing.

Western tradition edit

 
Equestrian seal of Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester and Hertford, c. 1218–1230

There is a direct line of descent from the seals used in the ancient world, to those used in medieval and post-medieval Europe, and so to those used in legal contexts in the western world to the present day. Seals were historically most often impressed in sealing wax (often simply described as "wax"): in the Middle Ages, this generally comprised a compound of about two-thirds beeswax to one-third of some kind of resin, but in the post-medieval period the resin (and other ingredients) came to dominate.[6] During the early Middle Ages seals of lead, or more properly "bullae" (from the Latin), were in common use both in East and West, but with the notable exception of documents ("bulls") issued by the Papal Chancery these leaden authentications fell out of favour in western Christendom.[7] Byzantine Emperors sometimes issued documents with gold seals, known as Golden Bulls.

 
During the early Byzantine period these rings were used for sealing personal documents and validating wills and testaments. 6th century, silver.[8] The Walters Art Museum.

Wax seals were being used on a fairly regular basis by most western royal chanceries by about the end of the 10th century. In England, few wax seals have survived of earlier date than the Norman Conquest,[7] although some earlier matrices are known, recovered from archaeological contexts: the earliest is a gold double-sided matrix found near Postwick, Norfolk, and dated to the late 7th century; the next oldest is a mid-9th-century matrix of a Bishop Ethilwald (probably Æthelwold, Bishop of East Anglia).[9] The practice of sealing in wax gradually moved down the social hierarchy from monarchs and bishops to great magnates, to petty knights by the end of the 12th century, and to ordinary freemen by the middle of the 13th century.[10] They also came to be used by a variety of corporate bodies, including cathedral chapters, municipalities, monasteries etc., to validate the acts executed in their name.[7]

 
The wax seal of Tampere from 1839

Traditional wax seals continue to be used on certain high-status and ceremonial documents, but in the 20th century they were gradually superseded in many other contexts by inked or dry embossed seals and by rubber stamps.

While many instruments formerly required seals for validity (e.g. deeds or covenants) it is now unusual in most countries in the west for private citizens to use seals. In Central and Eastern Europe, however, as in East Asia, a signature alone is considered insufficient to authenticate a document of any kind in business, and all managers, as well as many book-keepers and other employees, have personal seals[citation needed], normally just containing text, with their name and their position. These are applied to all letters, invoices issued, and similar documents. In Europe these are today plastic self-inking stamps.

Notaries also still use seals on a daily basis. At least in Britain, each registered notary has an individual personal seal, registered with the authorities, which includes his or her name and a pictorial emblem, often an animal—the same combination found in many seals from ancient Greece.

Practices edit

 
Pendent seals on the Swiss Federal Charter of 1291

Seals are used primarily to authenticate documents, specifically those which carry some legal import. There are two main ways in which a seal may be attached to a document. It may be applied directly to the face of the paper or parchment (an applied seal); or it may hang loose from it (a pendent seal). A pendent seal may be attached to cords or ribbons (sometimes in the owner's livery colors), or to the two ends of a strip (or tag) of parchment, threaded through holes or slots cut in the lower edge of the document: the document is often folded double at this point (a plica) to provide extra strength. Alternatively, the seal may be attached to a narrow strip of the material of the document (again, in this case, usually parchment), sliced and folded down, as a tail or tongue, but not detached.[11][12] The object in all cases is to help ensure authenticity by maintaining the integrity of the relationship between document and seal, and to prevent the seal's reuse. If a forger tries to remove an applied seal from its document, it will almost certainly break. A pendent seal is easily detached by cutting the cords or strips of parchment, but the forger would then have great difficulty in attaching it to another document (not least because the cords or parchment are normally knotted inside the seal), and would again almost certainly break it.

In the Middle Ages, the majority of seals were pendent. They were attached both to legal instruments and to letters patent (i.e. open letters) conferring rights or privileges, which were intended to be available for all to view. In the case of important transactions or agreements, the seals of all parties to the arrangement as well as of witnesses might be attached to the document, and so once executed it would carry several seals. Most governments still attach pendent seals to letters patent.

 
Hand-folded letter sealed with wax and stamped with capital letter "A". If a letter is folded and sealed correctly, a wax seal can eliminate the need for an envelope as demonstrated in the above picture.

Applied seals, by contrast, were originally used to seal a document closed: that is to say, the document would be folded and the seal applied in such a way that the item could not be opened without the seal being broken.[13] Applied seals were used on letters close (letters intended only for the recipient) and parcels to indicate whether or not the item had been opened or tampered with since it had left the sender, as well as providing evidence that the item was actually from the sender and not a forgery. In the post-medieval period, seals came to be commonly used in this way for private letters. A letter writer would fold the completed letter, pour wax over the joint formed by the top of the page, and then impress a ring or other seal matrix. Governments sometimes sent letters to citizens under the governmental seal for their eyes only, known as letters secret. Wax seals might also be used with letterlocking techniques to ensure that only the intended recipient would read the message.[14] In general, seals are no longer used in these ways except for ceremonial purposes. However, applied seals also came to be used on legal instruments applied directly to the face of the document, so that there was no need to break them, and this use continues.

Designs edit

 
Two-sided pendent seals from Inchaffray Abbey in Scotland, late 13th century, now in the British Museum.[15]
 
The Great Seal of the State of Montana (US)

Historically, the majority of seals were circular in design, although ovals, triangles, shield-shapes and other patterns are also known. The design generally comprised a graphic emblem (sometimes, but not always, incorporating heraldic devices), surrounded by a text (the legend) running around the perimeter. The legend most often consisted merely of the words "The seal of [the name of the owner]", either in Latin or in the local vernacular language: the Latin word Sigillum was frequently abbreviated to a simple S:. Occasionally, the legend took the form of a motto.

