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Heart symbol

The heart symbol is an ideograph used to express the idea of the "heart" in its metaphorical or symbolic sense. Represented by an anatomically inaccurate shape, the heart symbol is often used to represent the center of emotion, including affection and love, especially romantic love. It is sometimes accompanied or superseded by the "wounded heart" symbol, depicted as a heart symbol pierced with an arrow or as a heart symbol "broken" into two or more pieces, indicating lovesickness.

Conventional heart symbol
A heart symbol pierced with an arrow, symbolizing romantic love (being lovestruck, or the pain of lovesickness)
A typical depiction of the Sacred Heart (often shown with other attributes, e.g. surmounted by a cross, pierced by nails or swords, etc.)

History Edit

Similar shapes from antiquity Edit

Peepal leaves were used in artistic depictions of the Indus Valley civilisation: a heart-shaped pendant originating from there has been discovered and is now exhibited in the National Museum of India.[1] In the 5th–6th century BC, the heart shape was used to represent the heart-shaped fruit of the plant silphium,[2] a plant possibly used as a contraceptive and an aphrodisiac.[3][4] Silver coins from Cyrene of the 5th–6th century BC bear a similar design, sometimes accompanied by a silphium plant and is understood to represent its seed or fruit.[5]

Since ancient times in Japan, the heart symbol has been called Inome (猪目), meaning the eye of a wild boar, and it has the meaning of warding off evil spirits. The decorations are used to decorate Shinto shrines, Buddhist temples, castles, and weapons.[6][7] The oldest examples of this pattern are seen in some of the Japanese original tsuba (sword guard) of the style called toran gata tsuba (lit., inverted egg shaped tsuba) that were attached to swords from the sixth to seventh centuries, and part of the tsuba was hollowed out in the shape of a heart symbol.[8][9]

Earliest use Edit

The combination of the heart shape and its use within the heart metaphor was developed in the end of the Middle Ages, although the shape has been used in many ancient epigraphy monuments and texts. With possible early examples or direct predecessors in the 13th to 14th century, the familiar symbol of the heart representing love developed in the 15th century, and became popular in Europe during the 16th.[10]

Before the 14th century, the heart shape was not associated with the meaning of the heart metaphor. The geometric shape itself is found in much earlier sources, but in such instances does not depict a heart, but typically foliage: in examples from antiquity fig leaves, and in medieval iconography and heraldry, typically the leaves of ivy and of the water-lily.

The first known depiction of a heart as a symbol of romantic love dates to the 1250s. It occurs in a miniature decorating a capital 'S' in a manuscript of the French Roman de la poire.[11] In the miniature, a kneeling lover (or more precisely, an allegory of the lover's "sweet gaze" or doux regard) offers his heart to a damsel. The heart here resembles a pine cone (held "upside down", the point facing upward), in accord with medieval anatomical descriptions. However, in this miniature, what suggests a heart shape is only the result of a lover's finger superimposed on an object; the full shape outline of the object is partly hidden, and, therefore unknown. Moreover, the French title of the manuscript that features the miniature translates into "Novel Of The Pear" in English. Thus the heart-shaped object would be a pear; the conclusion that a pear represents a heart is dubious. Opinions, therefore, differ over this being the first depiction of a heart as a symbol of romantic love.[12]

Giotto in his 1305 painting in the Scrovegni Chapel (Padua) shows an allegory of charity (caritas) handing her heart to Jesus Christ. This heart is also depicted in the pine cone shape based on anatomical descriptions of the day (still held "upside down"). Giotto's painting exerted considerable influence on later painters, and the motive of Caritas offering a heart is shown by Taddeo Gaddi in Santa Croce, by Andrea Pisano on the bronze door of the south porch of the Florence Baptistery (c. 1337), by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in the Palazzo Publico in Siena (c. 1340) and by Andrea da Firenze in Santa Maria Novella in Florence (c. 1365). The convention of showing the heart point upward switches in the late 14th century and becomes rare in the first half of the 15th century.[12]

The "scalloped" shape of the now-familiar heart symbol, with a dent in its base, arises in the early 14th century, at first only lightly dented, as in the miniatures in Francesco da Barberino's Documenti d'amore (before 1320). A slightly later example with a more pronounced dent is found in a manuscript from the Cistercian monastery in Brussels.[13] The convention of showing a dent at the base of the heart thus spread at about the same time as the convention of showing the heart with its point downward.[14] The modern indented red heart has been used on playing cards since the late 15th century.[15]

Various hypotheses attempted to connect the "heart shape" as it evolved in the Late Middle Ages with instances of the geometric shape in antiquity.[16] Such theories are modern, proposed from the 1960s onward, and they remain speculative, as no continuity between the supposed ancient predecessors and the late medieval tradition can be shown. Specific suggestions include: the shape of the seed of the silphium plant, used in ancient times as an herbal contraceptive,[16][17] and stylized depictions of features of the human female body, such as the female's breasts, buttocks, pubic mound, or spread vulva.[18]

