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Heraldry

Webpages concerning "Heraldry"

A site devoted to heraldry (the study of coats of arms) of all forms and in all places. Related topics: titles, nobility, knighthood, national emblems, royalty
http://www.heraldica.org/
Keywords:
heraldry, heraldic, coat of arms, blazon, crest, titles, nobility, knighthood, knight, national emblems, royalty, araldica, stemma, Wappen, Wappenkunde, Heraldik, heraldica, blason, armoiries, heraldique

http://www.heraldica.org/

Heraldic Research on the Internet. Related topics: Heraldic research, charges, dictionary of heraldry, coats of arms, surnames, genealogy, clip art.
http://digiserve.com/heraldry/
Keywords:
heraldry, heraldic, coat of arms, coats of arms, blazon, crest, titles, nobility, knighthood, knight, national emblems, heraldic research, family crest, heraldic dictionary, clip art, wappen, rietstap, burke, armor, siebmacher, charge, rampant, passant, sejant, courant, segreant, guardant, combatant, salient, statant, display, naiant, hauriant, couped, arms, badges, mottoes, cadency, ...

http://digiserve.com/heraldry/

This is the official web site of The American Academy for the Promotion of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences. The aim of the Academy is to provide a scholarly avenue through which individuals, here and abroad, may meet and discuss genealogical and heraldic interests and provide papers, books and research on the historical and philosophical aspects of the aforementioned topics.
http://users.panola.com/AAGHS/index.html
Keywords:
American, academy, genealogy, heraldry, research

http://users.panola.com/AAGHS/index.html

Online heraldic drawing page using my Puncher Heraldry Program software
http://www.puncher.co.uk/gen_herald.php
Keywords:
heraldry symbol, heraldic heraldry, family heraldry, heraldic designs, Puncher Heraldry Program, emblazon drawing, heraldry software, heraldic shield, coat of arms, blazon, escutcheon, emblazoning

http://www.puncher.co.uk/gen_herald.php

Coat of arms website
http://www.coatofarms.org/
Keywords:
Coat of arms

http://www.coatofarms.org/

early coat of arms armory, armorial de blasons anciens
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/earlyblazon/hompage.htm
Keywords:
coat of arms, armoiries, blazon, blazons, blason, blasons, armorial, armory, heraldry, héraldique, arms, armes, crusade, crusades, croisade, croisades, early blazon, early blazons, early, coat, of, arms, blasons anciens, armoiries anciennes, shield of arms, albigeois, albigeoise, albigensian, cathar, cathars, cathare, cathares

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/earlyblazon/hompage.htm

Historic and scientifically correct explanations of the Romanian coats of arms from the oldest times to the present, with pictures
http://www.geocities.com/romaniancoins/coat.html
Keywords:
coat, arms, history, Romania, Middle Age, Ancient, fortress, Roman, Moldova, Empire, Moldavia, Transylvania, Transilvania, Transylvannia, Transilvannia, Walachia, Wallachia, Basarabia, Bucovina, principality, Cuza, Carol, independence, aurochs, wisent, bison, bonasus, vulture, aquila, Dragos, coat of arms, Tartar, Tartarian, Europe

http://www.geocities.com/romaniancoins/coat.html

Introduction to the May-August 2003 Baronage Magazine, primarily associated with heraldry, and including history, genealogy, constitutional politics, books, cinema, films, warfare, chivalry, television and the scam merchants selling fraudulent history, coats of arms, crests and titles of nobility. Features also The Feudal Herald Newsletter.
http://www.baronage.co.uk/
Keywords:
Heraldry, Coats of Arms, Clans, Crests, Badges, Regency, Regency game, Regency boardgame, Flags, Peerage, Politics, Scotland, United Kingdom, Parliament, European Union, Constitution, House of Lords, scams, coats, of, arms, for, sale, Hall of Names, House of Names, Historical Research Center, The Feudal Herald, Chivalry, Heraldic art, Titles, Titles for sale, Feudal titles, Noble titles, Lords, ...