In the Middle Ages it became customary for the seals of women and of ecclesiastics to be given a vesica (pointed oval) shape. The central emblem was often a standing figure of the owner, or (in the case of ecclesiastical seals) of a saint. Medieval townspeople used a wide variety of different emblems but some had seals that included an image relating to their work.[16]

Sealing wax was naturally yellowish or pale brownish in tone, but could also be artificially colored red or green (with many intermediary variations). In some medieval royal chanceries, different colours of wax were customarily used for different functions or departments of state, or to distinguish grants and decrees made in perpetuity from more ephemeral documents.[17][18]

The matrices for pendent seals were sometimes accompanied by a smaller counter-seal, which would be used to impress a small emblem on the reverse of the impression. In some cases the seal and counter-seal would be kept by two different individuals, in order to provide an element of double-checking to the process of authentication. Sometimes, a large official seal, which might be in the custody of chancery officials, would need to be counter-sealed by the individual in whose name it had been applied (the monarch, or the mayor of a town): such a counter-seal might be carried on the person (perhaps secured by a chain or cord), or later, take the form of a signet ring, and so would be necessarily smaller.[19] Other pendent seals were double-sided, with elaborate and equally-sized obverses and reverses. The impression would be formed by pressing a "sandwich" of matrices and wax firmly together by means of rollers or, later, a lever-press or a screw press.[20][21] Certain medieval seals were more complex still, involving two levels of impression on each side of the wax which would be used to create a scene of three-dimensional depth.[22][23]

On the death of a seal-holder, as a sign of continuity, a son and heir might commission a new seal employing the same symbols and design-elements as those used by his father. It is likely that this practice was a factor in the emergence of hereditary heraldry in western Europe in the 12th century.[24][25]

 
Vesica/Mandorla-shaped seal of the cathedral chapter of Moulins (France)

Ecclesiasticism edit

Ecclesiastical seals are frequently mandorla-shaped, as in the shape of an almond, also known as vesica-shaped. The use of a seal by men of wealth and position was common before the Christian era, but high functionaries of the Church adopted the habit.

 
A series of crosses from the sigillum cereum of Beatrice of Bar's grant to San Zeno, Verona (1073)

An incidental allusion in one of St. Augustine's letters (217 to Victorinus) indicates that he used a seal.[7] The practice spread, and it seems to be taken for granted by King Clovis I at the very beginning of the Merovingian dynasty.[26][7]

Later ecclesiastical synods require that letters under the bishop's seal should be given to priests when for some reason they lawfully quit their own proper diocese. Such a ruling was enacted at Chalon-sur-Saône in 813. Pope Nicholas I in the same century complained that the bishops of Dôle and Reims had, "contra morem" (contrary to custom), sent their letters to him unsealed.[27][7] The custom of bishops possessing seals may from this date be assumed to have been pretty general.[7]

In the British Museum collection the earliest bishop's seals preserved are those of William de St-Calais, Bishop of Durham (1081–96) and of St. Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury (1093–1109).[7]

Architects, surveyors and professional engineers edit

Seals are also affixed on architectural or engineering construction documents, or land survey drawings, to certify the identity of the licensed professional who supervised the development.[28][29][30] Depending on the authority having jurisdiction for the project, these seals may be embossed and signed, stamped and signed, or in certain situations a computer generated facsimile of the original seal validated by a digital certificate owned by the professional may be attached to a security protected computer file.[31] The identities on the professional seals determine legal responsibility for any errors or omissions, and in some cases financial responsibility for their correction as well as the territory of their responsibility, e.g.: "State of Minnesota".[32]

In some jurisdictions, especially in Canada, it is a legal requirement for a professional engineer to seal documents in accordance with the Engineering Profession Act and Regulations. Professional engineers may also be legally entitled to seal any document they prepare. The seal identifies work performed by, or under the direct supervision of, a licensed professional engineer, and assures the document's recipient that the work meets the standards expected of experienced professionals who take personal responsibility for their judgments and decisions.

 
Professional engineer's seal (in fact a rubber stamp) in the Province of Saskatchewan, Canada

Custom houses edit

In old English law, a cocket was a custom house seal; or a certified document given to a shipper as a warrant that his goods have been duly entered and have paid duty.[33][34] Hence, in Scotland, there was an officer called the clerk of the cocket. It may have given its name to cocket bread, which was perhaps stamped as though with a seal.

Destruction edit

The importance of the seal as a means of authentication necessitated that when authority passed into new hands the old seal should be destroyed and a new one made. When the pope dies it is the first duty of the Cardinal Camerlengo to obtain possession of the Ring of the Fisherman, the papal signet, and to see that it is broken up. A similar practice prevailed in the Middle Ages and it is often alluded to by historians, as it seems to have been a matter of some ceremony.[7] For example, on the death of Robert of Holy Island, Bishop of Durham, in 1283, the chronicler Robert Greystones reports: "After his burial, his seal was publicly broken up in the presence of all by Master Robert Avenel."[35] Matthew Paris gives a similar description of the breaking of the seal of William of Trumpington, Abbot of St Albans, in 1235.[7]

The practice is less widely attested in the case of medieval laypeople, but certainly occurred on occasion, particularly in the 13th and 14th centuries.[36][37] Silver seal matrices have been found in the graves of some of the 12th-century queens of France. These were probably deliberately buried as a means of cancelling them.[38][39]

When King James II of England was dethroned in the Glorious Revolution of 1688/9, he is supposed to have thrown the Great Seal of the Realm into the River Thames before his flight to France in order to ensure that the machinery of government would cease to function. It is unclear how much truth there is to this story, but certainly the seal was recovered: James's successors, William III and Mary used the same Great Seal matrix, fairly crudely adapted – possibly quite deliberately, in order to demonstrate the continuity of government.[40]

Signet rings edit

 
Armigerous signet ring bearing the arms of the Baronnet family; goldsmith: Jean-Pierre Gautheron, Paris
 
Golden ring, with cartouche and hieroglyphic name of Tutankhamun: 'Perfect God, Lord of the Two Lands' ('Ntr-Nfr, Neb-taui'; right to left columns)—Musée du Louvre.

A signet ring is a ring bearing on its flat top surface the equivalent of a seal. A typical signet ring has a design, often a family or personal crest, created in intaglio so that it will leave a raised (relief) impression of the design when the ring is pressed onto liquid sealing wax. The design is often made out of agate, carnelian, or sardonyx which tend not to bind with the wax. Most smaller classical engraved gems were probably originally worn as signet rings, or as seals on a necklace.

The wearing of signet rings (from Latin "signum" meaning "sign" or "mark") dates back to ancient Egypt: the seal of a pharaoh is mentioned in the Book of Genesis. Genesis 41:42: "Removing his signet ring from his hand, Pharaoh put it on Joseph's hand; he arrayed him in garments of fine linen, and put a gold chain around his neck."