Renaissance and early modern Edit

 
A heart symbol from the Achaemenid period, in the Louvre Museum, made of ivory[19]
 
A sasanian-style textile from first century AH that shows two winged horses[20][21] with one heart symbol top of them.[22]

Heart shapes can be seen on various stucco reliefs and wall panels excavated from the ruins of Ctesiphon, the Persian capital (c. 90 BC – 637 AD).[23][24][25]

The Luther rose was the seal that was designed for Martin Luther at the behest of Prince John Frederick, in 1530, while Luther was staying at the Coburg Fortress during the Diet of Augsburg. Luther wrote an explanation of the symbol to Lazarus Spengler: "a black cross in a heart, which retains its natural color, so that I myself would be reminded that faith in the Crucified saves us. 'For one who believes from the heart will be justified' (Romans 10:10)."[26][unreliable source?]

The aorta remains visible, as a protrusion at the top centered between the two "chambers" indicated in the symbol, in some depictions of the Sacred Heart well into the 18th century, and is partly still shown today (although mostly obscured by elements such as a crown, flames, rays, or a cross) but the "hearts" suit did not have this element since the 15th century.

Modern Edit

Since the 19th century, the symbol has often been used on Valentine's Day cards, candy boxes, and similar popular culture artifacts as a symbol of romantic love.

The use of the heart symbol as a logograph for the English verb "to love" derives from the use in "I ♥ NY," introduced in 1977.[29]

Heart symbols are frequently used to symbolize "health" or "lives" in video games. Super Mario Bros. 2 (1987, 1988) had a "life bar" composed of hexagons, but in 1990s remakes of these games, the hexagons were replaced by heart shapes (the Castlevania franchise being a notable exception, where the hearts are ammunition for the secondary weapons instead of representing health). Since the 1990s, the heart symbol has also been used as an ideogram indicating health outside of the video gaming context, e.g., its use by restaurants to indicate heart-healthy nutrient content claim (e.g., "low in cholesterol"). A copyrighted "heart-check" symbol to indicate heart-healthy food was introduced by the American Heart Association in 1995.[30]

Heraldry Edit

 
Coat of arms of the Principality of Lüneburg, originating with William of Winchester, Lord of Lüneburg (d. 1213) who married Helena, daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark, and therefore adopted the "Danish tincture" to the arms of his father, Henry the Lion[31]
 
A heart pictured in the coat of arms of the Laukaa municipality

The earliest heart-shaped charges in heraldry appear in the 12th century; the hearts in the coat of arms of Denmark go back to the royal banner of the kings of Denmark, in turn based on a seal used as early as the 1190s. However, while the charges are clearly heart-shaped, they did not depict hearts in origin, or symbolize any idea related to love. Instead, they are assumed to have depicted the leaves of the water-lily. Early heraldic heart-shaped charges depicting the leaves of water-lilies are found in various other designs related to territories close to rivers or a coastline (e.g. Flags of Frisia).

Inverted heart symbols have been used in heraldry as stylized testicles (coglioni in Italian) as in the canting arms of the Colleoni family of Milan.[32]

A seal attributed to William, Lord of Douglas (of 1333) shows a heart shape, identified as the heart of Robert the Bruce. The authenticity of this seal is "very questionable",[33] i.e. it could possibly date to the late 14th or even the 15th century.[34]

Heraldic charges actually representing hearts became more common in the early modern period, with the Sacred Heart depicted in ecclesiastical heraldry, and hearts representing love appearing in bourgeois coats of arms. Hearts also later became popular elements in municipal coats of arms.

Botanical symbolism Edit

There has been some conjecture regarding the link between the traditional heart symbol and images of the fruit of silphium, a (probably) extinct plant known to classical antiquity and belonging to the genus Ferula, used as a condiment and medicine, (the medicinal properties including contraceptive and abortifacient activity, linking the plant to sexuality and love).[35] Silver coins from the ancient Libya of the 6th to 5th centuries BC bear images strongly reminiscent of the heart symbol, sometimes accompanied by images of the silphium plant.[36][37] The related Ferula species asafoetida - which was actually used as an inferior substitute for silphium - is regarded as an aphrodisiac in Tibet and India, suggesting yet a third amatory association relating to silphium.[38]

Encoding Edit

A common emoticon for the heart is <3. In Unicode several heart symbols are available in text format:

Glyph Description HTML code Alt codes
U+2766 FLORAL HEART &#x2766;
U+2767 ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET &#x2767;
U+2619 REVERSED ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET &#x2619;
U+2661 WHITE HEART SUIT &#x2661; or &#9825;
U+2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in device default representation &#x2665; or &#9829; or &hearts; Alt + 3
♥︎ U+2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in explicit plaintext representation &#x2665;&#xfe0e;
♥️ U+2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in explicit emoji representation &#x2665;&#xfe0f;
U+2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in device default representation &#x2764; or &#10084;
❤︎ U+2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in explicit plaintext representation &#x2764;&#xfe0e;
❤️ U+2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in explicit emoji representation &#x2764;&#xfe0f;
U+2765 ROTATED HEAVY BLACK HEART BULLET &#x2765; or &#10085;
U+2763 HEAVY HEART EXCLAMATION MARK ORNAMENT &#x2763; or &#10083;