http://www.baronage.co.uk/

Displays the full achievement of arms, blazon, flags, and other heraldic devices of the Britton-Beitels and their extended family.
http://www.angelfire.com/alt/family_arms/
Keywords:
Heraldry, Coat of Arms, Britton, Beitel, Britton-Beitel, Majeska, von Witt, Bruce Beitel, Catherine Beitel, Cathy Beitel, Catherine Britton, David Duffield, Dave Duffiled, Michael Beitel, Mike Beitel, Timothy Beitel, Tim Beitel, John Beitel, Jack Beitel, Matthew Betiel, Matt Beitel, Morganatic, Morganatic Alliance, Armorial Achievement, Achievement of Arms, Arms, Crest, Wampum, ...

http://www.angelfire.com/alt/family_arms/

information on civic heraldry in england and wales both contemporary and obsolete
http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk/
Keywords:
heraldry, arms, civic, borough, district, city, county, crest

http://www.civicheraldry.co.uk/

Arms of Elizabethan Peers
http://renaissance.dm.net/heraldry/index.html
Keywords:
historical, heraldry, arms, armor, crest, history, , elizabethan, renaissance, recreation

http://renaissance.dm.net/heraldry/index.html

Introducing Japanese famiy crest, so-called Kamon. Well designed!, coolest!! and awesom !!! Such ka-mons are here. We make original Kamon T-shirt only for you.
http://www.familyemblem.com/
Keywords:
Introducing, Japanese, family, crest, and, printed, Japanese, family, crest, on, a, T-shirt., Surname, Last name, Name, Family Names, Histories, Ancestry, Heraldry, Family Crest, Coat Of Arms, Heraldic, Clans, Arts, Apparel, Collectibles, Manufactures, Genealogy, Fashion, History, T-shirt, Shopping

http://www.familyemblem.com/

Clackson Heraldry Pages - details of the Clackson armorial bearings
http://www.clackson.com/heraldry
Keywords:
Clackson, Stephen, Gregory, Ute, Doctor, Aelfleda, Ælfleda, Wulfric, Dunstan, Frideswide, heraldry, heraldic, armorial, shield, arms, coat of arms, crest, badge, achievement, motto, mantling, lambrequin, wreath, helm, helmet, 1998, 2001, Clackson banner, tartan

http://www.clackson.com/heraldry

The heraldry (coats of arms and crests) of the provinces and the cities of Canada.
http://www.mad-alchemy.com/heraldry/
Keywords:
Canadian, coats, of, arms, provincial armourial bearings, civic emblem, Canada, heraldry, crests, flag, maple leaf, heraldic, symbols, nationalist

http://www.mad-alchemy.com/heraldry/

http://www.gg.ca/heraldry/index_e.asp

http://www.gg.ca/heraldry/index_e.asp

Visit New Advent for the Summa Theologica, Church Fathers, Catholic Encyclopedia and more.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07243a.htm

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07243a.htm

A Site devoted to North American Heraldry. Le site de l'héraldique nord-américaine.
http://pages.infinit.net/cerame/heraldicamerica/
Keywords:
America, Canada, Quebec, arms, seals, bookplates, armory, history, Amérique, Québec, héraldique, armoiries, sceaux, armorial, histoire

http://pages.infinit.net/cerame/heraldicamerica/

The symbols of Irish Heraldry explained,Irish surnames explained,Irish Genealogy,Irish coats of arms,How to start the search for your Irish roots,family crests,genealogy,Irish roots,heritage,Ireland,ancestry,decendants
http://www.irishsurnames.com/heraldiccharges.htm
Keywords:
Heraldry symbols, Irish surnames explained, Irish Genealogy, Irish, coats, of, arms, How, to, start, the, search, for, your, Irish, roots, family crests, genealogy, Irish roots, heritage, Ireland, ancestry, decendants