Because it is used to attest to the authority of its bearer, the ring has also been seen as a symbol of power, which is why it is included in the regalia of certain monarchies. After the death of a Pope, the destruction of his signet ring is a prescribed act clearing the way for the sede vacante and subsequent election of a new Pope.[41]

Signet rings are also used as a souvenir or membership attribute, e.g., class rings (which typically bear the coat of arms or crest of the school). One may also have their initials engraved as a sign of their personal stature.[citation needed]

The less noble classes began wearing and using signet rings as early as the 13th century. In the 17th century, signet rings fell out of favor in the upper levels of society, replaced by other means for mounting and carrying the signet. In the 18th century, though, signet rings again became popular, and by the 19th century, men of all classes wore them.[42]

Since at least the 16th century there have also been pseudo-signet rings where the engraving is not reversed (mirror image), as it should be if the impression is to read correctly.[43]

Rings have been used since antiquity as spy identification and in espionage. During World War II, US Air Force personnel would privately purchase signet rings with a hidden compartment that would hold a small compass or hidden message. MI9 purchased a number of signet rings from Regent Street jewelers that were used to conceal compasses.[44]

Modern tamper-proofing edit

In modern use, seals are used to tamper-proof equipment. For example, to prevent gas and electricity meters from being interfered with to show lower chargeable readings, they may be sealed with a lead or plastic seal with a government marking, typically fixed to a wire that passes through part of the meter housing. The meter cannot be opened without cutting the wire or damaging the seal.[45][46]

Specially-made tamper-evident labels are available which are destroyed if the protected container or equipment is opened, functionally equivalent to a wax seal.[47] They are used to protect things which must not be tampered with such as pharmaceuticals, equipment whose opening voids a manufacturer's warranty, etc.

Figurative uses edit

 
Representation of a seal of approval.

Approval edit

The expression "seal of approval" refers to a formal approval, regardless whether it involves a seal or other external marking, by an authoritative person or institute.

It is also part of the formal name of certain quality marks, such as:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ New 2010, p. 7.
  2. ^ Notary Public Handbook. (2020). California Secretary of State, Notary Public Section. p. 7.
  3. ^ Vermont Statutes Title 1 § 134. Vermont Legislature. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  4. ^ Harris Rackham (1938). "Pliny The Elder, Natural History". Loeb Classical Library.
  5. ^ Thomas Carter (1925). The invention of printing in China. Columbia University Press.
  6. ^ Jenkinson 1968, p. 12.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbert Thurston (1913). "Seal". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  8. ^ "Signet Ring". The Walters Art Museum.
  9. ^ New 2010, p. 3.
  10. ^ Jenkinson 1968, pp. 6-7.
  11. ^ Jenkinson 1968, pp. 14–18.
  12. ^ New 2010, pp. 19–23.
  13. ^ Jenkinson 1968, pp. 18–19.
  14. ^ Cain, Abigal (9 November 2018). "Before Envelopes, People Protected Messages With Letterlocking". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  15. ^ "British Museum Collection".
  16. ^ McEwan 2016, no.764.
  17. ^ Jenkinson 1968, p. 13.
  18. ^ New 2010, p. 41.
  19. ^ John A. McEwan, "Does size matter? Seals in England and Wales, ca. 1200–1500", in Whatley 2019, pp. 103–26 (116–18).
  20. ^ Jenkinson 1968, pp. 8–10.
  21. ^ New 2010, p. 13.
  22. ^ John Cherry, "Medieval and post-medieval seals", in Collon 1997, pp. 130–131.
  23. ^ Markus Späth, "Memorialising the glorious past: thirteenth-century seals from English cathedral priories and their artistic contexts", in Schofield 2015, p. 166.
  24. ^ Wagner, Anthony (1956). Heralds and Heraldry in the Middle Ages (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 13–15.
  25. ^ Brooke-Little, John (1973). Boutell's Heraldry. London: Frederick Warne. pp. 6–7. ISBN 0-7232-1708-4.
  26. ^ Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Leg., II, 2.
  27. ^ Philipp Jaffé, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum, nos. 2789, 2806, 2823.
  28. ^ "What is a PE" National Society of Professional Engineers (US).
  29. ^ "How Building Officials Interact With Registered Architects And Engineers" National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (US).
  30. ^ GSA P100 Facilities Standards for the Public Buildings Service. Appendix A: "Submission Requirements" 2009-09-29 at the Wayback Machine U.S. General Services Administration.
  31. ^ "Rule and Regulation Change Allowing the Construction and use of Computerized Seals" 2009-10-11 at the Wayback Machine Kansas State Board of Technical Professions. Typical sample of requirements for a professional seal in the United States.
  32. ^ FAR 36.609 2010-12-01 at the Wayback Machine U.S. Federal Acquisition Regulations, Subpart 36.6 Architect-Engineer Services, Article 36.609 Contract Clauses.
  33. ^ Cocket, History of Science and Technology. p.243
  34. ^ "Cocket". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2nd ed. 1989.
  35. ^ Raine, James, ed. (1839). Historia Dunelmensis Scriptores Tres. Surtees Society. Vol. 9. London. p. 63.
  36. ^ Cherry 1992.
  37. ^ Paul Brand, "Seals and the law in the thirteenth century", in Schofield 2015, pp. 111–19 (at p. 115).
  38. ^ Cherry, "Medieval and post-medieval seals", in Collon 1997, p. 134.
  39. ^ Dąbrowska, Elżbieta (2011). "Les sceaux et les matrices de sceaux trouvés dans le tombes médiévales". In Gil, Marc; Chassel, Jean-Luc (eds.). Pourquois les sceaux? La sigillographie, nouvel enjeu de l'histoire de l'art. Lille: Centre de Gestion de l'Édition Scientifique. pp. 31–43.
  40. ^ Jenkinson, Hilary (1943). "What happened to the Great Seal of James II?". Antiquaries Journal. 23 (1–2): 1–13. doi:10.1017/s0003581500042189. S2CID 162188010.
  41. ^ "What Is A Signet Ring And Why Wear One?". He Spoke Style. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  42. ^ . Rebus Signet Rings. 2017-06-20. Archived from the original on 2019-04-01. Retrieved 2018-09-16.
  43. ^ Taylor, Gerald; Scarisbrick, Diana (1978). Finger Rings From Ancient Egypt to the Present Day. Ashmolean Museum. p. 71. ISBN 0-900090-54-5.
  44. ^ Froom, Phil. Evasion and Escape Devices: Produced by MI9, MIS-X and SOE in World War II. 2015. Pages 296-297.
  45. ^ "Gas meter stamping". UK Government. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  46. ^ "Publication of specifications related to physical sealing of electricity and gas meters". Measurement Canada. 18 August 2008.
  47. ^ Corbin, Tony (15 November 2018). "Tamper evident labels market growth continues". Packaging News.