And from the Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs and Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs ranges associated with emoji:

Glyph Description HTML code
🎔 U+1F394 HEART WITH TIP ON THE LEFT &#x1f394;
💑 U+1F491 COUPLE WITH HEART &#x1f491;
💒 U+1F492 WEDDING &#x1f492;
💓 U+1F493 BEATING HEART &#x1f493;
💔 U+1F494 BROKEN HEART &#x1f494;
💕 U+1F495 TWO HEARTS &#x1f495;
💖 U+1F496 SPARKLING HEART &#x1f496;
💗 U+1F497 GROWING HEART &#x1f497;
💘 U+1F498 HEART WITH ARROW &#x1f498;
💙 U+1F499 BLUE HEART &#x1f499;
💚 U+1F49A GREEN HEART &#x1f49a;
💛 U+1F49B YELLOW HEART &#x1f49b;
Glyph Description HTML code
💜 U+1F49C PURPLE HEART &#x1f49c;
💝 U+1F49D HEART WITH RIBBON &#x1f49d;
💞 U+1F49E REVOLVING HEARTS &#x1f49e;
💟 U+1F49F HEART DECORATION &#x1f49f;
🖤 U+1F5A4 BLACK HEART &#x1f5a4;
🤍 U+1F90D WHITE HEART &#x1f90d;
🤎 U+1F90E BROWN HEART &#x1f90e;
🧡 U+1F9E1 ORANGE HEART &#x1f9e1;
🩵 U+1FA75 LIGHT BLUE HEART &#x1fa75;
🩶 U+1FA76 GREY HEART &#x1fa76;
🩷 U+1FA77 PINK HEART &#x1fa77;

In Code page 437, the original character set of the IBM PC, the value of 3 (hexadecimal 03) represents the heart symbol. This value is shared with the non-printing ETX control character, which overrides the glyph in many contexts.

Parametrisation Edit

A number of parametrisations of approximately heart-shaped curves have been described. The best-known of these is the cardioid, which is an epicycloid with one cusp;[39] though as the cardioid lacks the point, it may be seen as a stylized water-lily leaf, a so-called seeblatt, rather than a heart. Other curves, such as the implicit curve (x2+y2−1)3−x2y3=0, may produce better approximations of the heart shape.[40]

 
A cardioid generated by a rolling circle
(animated)
 
Implicit heart curve
(x2 + y2 − 1)3 − x2y3 = 0
 
Parametric plot of the curve

 
 
Implicit heart surface
 
Simple form made from two perpendicular lines and two circular arcs.

See also Edit

References Edit

Inline citations Edit

  1. ^ "Pendant - unknown". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
  2. ^ Favorito, E. N.; Baty, K. (February 1995). "The Silphium Connection". Celator. 9 (2): 6–8.
  3. ^ Did the ancient Romans use a natural herb for birth control?, The Straight Dope, October 13, 2006
  4. ^ Zaria Gorvett (2017). "The mystery of the lost Roman herb". BBC.
  5. ^ Buttrey, T. V. (Spring–Summer 1992). "The Coins and the Cult" (PDF). Expedition. 34 (1–2): 59–66.
  6. ^ (in Japanese). Hase-dera. Archived from the original on 30 January 2021.
  7. ^ (in Japanese). Fukagawa Fudoudou. Archived from the original on 30 April 2022.
  8. ^ (in Japanese). weblio. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021.
  9. ^ (in Japanese). weblio. Archived from the original on 26 October 2017.
  10. ^ Martin Kemp. (2011). "Christ to Coke: How Image Becomes Icon", 1st ed. Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780199581115, pp.368, p.96–99.
  11. ^ (National Library FR MS. 2086, plate 12)
  12. ^ a b Vinken (2001).
  13. ^ MS 4459–70, fol 192v. Royal Library of Belgium
  14. ^ Vinken (2001): "The change from the spherical to the scalloped form of the heart base happened more or less in train with the differing way in which the heart was held, and has dominated visual representations of the heart ever since."
  15. ^ A Brief History of Playing Cardes, by Charles Knutson, Renaissance Magazine 2001 . Archived from the original on 2010-12-20. Retrieved 2013-05-27.
  16. ^ a b The Shape of My Heart: Where did the ubiquitous Valentine's symbol come from? by Keelin McDonell, Slate.com, Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2007.
  17. ^ Benedictus, Luke (12 February 2006). "Sowing the seeds of love". The Age.
  18. ^ Proposed by Gloria Steinem in the 1998 introduction to the Vagina Monologues online copy[permanent dead link]; "For example, the shape we call a heart—whose symmetry resembles the vulva far more than the asymmetry of the organ that shares its name—is probably a residual female genital symbol. It was reduced from power to romance by centuries of male dominance.", based on an earlier suggestion by Tanzer (1969) that the shape was used as a symbol indicating brothels in ancient Pompeii. Tanzer (1969). The Common People of Pompeii. A study of the graffiti. With illustrations and a map
  19. ^ "Incrustation de meuble". 539.
  20. ^ Daryaee, Touraj (January 2022). "اسب های بالدار". Bukhara 147.
  21. ^ "Plate with youths and winged horses | Sasanian | Sasanian". The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  22. ^ "Textile Gallery | IAMM".
  23. ^ Roundel with radiating palmettes. (n.d.). Retrieved April 7, 2015, from http://metmuseum.org/exhibitions/view?exhibitionId={60853040-AE7E-4162-8FA7-525505D6B633}&oid=322631
  24. ^ Fragments of stucco roundels in situ, Taq-i Kisra, south building, Ctesiphon, Iraq, 1931–32. (n.d.). Retrieved April 7, 2015, from http://www.metmuseum.org/met-around-the-world/images/wb_large/wb_Ctesiphon2.jpg
  25. ^ "Wall panel with a guinea fowl [Sasanian] (32.150.13)". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/32.150.13 (March 2012)
  26. ^ gamesmuseum.uwaterloo.ca 2006-10-10 at the Wayback Machine, i-p-c-s.org . Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2013-03-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) antiquemapsandprints.com, obviously more research is needed here.
  27. ^ Cologne Mn Kn 28-1181 fol. 116
  28. ^ fol. 13r
  29. ^ "Subsequently the heart symbol became a shorthand for enthusiasm for everything from software to Yorkshire terriers. It was a stamp that validated lifestyles. People could ♥ their grandchildren or line dancing or Buddha." Stephen Amidon, Thomas Amidon, The Sublime Engine: A Biography of the Human Heart (2011), p. 193.
  30. ^ "the heart-check mark that began to appear on a wide array of food packaging in 1995. The symbol consists of a heart branded with a bold, efficient check mark. It is copyrighted by the American Heart Association (AHA), which licenses it for a nominal fee to companies whose products meet the organization's criteria for saturated fat and cholesterol content." Stephen Amidon, Thomas Amidon, The Sublime Engine: A Biography of the Human Heart (2011), p. 193.
  31. ^ C. Weyers in: Stengel (ed.), Archiv für Diplomatik: Schriftgeschichte, Siegel, und Wappenkunde, Volume 54, 2008, p. 100.
  32. ^ Woodward, John and George Burnett (1969). Woodward's a treatise on heraldry, British and foreign, page 203. Originally published 1892, Edinburgh: W. & A. B. Johnson. ISBN 0-7153-4464-1. LCCN 02-20303
  33. ^ McAndrew, Scotland's Historic Heraldry, 2006, p. 141
  34. ^ McAndrew 2006, p. 213.
  35. ^ Favorito, E. N.; Baty, K. (February 1995). "The Silphium Connection". Celator. 9 (2): 6–8.
  36. ^ T. V. Buttrey, "The Coins and the Cult", Expedition magazine vol. 34, Nos. 1–2 "Special Issue: Gifts to the Goddesses—Cyrene's Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone", Spring–Summer 1992.
  37. ^ Koerper, H.; Kolls, A. L. (1999). "The silphium motif adorning ancient libyan coinage: Marketing a medicinal plant". Economic Botany. 53 (2): 133–143. doi:10.1007/BF02866492. JSTOR 4256173. S2CID 32144481.
  38. ^ "Aphrodisiac - Asafoetida (Ferula asa foetida)".
  39. ^ Weisstein, Eric W., "Cardioid" from MathWorld.
  40. ^ Eric W. Weisstein, "Heart Curve." From MathWorld

Works cited Edit

  • Martin Kemp, "The Heart" in Christ to Coke: How Image Becomes Icon, Oxford University Press, 2011, 81–113.
  • P. J. Vinken (2000), The Shape of the Heart: A Contribution to the Iconology of the Heart (illustrated ed.), Elsevier Health Sciences, ISBN 978-0-444-82987-0

General references Edit

  • Vinken, P (2001), "How the heart was held in medieval art", The Lancet, 358 (9299): 2155–2157, doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(01)07224-5, PMID 11784647, S2CID 37917232