Bibliography edit

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  • McEwan, John (2016). Seals in Medieval London, 1050–1300: A Catalogue. London Record Society Extra Series. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-0-900952-56-2.
  • Morris, David (2012). Matrix: A Collection of British Seals. Whyteleaf. ISBN 978-0-9570102-0-8.
  • New, Elizabeth (2010). Seals and Sealing Practices. Archives and the User. Vol. 11. London: British Records Association. ISBN 978-0-900222-15-3.
  • Pastoureau, Michel (1981). Les sceaux. Turnhout: Brepols.
  • Posse, Otto (1913). Die Siegel der deutschen Kaiser und Könige, von 751 bis 1913. Vol. 5. Dresden.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Accessible on Wikisource
  • Schofield, Phillipp R., ed. (2015). Seals and their Context in the Middle Ages. Oxford: Oxbow. ISBN 978-1-78297-817-6.
  • Schofield, P. R.; New, E. A., eds. (2016). Seals and Society: medieval Wales, the Welsh marches and their English border region. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 9781783168712.
  • Whatley, Laura, ed. (2019). A Companion to Seals in the Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-38064-6.
  • Yule, Paul (1981). Early Cretan Seals: A Study of Chronology. Marburger Studien zur Vor und Frühgeschichte 4. Mainz. ISBN 3-8053-0490-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Živković, Tibor (2007). "The Golden Seal of Stroimir" (PDF). Historical Review. Belgrade: The Institute for History. 55: 23–29. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728). "Cocket". Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Seals at Wikisource
  • God's Regents on Earth: A Thousand Years of Byzantine Imperial Seals, from the Dumbarton Oaks Collection
  • UK National Archives on seals
  • Not All Online Authority Seals are Credible - Harvard's Ben Edelman says "Suppose users have seen a seal on dozens of sites that turn out to be legitimate. Dubious sites can present that same seal to encourage more users to buy, register, or download."
  • Signet ring article - Berganza, London: Signets: Sealed with a Ring
  • Search Results (database of Byzantine Seal impressions from Prosopography of the Byzantine World project (PBW)
  • Photographic reproductions of medieval seals in the Lichtbildarchiv älterer Originalurkunden searchable via the verteillte Bildarchiv prometheus