External links Edit

heart, symbol, love, symbol, redirects, here, 1992, album, love, symbol, prince, album, this, article, about, graphical, symbol, symbolic, metaphorical, word, heart, symbolism, heart, symbol, ideograph, used, express, idea, heart, metaphorical, symbolic, sense. Love symbol redirects here For the 1992 album see Love Symbol Prince album This article is about the graphical symbol For the symbolic or metaphorical use of the word see Heart Symbolism The heart symbol is an ideograph used to express the idea of the heart in its metaphorical or symbolic sense Represented by an anatomically inaccurate shape the heart symbol is often used to represent the center of emotion including affection and love especially romantic love It is sometimes accompanied or superseded by the wounded heart symbol depicted as a heart symbol pierced with an arrow or as a heart symbol broken into two or more pieces indicating lovesickness Conventional heart symbolA heart symbol pierced with an arrow symbolizing romantic love being lovestruck or the pain of lovesickness A typical depiction of the Sacred Heart often shown with other attributes e g surmounted by a cross pierced by nails or swords etc Contents 1 History 1 1 Similar shapes from antiquity 1 2 Earliest use 1 3 Renaissance and early modern 1 4 Modern 2 Heraldry 3 Botanical symbolism 4 Encoding 5 Parametrisation 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Inline citations 7 2 Works cited 7 3 General references 8 External linksHistory EditSimilar shapes from antiquity Edit Peepal leaves were used in artistic depictions of the Indus Valley civilisation a heart shaped pendant originating from there has been discovered and is now exhibited in the National Museum of India 1 In the 5th 6th century BC the heart shape was used to represent the heart shaped fruit of the plant silphium 2 a plant possibly used as a contraceptive and an aphrodisiac 3 4 Silver coins from Cyrene of the 5th 6th century BC bear a similar design sometimes accompanied by a silphium plant and is understood to represent its seed or fruit 5 Since ancient times in Japan the heart symbol has been called Inome 猪目 meaning the eye of a wild boar and it has the meaning of warding off evil spirits The decorations are used to decorate Shinto shrines Buddhist temples castles and weapons 6 7 The oldest examples of this pattern are seen in some of the Japanese original tsuba sword guard of the style called toran gata tsuba lit inverted egg shaped tsuba that were attached to swords from the sixth to seventh centuries and part of the tsuba was hollowed out in the shape of a heart symbol 8 9 Earliest use Edit The combination of the heart shape and its use within the heart metaphor was developed in the end of the Middle Ages although the shape has been used in many ancient epigraphy monuments and texts With possible early examples or direct predecessors in the 13th to 14th century the familiar symbol of the heart representing love developed in the 15th century and became popular in Europe during the 16th 10 Before the 14th century the heart shape was not associated with the meaning of the heart metaphor The geometric shape itself is found in much earlier sources but in such instances does not depict a heart but typically foliage in examples from antiquity fig leaves and in medieval iconography and heraldry typically the leaves of ivy and of the water lily The first known depiction of a heart as a symbol of romantic love dates to the 1250s It occurs in a miniature decorating a capital S in a manuscript of the French Roman de la poire 11 In the miniature a kneeling lover or more precisely an allegory of the lover s sweet gaze or doux regard offers his heart to a damsel The heart here resembles a pine cone held upside down the point facing upward in accord with medieval anatomical descriptions However in this miniature what suggests a heart shape is only the result of a lover s finger superimposed on an object the full shape outline of the object is partly hidden and therefore unknown Moreover the French title of the manuscript that features the miniature translates into Novel Of The Pear in English Thus the heart shaped object would be a pear the conclusion that a pear represents a heart is dubious Opinions therefore differ over this being the first depiction of a heart as a symbol of romantic love 12 Giotto in his 1305 painting in the Scrovegni Chapel Padua shows an allegory of charity caritas handing her heart to Jesus Christ This heart is also depicted in the pine cone shape based on anatomical descriptions of the day still held upside down Giotto s painting exerted considerable influence on later painters and the motive of Caritas offering a heart is shown by Taddeo Gaddi in Santa Croce by Andrea Pisano on the bronze door of the south porch of the Florence Baptistery c 1337 by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in the Palazzo Publico in Siena c 1340 and by Andrea da Firenze in Santa Maria Novella in Florence c 1365 The convention of showing the heart point upward switches in the late 14th century and becomes rare in the first half of the 15th century 12 The scalloped shape of the now familiar heart symbol with a dent in its base arises in the early 14th century at first only lightly dented as in the miniatures in Francesco da Barberino s Documenti d amore before 1320 A slightly later example with a more pronounced dent is found in a manuscript from the Cistercian monastery in Brussels 13 The convention of showing a dent at the base of the heart thus spread at about the same time as the convention of showing the heart with its point downward 14 The modern indented red heart has been used on playing cards since the late 15th century 15 Various hypotheses attempted to connect the heart shape as it evolved in the Late Middle Ages with instances of the geometric shape in antiquity 16 Such theories are modern proposed from the 1960s onward and they remain speculative as no continuity between the supposed ancient predecessors and the late medieval tradition can be shown Specific suggestions include the shape of the seed of the silphium plant used in ancient times as an herbal contraceptive 16 17 and stylized depictions of features of the human female body such as the female s breasts buttocks pubic mound or spread vulva 18 The earliest known possible visual depiction of a heart symbol as a lover hands his heart to the beloved lady in a manuscript of the Roman de la poire 13th century Giotto s allegory of charity handing her heart to Jesus Christ c 1305 Charity on the south doors of the Florence Baptistery c 1336 Renaissance and early modern Edit A heart symbol from the Achaemenid period in the Louvre Museum made of ivory 19 A sasanian style textile from first century AH that shows two winged horses 20 21 with one heart symbol top of them 22 Heart shapes can be seen on various stucco reliefs and wall panels excavated from the ruins of Ctesiphon the Persian capital c 90 BC 637 AD 23 24 25 The Luther rose was the seal that was designed for Martin Luther at the behest of Prince John Frederick in 1530 while Luther was staying at the Coburg Fortress during the Diet of Augsburg Luther wrote an explanation of the symbol to Lazarus Spengler a black cross in a heart which retains its natural color so that I myself would be reminded that faith in the Crucified saves us For one who believes from the heart will be justified Romans 10 10 26 unreliable source The aorta remains visible as a protrusion at the top centered between the two chambers indicated in the symbol in some depictions of the Sacred Heart well into the 18th century and is partly still shown today although mostly obscured by elements such as a crown flames rays or a cross but the hearts suit did not have this element since the 15th century The chanson Belle Bonne Sage by Baude Cordier written in the shape of a heart in the Chantilly Codex This is one of two dedicatory pieces placed at the beginning of the older late 14th century corpus probably to replace the original first fascicle which is missing Early depiction of the Heart of Jesus in the context of the Five Wounds the wounded heart here depicting Christ s wound inflicted by the Lance of Longinus in a 15th century manuscript 27 1486 depiction of the Five Wounds Miniature from the Petit Livre d Amour c 1500 showing the author Pierre Sala fr depositing his heart in a marguerite flower symbolizing his mistress who was called Marguerite Also worth mentioning is the miniature on fol 13r 28 showing two women catching winged hearts in a net The Luther rose 1706 print after the 1530 design Hearts suit in a 1540s German deck of playing cards The Danish Heart Book a heart shaped manuscript of love ballads from the 1550s Augustine of Hippo holding a heart in his hand which is set alight by a ray emanating from divine Truth Veritas painting by Philippe de Champaigne c 1650 Allegorical painting of the Sacred Heart of Jesus The central heart radiates hearts gathered up by Putti By Robert la Longe c 1705 Leaden heart of Raesfeld chapel funerary casket containing the heart of Christoph Otto von Velen d 1733 18th century depiction of the Sacred Heart from the vision of Marguerite Marie Alacoque d 1690 The heart is both heart shaped and drawn anatomically correct with both the aorta and the pulmonary artery visible with the crucifix placed inside the aorta Another anatomically correct Sacred Heart painted in c 1770 by Jose de Paez Modern Edit Since the 19th century the symbol has often been used on Valentine s Day cards candy boxes and similar popular culture artifacts as a symbol of romantic love The use of the heart symbol as a logograph for the English verb to love derives from the use in I NY introduced in 1977 29 Heart symbols are frequently used to symbolize health or lives in video games Super Mario Bros 2 1987 1988 had a life bar composed of hexagons but in 1990s remakes of these games the hexagons were replaced by heart shapes the Castlevania franchise being a notable exception where the hearts are ammunition for the secondary weapons instead of representing health Since the 1990s the heart symbol has also been used as an ideogram indicating health outside of the video gaming context e g its use by restaurants to indicate heart healthy nutrient content claim e g low in cholesterol A copyrighted heart check symbol to indicate heart healthy food was introduced by the American Heart Association in 1995 30 A heart shaped Map of Woman s Heart 1830s Two burning hearts coloured pink illustration on a Victorian era Valentine s Day card A Vinegar Valentine card from the 1870s with a red heart symbol pierced by six arrows The traditional heart shape appears on a 1910 Valentine s Day card Sheet music cover of Look in His Eyes from the musical Have a Heart 1913 Magazine advertisement for the silent film The Orderly 1921 Wedding rings of a groom and bride with shadow in the form of heart symbolic of love Heraldry Edit Heart field or heart shield are terms for an inescutcheon placed en surtout Coat of arms of the Principality of Luneburg originating with William of Winchester Lord of Luneburg d 1213 who married Helena daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark and therefore adopted the Danish tincture to the arms of his father Henry the Lion 31 A heart pictured in the coat of arms of the Laukaa municipalityThe earliest heart shaped charges in heraldry appear