seal, emblem, other, uses, seal, disambiguation, seal, device, making, impression, clay, paper, some, other, medium, including, embossment, paper, also, impression, thus, made, original, purpose, authenticate, document, prevent, interference, with, package, en. For other uses see Seal disambiguation A seal is a device for making an impression in wax clay paper or some other medium including an embossment on paper and is also the impression thus made The original purpose was to authenticate a document or to prevent interference with a package or envelope by applying a seal which had to be broken to open the container hence the modern English verb to seal which implies secure closing without an actual wax seal Town seal matrix of Nachod now in the Czech Republic from 1570Present day impression of a Late Bronze Age sealThe seal making device is also referred to as the seal matrix or die the imprint it creates as the seal impression or more rarely the sealing 1 If the impression is made purely as a relief resulting from the greater pressure on the paper where the high parts of the matrix touch the seal is known as a dry seal in other cases ink or another liquid or liquefied medium is used in another color than the paper In most traditional forms of dry seal the design on the seal matrix is in intaglio cut below the flat surface and therefore the design on the impressions made is in relief raised above the surface The design on the impression will reverse be a mirror image of that of the matrix which is especially important when script is included in the design as it very often is This will not be the case if paper is embossed from behind where the matrix and impression read the same way and both matrix and impression are in relief However engraved gems were often carved in relief called cameo in this context giving a counter relief or intaglio impression when used as seals The process is essentially that of a mould Most seals have always given a single impression on an essentially flat surface but in medieval Europe two sided seals with two matrices were often used by institutions or rulers such as towns bishops and kings to make two sided or fully three dimensional impressions in wax with a tag a piece of ribbon or strip of parchment running through them These pendent seal impressions dangled below the documents they authenticated to which the attachment tag was sewn or otherwise attached single sided seals were treated in the same way Some jurisdictions consider rubber stamps 2 or specified signature accompanying words such as seal or L S abbreviation of locus sigilli place of the seal to be the legal equivalent of i e an equally effective substitute for a seal 3 In the United States the word seal is sometimes assigned to a facsimile of the seal design in monochrome or color which may be used in a variety of contexts including architectural settings on flags or on official letterheads Thus for example the Great Seal of the United States among other uses appears on the reverse of the one dollar bill and several of the seals of the U S states appear on their respective state flags In Europe although coats of arms and heraldic badges may well feature in such contexts as well as on seals the seal design in its entirety rarely appears as a graphical emblem and is used mainly as originally intended as an impression on documents The study of seals is known as sigillography or sphragistics Contents 1 Ancient Near East 2 Ancient Greece and Rome 3 East Asia 4 Western tradition 4 1 Practices 4 2 Designs 4 3 Ecclesiasticism 4 4 Architects surveyors and professional engineers 4 5 Custom houses 4 6 Destruction 4 7 Signet rings 4 8 Modern tamper proofing 5 Figurative uses 5 1 Approval 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksAncient Near East editMain article Cylinder seal nbsp Mesopotamian limestone cylinder seal and the impression made by it worship of ShamashSeals were used in the earliest civilizations and are of considerable importance in archaeology and art history In ancient Mesopotamia carved or engraved cylinder seals in stone or other materials were used These could be rolled along to create an impression on clay which could be repeated indefinitely and used as labels on consignments of trade goods or for other purposes They are normally hollow and it is presumed that they were worn on a string or chain round the neck Many have only images often very finely carved with no writing while others have both From ancient Egypt seals in the form of Signet rings including some with the names of kings have been found these tend to show only names in hieroglyphics Recently citation needed seals have come to light in South Arabia datable to the Himyarite age One example shows a name written in Aramaic Yitsḥaq bar Ḥanina engraved in reverse so as to read correctly in the impression Ancient Greece and Rome editThis section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources seals antiquity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message From the beginning of the 3rd millennium BC until the Middle Ages seals of various kinds were in production in the Aegean islands and mainland Greece In the Early Minoan age these were formed of soft stone and ivory and show particular characteristic forms By the Middle Minoan age a new set for seal forms motifs and materials appear Hard stone requires new rotary carving techniques The Late Bronze Age is the time par excellence of the lens shaped seal and the seal ring which continued into the Archaic Classical and Hellenistic periods in the form of pictorial engraved gems These were a major luxury art form and became keenly collected with King Mithridates VI of Pontus the first major collector according to Pliny the Elder His collection fell as booty to Pompey the Great who deposited it in a temple in Rome Engraved gems continued to be produced and collected until the 19th century Pliny also explained the significance of the signet ring and how over time this ring was worn on the little finger 4 failed verification East Asia editSee also Seal East Asia nbsp Front nbsp InscriptionJoseon era Korean royal seal with knob in the form of a turtle late 16th 17th century cast bronze with gilding 6 98 x 15 24 x 15 24 cm Los Angeles County Museum of Art US nbsp 徐永裕印 Xu Yǒngyu yin rotating character seal of Xu Yǒngyu nbsp A demonstration of the use of a standardized seal Chinese 公章 red colour for organizations in ChinaKnown as yinzhang Chinese 印章 in Greater China injang in Korea inshō in Japan ấn triện or ấn chương in Vietnam seals have been used in East Asia as a form of written identification since the Qin dynasty 221 BC The seals of the Han dynasty were impressed in a soft clay but from the Tang dynasty a red ink made from cinnabar was normally used 5 Even in modern times seals often known as chops in local colloquial English are still commonly used instead of handwritten signatures to authenticate official documents or financial transactions Both individuals and organizations have official seals and they often have multiple seals in different sizes and styles for different situations East Asian seals usually bear the names of the people or organizations represented but they can also bear poems or personal mottoes Sometimes both types of seals or large seals that bear both names and mottoes are used to authenticate official documents Seals are so important in East Asia that foreigners who frequently conduct business there also commission the engraving of personal seals East Asian seals are carved from a variety of hard materials including wood soapstone sea glass and jade East Asian seals are traditionally used with a red oil based paste consisting of finely ground cinnabar which contrasts with the black ink traditionally used for the ink brush Red chemical inks are more commonly used in modern times for sealing documents Seal engraving is considered a form of calligraphy in East Asia Like ink brush calligraphy there are several styles of engraving Some engraving styles emulate calligraphy styles but many styles are so highly stylized that the characters represented on the seal are difficult for untrained readers to identify Seal engravers are considered artists and in the past several famous calligraphers also became famous as engravers Some seals carved by famous engravers or owned by famous artists or political leaders have become valuable as historical works of art Because seals are commissioned by individuals and carved by artists every seal is unique and engravers often personalize the seals that they create The materials of seals and the styles of the engraving are typically matched to the personalities of the owners Seals can be traditional or modern or conservative or expressive Seals are sometimes carved with the owners zodiac animals on the tops of the seals Seals are also sometimes carved with images or calligraphy on the sides Although it is a utilitarian instrument of daily business in East Asia westerners and other non Asians seldom see Asian seals except on Asian paintings and calligraphic art All traditional paintings in China Japan Korea and the rest of East Asia are watercolor paintings on silk paper or some other surface to which the red ink from seals can adhere East Asian paintings often bear multiple seals including one or two seals from the artist and the seals from the owners of the paintings East Asian seals are the predecessors to block printing Western tradition edit nbsp Equestrian seal of Gilbert de Clare earl of Gloucester and Hertford c 1218 1230There is a direct line of descent from the seals used in the ancient world to those used in medieval and post medieval Europe and so to those used in legal contexts in the western world to the present day Seals were historically most often impressed in sealing wax often simply described as wax in the Middle Ages this generally comprised a compound of about two thirds beeswax to one third of some kind of resin but in the post medieval period the resin and other ingredients came to dominate 6 During the early Middle Ages seals of lead or more properly bullae from the Latin were in common use both in East and West but with the notable exception of documents bulls issued by the Papal Chancery these leaden authentications fell out of favour in western Christendom 7 Byzantine Emperors sometimes issued documents with gold seals known as Golden Bulls nbsp During the early Byzantine period these rings were used for sealing personal documents and validating wills and testaments 6th century silver 8 The Walters Art Museum Wax seals were being used on a fairly regular basis by most western royal chanceries by about the end of the 10th century In England few wax seals have survived of earlier date than the Norman Conquest 7 although some earlier matrices are known recovered from archaeological contexts the earliest is a gold double sided matrix found near Postwick Norfolk and dated to the late 7th century the next oldest is a mid 9th century matrix of a Bishop Ethilwald probably AEthelwold Bishop of East Anglia 9 The practice of sealing in wax gradually moved down the social hierarchy from monarchs and bishops to great magnates to petty knights by the end of the 12th century and to ordinary freemen by the middle of the 13th century 10 They also came to be used by a variety of corporate bodies including cathedral chapters municipalities monasteries etc to validate the acts executed in their name 7 nbsp The wax seal of Tampere from 1839Traditional wax seals continue to be used on certain high status and ceremonial documents but in the 20th century they were gradually superseded in many other contexts by inked or dry embossed seals and by rubber stamps While many instruments formerly required seals for validity e g deeds or covenants it is now unusual in most countries in the west for private citizens to use seals In Central and Eastern Europe however as in East Asia a signature alone is considered insufficient to authenticate a document of any kind in business and all managers as well as many book keepers and other employees have personal seals citation needed normally just containing text with their name and their position These are applied to all letters invoices issued and similar documents In Europe these are today plastic self inking stamps Notaries also still use seals on a daily basis At least in Britain each registered notary has an individual personal seal registered with the authorities which includes his or her name and a pictorial emblem often an animal the same combination found in many seals from ancient Greece Practices edit nbsp Pendent seals on the Swiss Federal Charter of 1291Seals are used primarily to authenticate documents specifically those which carry some legal import There are two main ways in which a seal may be attached to a document It may be applied directly to the face of the paper or parchment an applied seal or it may hang loose from it a pendent seal A pendent seal may be attached to cords or ribbons sometimes in the owner s livery colors or to the two ends of a strip or tag of parchment threaded through holes or slots cut in the lower edge of the document the document is often folded double at this point a plica to provide extra strength Alternatively the seal may be attached to a narrow strip of the material of the document again in this case usually parchment sliced and folded down as a tail or tongue but not detached 11 12 The object in all cases is to help ensure authenticity by maintaining the integrity of the relationship between document and seal and to prevent the seal s reuse If a forger tries to remove an applied seal from its document it will almost certainly break A pendent seal is easily detached by cutting the cords or strips of parchment but the forger would then have great difficulty in attaching it to another document not least because the cords or parchment are normally knotted inside the seal and would again almost certainly break it In the Middle Ages the majority of seals were pendent They were attached both to legal instruments and to letters patent i e open letters conferring rights or privileges which were intended to be available for all to view In the case of important transactions or agreements the seals of all parties to the arrangement as well as of witnesses might be attached to the document and so once executed it would carry several seals Most governments still attach pendent seals to letters patent nbsp Hand folded letter sealed with wax and stamped with capital letter A If a letter is folded and sealed correctly a wax seal can eliminate the need for an envelope as demonstrated in the above picture Applied seals by contrast were originally used to seal a document closed that is to say the document would be folded and the seal applied in such a way that the item could not be opened without the seal being broken 13 Applied seals were used on letters close letters intended only for the recipient and parcels to indicate whether or not the item had been opened or tampered with since it had left the sender as well as providing evidence that the item was actually from the sender and not a forgery In the post medieval period seals came to be commonly used in this way for private letters A letter writer would fold the completed letter pour wax over the joint formed by the top of the page and then impress a ring or other seal matrix Governments sometimes sent letters to citizens under the governmental seal for their eyes only known as letters secret Wax seals might also be used with letterlocking techniques to ensure that only the intended recipient would read the message 14 In general seals are no longer used in these ways except for ceremonial purposes However applied seals also came to be used on legal instruments applied directly to the face of the document so that there was no need to break them and this use continues Designs edit nbsp Two sided pendent seals from Inchaffray Abbey in Scotland late 13th century now in the British Museum 15 nbsp The Great Seal of the State of Montana US Historically the majority of seals were circular in design although ovals triangles shield shapes and other patterns are also known The design generally comprised a graphic emblem sometimes but not always incorporating heraldic devices surrounded by a text the legend running around the perimeter The legend most often consisted merely of the words The seal of the name of the owner either in Latin or in the local vernacular language the Latin word Sigillum was frequently abbreviated to a simple S Occasionally the legend took the form of a motto In the Middle Ages it became customary for the seals of women and of ecclesiastics to be given a vesica pointed oval shape The central emblem was often a standing figure of the owner or in the case of ecclesiastical seals of a saint Medieval townspeople used a wide variety of different emblems but some had seals that included an image relating to their work 16 Sealing wax was naturally yellowish or pale brownish in tone but could also be artificially colored red or green with many intermediary variations In some medieval royal chanceries different colours of wax were customarily used for different functions or departments of state or to distinguish grants and decrees made in perpetuity from more ephemeral documents 17 18 The matrices for pendent seals were sometimes accompanied by a smaller counter seal which would be used to impress a small emblem on the reverse of the impression In some cases the seal and counter seal would be kept by two different individuals in order to provide an element of double checking to the process of authentication Sometimes a large official seal which might be in the custody of chancery officials would