in the 12th century the hearts in the coat of arms of Denmark go back to the royal banner of the kings of Denmark in turn based on a seal used as early as the 1190s However while the charges are clearly heart shaped they did not depict hearts in origin or symbolize any idea related to love Instead they are assumed to have depicted the leaves of the water lily Early heraldic heart shaped charges depicting the leaves of water lilies are found in various other designs related to territories close to rivers or a coastline e g Flags of Frisia Inverted heart symbols have been used in heraldry as stylized testicles coglioni in Italian as in the canting arms of the Colleoni family of Milan 32 A seal attributed to William Lord of Douglas of 1333 shows a heart shape identified as the heart of Robert the Bruce The authenticity of this seal is very questionable 33 i e it could possibly date to the late 14th or even the 15th century 34 Heraldic charges actually representing hearts became more common in the early modern period with the Sacred Heart depicted in ecclesiastical heraldry and hearts representing love appearing in bourgeois coats of arms Hearts also later became popular elements in municipal coats of arms Botanical symbolism EditMain article Silphium antiquity There has been some conjecture regarding the link between the traditional heart symbol and images of the fruit of silphium a probably extinct plant known to classical antiquity and belonging to the genus Ferula used as a condiment and medicine the medicinal properties including contraceptive and abortifacient activity linking the plant to sexuality and love 35 Silver coins from the ancient Libya of the 6th to 5th centuries BC bear images strongly reminiscent of the heart symbol sometimes accompanied by images of the silphium plant 36 37 The related Ferula species asafoetida which was actually used as an inferior substitute for silphium is regarded as an aphrodisiac in Tibet and India suggesting yet a third amatory association relating to silphium 38 Ancient silver coin from Cyrene Libya depicting the heart shaped seed actually fruit of silphium Example of a heart shaped mericarp fruit in a plant Heracleum sphondylium belonging like the unidentified silphium to the parsley family Apiaceae Ferula assa foetida a species of giant fennel belonging to the same genus as the ancient silphium and regarded as having similar properties while being an inferior substitute for the plant Ferula tingitana a possible identity for silphium Encoding EditA common emoticon for the heart is lt 3 In Unicode several heart symbols are available in text format Glyph Description HTML code Alt codes U 2766 FLORAL HEART amp x2766 U 2767 ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET amp x2767 U 2619 REVERSED ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET amp x2619 U 2661 WHITE HEART SUIT amp x2661 or amp 9825 U 2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in device default representation amp x2665 or amp 9829 or amp hearts Alt 3 U 2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in explicit plaintext representation amp x2665 amp xfe0e U 2665 BLACK HEART SUIT in explicit emoji representation amp x2665 amp xfe0f U 2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in device default representation amp x2764 or amp 10084 U 2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in explicit plaintext representation amp x2764 amp xfe0e U 2764 HEAVY BLACK HEART in explicit emoji representation amp x2764 amp xfe0f U 2765 ROTATED HEAVY BLACK HEART BULLET amp x2765 or amp 10085 U 2763 HEAVY HEART EXCLAMATION MARK ORNAMENT amp x2763 or amp 10083 And from the Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs and Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs ranges associated with emoji Glyph Description HTML code U 1F394 HEART WITH TIP ON THE LEFT amp x1f394 U 1F491 COUPLE WITH HEART amp x1f491 U 1F492 WEDDING amp x1f492 U 1F493 BEATING HEART amp x1f493 U 1F494 BROKEN HEART amp x1f494 U 1F495 TWO HEARTS amp x1f495 U 1F496 SPARKLING HEART amp x1f496 U 1F497 GROWING HEART amp x1f497 U 1F498 HEART WITH ARROW amp x1f498 U 1F499 BLUE HEART amp x1f499 U 1F49A GREEN HEART amp x1f49a U 1F49B YELLOW HEART amp x1f49b Glyph Description HTML code U 1F49C PURPLE HEART amp x1f49c U 1F49D HEART WITH RIBBON amp x1f49d U 1F49E REVOLVING HEARTS amp x1f49e U 1F49F HEART DECORATION amp x1f49f U 1F5A4 BLACK HEART amp x1f5a4 U 1F90D WHITE HEART amp x1f90d U 1F90E BROWN HEART amp x1f90e U 1F9E1 ORANGE HEART amp x1f9e1 U 1FA75 LIGHT BLUE HEART amp x1fa75 U 1FA76 GREY HEART amp x1fa76 U 1FA77 PINK HEART amp x1fa77 In Code page 437 the original character set of the IBM PC the value of 3 hexadecimal 03 represents the heart symbol This value is shared with the non printing ETX control character which overrides the glyph in many contexts Parametrisation EditA number of parametrisations of approximately heart shaped curves have been described The best known of these is the cardioid which is an epicycloid with one cusp 39 though as the cardioid lacks the point it may be seen as a stylized water lily leaf a so called seeblatt rather than a heart Other curves such as the implicit curve x2 y2 1 3 x2y3 0 may produce better approximations of the heart shape 40 A cardioid generated by a rolling circle animated Implicit heart curve x2 y2 1 3 x2y3 0 Parametric plot of the curve 16 sin 3 t 13 cos t 5 cos 2 t 2 cos 3 t cos 4 t displaystyle textstyle binom 16 sin scriptscriptstyle 3 t 13 cos t 5 cos 2t 2 cos 3t cos 4t Implicit heart surface Simple form made from two perpendicular lines and two circular arcs Heart curve on TI 89 graphing calculator Parametric equation of heart curve on TI 89 graphing calculatorSee also