need to be counter sealed by the individual in whose name it had been applied the monarch or the mayor of a town such a counter seal might be carried on the person perhaps secured by a chain or cord or later take the form of a signet ring and so would be necessarily smaller 19 Other pendent seals were double sided with elaborate and equally sized obverses and reverses The impression would be formed by pressing a sandwich of matrices and wax firmly together by means of rollers or later a lever press or a screw press 20 21 Certain medieval seals were more complex still involving two levels of impression on each side of the wax which would be used to create a scene of three dimensional depth 22 23 On the death of a seal holder as a sign of continuity a son and heir might commission a new seal employing the same symbols and design elements as those used by his father It is likely that this practice was a factor in the emergence of hereditary heraldry in western Europe in the 12th century 24 25 nbsp Vesica Mandorla shaped seal of the cathedral chapter of Moulins France Ecclesiasticism edit Ecclesiastical seals are frequently mandorla shaped as in the shape of an almond also known as vesica shaped The use of a seal by men of wealth and position was common before the Christian era but high functionaries of the Church adopted the habit nbsp A series of crosses from the sigillum cereum of Beatrice of Bar s grant to San Zeno Verona 1073 An incidental allusion in one of St Augustine s letters 217 to Victorinus indicates that he used a seal 7 The practice spread and it seems to be taken for granted by King Clovis I at the very beginning of the Merovingian dynasty 26 7 Later ecclesiastical synods require that letters under the bishop s seal should be given to priests when for some reason they lawfully quit their own proper diocese Such a ruling was enacted at Chalon sur Saone in 813 Pope Nicholas I in the same century complained that the bishops of Dole and Reims had contra morem contrary to custom sent their letters to him unsealed 27 7 The custom of bishops possessing seals may from this date be assumed to have been pretty general 7 In the British Museum collection the earliest bishop s seals preserved are those of William de St Calais Bishop of Durham 1081 96 and of St Anselm Archbishop of Canterbury 1093 1109 7 Architects surveyors and professional engineers edit Seals are also affixed on architectural or engineering construction documents or land survey drawings to certify the identity of the licensed professional who supervised the development 28 29 30 Depending on the authority having jurisdiction for the project these seals may be embossed and signed stamped and signed or in certain situations a computer generated facsimile of the original seal validated by a digital certificate owned by the professional may be attached to a security protected computer file 31 The identities on the professional seals determine legal responsibility for any errors or omissions and in some cases financial responsibility for their correction as well as the territory of their responsibility e g State of Minnesota 32 In some jurisdictions especially in Canada it is a legal requirement for a professional engineer to seal documents in accordance with the Engineering Profession Act and Regulations Professional engineers may also be legally entitled to seal any document they prepare The seal identifies work performed by or under the direct supervision of a licensed professional engineer and assures the document s recipient that the work meets the standards expected of experienced professionals who take personal responsibility for their judgments and decisions nbsp Professional engineer s seal in fact a rubber stamp in the Province of Saskatchewan CanadaCustom houses edit In old English law a cocket was a custom house seal or a certified document given to a shipper as a warrant that his goods have been duly entered and have paid duty 33 34 Hence in Scotland there was an officer called the clerk of the cocket It may have given its name to cocket bread which was perhaps stamped as though with a seal Destruction edit The importance of the seal as a means of authentication necessitated that when authority passed into new hands the old seal should be destroyed and a new one made When the pope dies it is the first duty of the Cardinal Camerlengo to obtain possession of the Ring of the Fisherman the papal signet and to see that it is broken up A similar practice prevailed in the Middle Ages and it is often alluded to by historians as it seems to have been a matter of some ceremony 7 For example on the death of Robert of Holy Island Bishop of Durham in 1283 the chronicler Robert Greystones reports After his burial his seal was publicly broken up in the presence of all by Master Robert Avenel 35 Matthew Paris gives a similar description of the breaking of the seal of William of Trumpington Abbot of St Albans in 1235 7 The practice is less widely attested in the case of medieval laypeople but certainly occurred on occasion particularly in the 13th and 14th centuries 36 37 Silver seal matrices have been found in the graves of some of the 12th century queens of France These were probably deliberately buried as a means of cancelling them 38 39 When King James II of England was dethroned in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 9 he is supposed to have thrown the Great Seal of the Realm into the River Thames before his flight to France in order to ensure that the machinery of government would cease to function It is unclear how much truth there is to this story but certainly the seal was recovered James s successors William III and Mary used the same Great Seal matrix fairly crudely adapted possibly quite deliberately in order to demonstrate the continuity of government 40 Signet rings edit nbsp Armigerous signet ring bearing the arms of the Baronnet family goldsmith Jean Pierre Gautheron Paris nbsp Golden ring with cartouche and hieroglyphic name of Tutankhamun Perfect God Lord of the Two Lands Ntr Nfr Neb taui right to left columns Musee du Louvre nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Signet rings A signet ring is a ring bearing on its flat top surface the equivalent of a seal A typical signet ring has a design often a family or personal crest created in intaglio so that it will leave a raised relief impression of the design when the ring is pressed onto liquid sealing wax The design is often made out of agate carnelian or sardonyx which tend not to bind with the wax Most smaller classical engraved gems were probably originally worn as signet rings or as seals on a necklace The wearing of signet rings from Latin signum meaning sign or mark dates back to ancient Egypt the seal of a pharaoh is mentioned in the Book of Genesis Genesis 41 42 Removing his signet ring from his hand Pharaoh put it on Joseph s hand he arrayed him in garments of fine linen and put a gold chain around his neck Because it is used to attest to the authority of its bearer the ring has also been seen as a symbol of power which is why it is included in the regalia of certain monarchies After the death of a Pope the destruction of his signet ring is a prescribed act clearing the way for the sede vacante and subsequent election of a new Pope 41 Signet rings are also used as a souvenir or membership attribute e g class rings which typically bear the coat of arms or crest of the school One may also have their initials engraved as a sign of their personal stature citation needed The less noble classes began wearing and using signet rings as early as the 13th century In the 17th century signet rings fell out of favor in the upper levels of society replaced by other means for mounting and carrying the signet In the 18th century though signet rings again became popular and by the 19th century men of all classes wore them 42 Since at least the 16th century there have also been pseudo signet rings where the engraving is not reversed mirror image as it should be if the impression is to read correctly 43 Rings have been used since antiquity as spy identification and in espionage During World War II US Air Force personnel would privately purchase signet rings with a hidden compartment that would hold a small compass or hidden message MI9 purchased a number of signet rings from Regent Street jewelers that were used to conceal compasses 44 Modern tamper proofing edit In modern use seals are used to tamper proof equipment For example to prevent gas and electricity meters from being interfered with to show lower chargeable readings they may be sealed with a lead or plastic seal with a government marking typically fixed to a wire that passes through part of the meter housing The meter cannot be opened without cutting the wire or damaging the seal 45 46 Specially made tamper evident labels are available which are destroyed if the protected container or equipment is opened functionally equivalent to a wax seal 47 They are used to protect things which must not be tampered with such as pharmaceuticals equipment whose opening voids a manufacturer s warranty etc Figurative uses edit nbsp Representation of a seal of approval Seal of the Confessional Record sealingApproval edit See also Certification mark The expression seal of approval refers to a formal approval regardless whether it involves a seal or other external marking by an authoritative person or institute It is also part of the formal name of certain quality marks such as Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval of the Good Housekeeping Institute Good Netkeeping Seal of ApprovalSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Signets Company seal Keeper of the seal Great seal King of Na gold seal the first seal in Japan Knights Templar Seal used to validate documents approved by the order Manu propria Privy sealReferences edit New 2010 p 7 Notary Public Handbook 2020 California Secretary of State Notary Public Section p 7 Vermont Statutes Title 1 134 Vermont Legislature Retrieved January 4 2020 Harris Rackham 1938 Pliny The Elder Natural History Loeb Classical Library Thomas Carter 1925 The invention of printing in China Columbia University Press Jenkinson 1968 p 12 a b c d e f g h i j nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbert Thurston 1913 Seal In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Signet Ring The Walters Art Museum New 2010 p 3 Jenkinson 1968 pp 6 7 Jenkinson 1968 pp 14 18 New 2010 pp 19 23 Jenkinson 1968 pp 18 19 Cain Abigal 9 November 2018 Before Envelopes People Protected Messages With Letterlocking Atlas Obscura Retrieved 12 March 2019 British Museum Collection McEwan 2016 no 764 Jenkinson 1968 p 13 New 2010 p 41 John A McEwan Does size matter Seals in England and Wales ca 1200 1500 in Whatley 2019 pp 103 26 116 18 Jenkinson 1968 pp 8 10 New 2010 p 13 John Cherry Medieval and post medieval seals in Collon 1997 pp 130 131 Markus Spath Memorialising the glorious past thirteenth century seals from English cathedral priories and their artistic contexts in Schofield 2015 p 166 Wagner Anthony 1956 Heralds and Heraldry in the Middle Ages 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 13 15 Brooke Little John 1973 Boutell s Heraldry London Frederick Warne pp 6 7 ISBN 0 7232 1708 4 Monumenta Germaniae Historica Leg II 2 Philipp Jaffe Regesta Pontificum Romanorum nos 2789 2806 2823 What is a PE National Society of Professional Engineers US How Building Officials Interact With Registered Architects And Engineers National Council of Architectural Registration Boards US GSA P100 Facilities Standards for the Public Buildings Service Appendix A Submission Requirements Archived 2009 09 29 at the Wayback Machine U S General Services Administration Rule and Regulation Change Allowing the Construction and use of Computerized Seals Archived 2009 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Kansas State Board of Technical Professions Typical sample of requirements for a professional seal in the United States FAR 36 609 Archived 2010 12 01 at the Wayback Machine U S Federal Acquisition Regulations Subpart 36 6 Architect Engineer Services Article 36 609 Contract Clauses Cocket History of Science and Technology p 243 Cocket Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press 2nd ed 1989 Raine James ed 1839 Historia Dunelmensis Scriptores Tres Surtees Society Vol 9 London p 63 Cherry 1992 Paul Brand Seals and the law in the thirteenth century in Schofield 2015 pp 111 19 at p 115 Cherry Medieval and post medieval seals in Collon 1997 p 134 Dabrowska Elzbieta 2011 Les sceaux et les matrices de sceaux trouves dans le tombes medievales In Gil Marc Chassel Jean Luc eds Pourquois les sceaux La sigillographie nouvel enjeu de l histoire de l art Lille Centre de Gestion de l Edition Scientifique pp 31 43 Jenkinson Hilary 1943 What happened to the Great Seal of James II Antiquaries Journal 23 1 2 1 13 doi 10 1017 s0003581500042189 S2CID 162188010 What Is A Signet Ring And Why Wear One He Spoke Style 31 May 2017 Retrieved 23 October 2017 The ultimate guide to signet rings Journal Rebus Signet Rings 2017 06 20 Archived from the original on 2019 04 01 Retrieved 2018 09 16 Taylor Gerald Scarisbrick Diana 1978 Finger Rings From Ancient Egypt to the Present Day Ashmolean Museum p 71 ISBN 0 900090 54 5 Froom Phil Evasion and Escape Devices Produced by MI9 MIS X and SOE in World War II 2015 Pages 296 297 Gas meter stamping UK Government Retrieved 7 August 2021 Publication of specifications related to physical sealing of electricity and gas meters Measurement Canada 18 August 2008 Corbin Tony 15 November 2018 Tamper evident labels market growth continues Packaging News Bibliography editAdams Noel Cherry John Robinson James eds 2007 Good Impressions Image and Authority in Medieval Seals British Museum Research Publications 168 London British Museum ISBN 978 0 86159 168 8 Ameri Marta Costello Sarah Kielt Jamison Gregg Scott Sarah Jarmer eds 2018 Seals and Sealing in the Ancient World case studies from the Near East Egypt the Aegean and South Asia Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107194588 Boardman John 1972 Greek Gems and Finger Rings New York New York H N Abrams Chassel Jean Luc 2003 Sceaux et usages de sceaux images de la Champagne medievale Paris Somogny ISBN 2 85056 643 8 Cherry John 1992 The breaking of seals Medieval Europe 1992 pre printed papers vol 7 Art and Symbolism York Medieval Europe 1992 pp 23 27 ISBN 0952002361 Cherry John Berenbeim Jessica Beer Lloyd de eds 2018 Seals and Status power of objects British Museum Research Publication Vol 213 London British Museum ISBN 9780861592135 Collon Dominique ed 1997 7000 Years of Seals London British Museum Press ISBN 0 7141 1143 0 Grisar Josef De Lasala Fernando 1997 Aspetti della sigillografia Rome a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Harvey P D A McGuinness Andrew 1996 A Guide to British Medieval Seals London British Library and Public Record Office ISBN 0 7123 0410 X Jenkinson Hilary 1968 Guide to Seals in the Public Record Office Public Record Handbooks Vol 1 2nd ed London Her Majesty s Stationery Office McEwan John 2016 Seals in Medieval London 1050 1300 A Catalogue London Record Society Extra Series Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 0 900952 56 2 Morris David 2012 Matrix A Collection of British Seals Whyteleaf ISBN 978 0 9570102 0 8 New Elizabeth 2010 Seals and Sealing Practices Archives and the User Vol 11 London British Records Association ISBN 978 0 900222 15 3 Pastoureau Michel 1981 Les sceaux Turnhout Brepols Posse Otto 1913 Die Siegel der deutschen Kaiser und Konige von 751 bis 1913 Vol 5 Dresden a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Accessible on Wikisource Schofield Phillipp R ed 2015 Seals and their Context in the Middle Ages Oxford Oxbow ISBN 978 1 78297 817 6 Schofield P R New E A eds 2016 Seals and Society medieval Wales the Welsh marches and their English border region Cardiff University of Wales Press ISBN 9781783168712 Whatley Laura ed 2019 A Companion to Seals in the Middle Ages Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 38064 6 Yule Paul 1981 Early Cretan Seals A Study of Chronology Marburger Studien zur Vor und Fruhgeschichte 4 Mainz ISBN 3 8053 0490 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zivkovic Tibor 2007 The Golden Seal of Stroimir PDF Historical Review Belgrade The Institute for History 55 23 29 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 Cocket Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences 1st ed James and John Knapton et al External links edit nbsp Works related to Seals at Wikisource nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Seals nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Seals nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1905 New International Encyclopedia article about Seals God s Regents on Earth A Thousand Years of Byzantine Imperial Seals from the Dumbarton Oaks Collection UK National Archives on seals Not All Online Authority Seals are Credible Harvard s Ben Edelman says Suppose users have seen a seal on dozens of sites that turn out to be legitimate Dubious sites can present that same seal to encourage more users to buy register or download Signet ring article Berganza London Signets Sealed with a Ring Search Results database of Byzantine Seal impressions from Prosopography of the Byzantine World project PBW Photographic reproductions of medieval seals in the Lichtbildarchiv alterer Originalurkunden searchable via the verteillte Bildarchiv prometheus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Seal emblem amp oldid 1177840691, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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