EditCordata Cordatum and Cordatus Latin adjectives meaning heart shaped Hand heart Hand gesture Heart in hand Symbol of charity Passion emotion or passionate love Seeblatt a symbol of a water lily leaf that resembles a heartReferences EditInline citations Edit Pendant unknown Google Arts amp Culture Retrieved 2020 10 21 Favorito E N Baty K February 1995 The Silphium Connection Celator 9 2 6 8 Did the ancient Romans use a natural herb for birth control The Straight Dope October 13 2006 Zaria Gorvett 2017 The mystery of the lost Roman herb BBC Buttrey T V Spring Summer 1992 The Coins and the Cult PDF Expedition 34 1 2 59 66 幸せの猪目 いのめ in Japanese Hase dera Archived from the original on 30 January 2021 お寺にハートマーク in Japanese Fukagawa Fudoudou Archived from the original on 30 April 2022 猪目 いのめ in Japanese weblio Archived from the original on 8 May 2021 倒卵形鐔 とうらんがたつば in Japanese weblio Archived from the original on 26 October 2017 Martin Kemp 2011 Christ to Coke How Image Becomes Icon 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199581115 pp 368 p 96 99 National Library FR MS 2086 plate 12 a b Vinken 2001 MS 4459 70 fol 192v Royal Library of Belgium Vinken 2001 The change from the spherical to the scalloped form of the heart base happened more or less in train with the differing way in which the heart was held and has dominated visual representations of the heart ever since A Brief History of Playing Cardes by Charles Knutson Renaissance Magazine 2001 Gamester article renaissance magazine Archived from the original on 2010 12 20 Retrieved 2013 05 27 a b The Shape of My Heart Where did the ubiquitous Valentine s symbol come from by Keelin McDonell Slate com Tuesday Feb 13 2007 Benedictus Luke 12 February 2006 Sowing the seeds of love The Age Proposed by Gloria Steinem in the 1998 introduction to the Vagina Monologues online copy permanent dead link For example the shape we call a heart whose symmetry resembles the vulva far more than the asymmetry of the organ that shares its name is probably a residual female genital symbol It was reduced from power to romance by centuries of male dominance based on an earlier suggestion by Tanzer 1969 that the shape was used as a symbol indicating brothels in ancient Pompeii Tanzer 1969 The Common People of Pompeii A study of the graffiti With illustrations and a map Incrustation de meuble 539 Daryaee Touraj January 2022 اسب های بالدار Bukhara 147 Plate with youths and winged horses Sasanian Sasanian The Metropolitan Museum of Art Textile Gallery IAMM Roundel with radiating palmettes n d Retrieved April 7 2015 from http metmuseum org exhibitions view exhibitionId 60853040 AE7E 4162 8FA7 525505D6B633 amp oid 322631 Fragments of stucco roundels in situ Taq i Kisra south building Ctesiphon Iraq 1931 32 n d Retrieved April 7 2015 from http www metmuseum org met around the world images wb large wb Ctesiphon2 jpg Wall panel with a guinea fowl Sasanian 32 150 13 In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 http www metmuseum org toah works of art 32 150 13 March 2012 gamesmuseum uwaterloo ca Archived 2006 10 10 at the Wayback Machine i p c s org Archived copy Archived from the original on 2013 09 27 Retrieved 2013 03 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link antiquemapsandprints com obviously more research is needed here Cologne Mn Kn 28 1181 fol 116 fol 13r Subsequently the heart symbol became a shorthand for enthusiasm for everything from software to Yorkshire terriers It was a stamp that validated lifestyles People could their grandchildren or line dancing or Buddha Stephen Amidon Thomas Amidon The Sublime Engine A Biography of the Human Heart 2011 p 193 the heart check mark that began to appear on a wide array of food packaging in 1995 The symbol consists of a heart branded with a bold efficient check mark It is copyrighted by the American Heart Association AHA which licenses it for a nominal fee to companies whose products meet the organization s criteria for saturated fat and cholesterol content Stephen Amidon Thomas Amidon The Sublime Engine A Biography of the Human Heart 2011 p 193 C Weyers in Stengel ed Archiv fur Diplomatik Schriftgeschichte Siegel und Wappenkunde Volume 54 2008 p 100 Woodward John and George Burnett 1969 Woodward s a treatise on heraldry British and foreign page 203 Originally published 1892 Edinburgh W amp A B Johnson ISBN 0 7153 4464 1 LCCN 02 20303 McAndrew Scotland s Historic Heraldry 2006 p 141 McAndrew 2006 p 213 Favorito E N Baty K February 1995 The Silphium Connection Celator 9 2 6 8 T V Buttrey The Coins and the Cult Expedition magazine vol 34 Nos 1 2 Special Issue Gifts to the Goddesses Cyrene s Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone Spring Summer 1992 Koerper H Kolls A L 1999 The silphium motif adorning ancient libyan coinage Marketing a medicinal plant Economic Botany 53 2 133 143 doi 10 1007 BF02866492 JSTOR 4256173 S2CID 32144481 Aphrodisiac Asafoetida Ferula asa foetida Weisstein Eric W Cardioid from MathWorld Eric W Weisstein Heart Curve From MathWorld Works cited Edit Martin Kemp The Heart in Christ to Coke How Image Becomes Icon Oxford University Press 2011 81 113 P J Vinken 2000 The Shape of the Heart A Contribution to the Iconology of the Heart illustrated ed Elsevier Health Sciences ISBN 978 0 444 82987 0General references Edit Vinken P 2001 How the heart was held in medieval art The Lancet 358 9299 2155 2157 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 01 07224 5 PMID 11784647 S2CID 37917232External links EditHeart symbol at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heart symbol amp oldid 1171859466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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