http://www.irishsurnames.com/heraldiccharges.htm

http://digiserve.com/heraldry/pimbley.htm

http://digiserve.com/heraldry/pimbley.htm

http://www.wawrzak.org/

http://www.wawrzak.org/

http://rustaveli.tripod.com/heraldry/index.html

http://rustaveli.tripod.com/heraldry/index.html

http://www.briantimms.com/

http://www.briantimms.com/

http://www.users.qwest.net/~hrellis/AutoHeraldry.htm

http://www.users.qwest.net/~hrellis/AutoHeraldry.htm

http://www.panix.com/~wlinden/heraldry.shtml

http://www.panix.com/~wlinden/heraldry.shtml

http://www.ngw.nl/indexgb.htm

http://www.ngw.nl/indexgb.htm

http://jgrimbert.free.fr/herald/rh/

http://jgrimbert.free.fr/herald/rh/

http://www.geocities.com/noelcox/Law_of_Arms.htm

http://www.geocities.com/noelcox/Law_of_Arms.htm

http://www.qmfound.com/heraldry.htm

http://www.qmfound.com/heraldry.htm

http://pages.ripco.net/~clevin/lexarm.html

http://pages.ripco.net/~clevin/lexarm.html

http://www.sog.org.uk/leaflets/arms.html

http://www.sog.org.uk/leaflets/arms.html

http://www.geocities.com/pheon.geo/heraldry.htm

http://www.geocities.com/pheon.geo/heraldry.htm

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/4369/Bookplate/journal.htm

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/4369/Bookplate/journal.htm

http://www.heraldica.org/faqs/heraldry.faq

http://www.heraldica.org/faqs/heraldry.faq

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Wikipedia-Article "Heraldry"

Heraldry is the science and art of describing coats-of-arms (also referred to as "armorial bearings" or simply as "arms"). Its origins lie in the need to distinguish participants in battles or jousts and to describe the various devices they carried or painted on their shields.

In the late middle ages and renaissance, heraldry became a highly developed discipline, regulated by professional heralds, who used the language of heraldry to "blazon" a coat of arms. (Since arms are formally described by words, the painter, engraver, or stonecarver using a coat of arms in his work has considerable stylistic license.) As its use in jousts became obsolete, arms remained popular for visually identifying a person in other ways — impressed in sealing wax on official documents, engraved on a family tomb, and so forth. The descent of arms was and remains strictly regulated by inheritence; only certain actual descendents of a particular armigerous (arm-bearing) person are entitled to his arms or a differenced version of them — hence popular associations of a coat of arms with all bearers of a surname are based on a misconception. Heraldry is mostly a hobby today; but in some countries it remains regulated by heralds and the assumption of another's arms is illegal.

The word "crest" is commonly used to refer to a coat-of-arms. However, in heraldry, a crest is just one component of a full or complete achievement of arms. The crest sits atop a helmet, which itself sits on the main and most recognizable part of the arms, the shield or escutcheon. Other common elements include supporters holding up the shield and a motto beneath. Crests can in fact be used on their own (this is particularly useful when there is insufficient space to display the entire coat-of-arms); but where the shield alone is used it should never be called a "crest."

Contents

Shield and lozenge

Traditionally, as women did not go to war, they would not have a shield. Instead, their coats-of-arms would be shown on a lozenge, usually a square standing on one of its corners. As women may now serve in the armed forces in a number of countries, some armigerous women prefer to use a shield anyway. A parallel usage for noncombatant clergymen could be found sometimes on the European continent, with the occasional placement of arms on a cartouche (an oval-shaped vehicle for their display). For more detail on the use of the lozenge (subject to certain rules) by women in the British heraldic tradition, see the separate article on the lozenge.

Very rarely and almost invariably in non-European contexts, such as the arms of Nunavut, the former Republic of Bophuthatswana and some Algerian civic heraldry of French colonial origin, specific shapes of shield are specified in the blazon (and the specific type of shield is sometimes followed to the extent, as in the arms of Gauteng, that structures in the shield (in that case "shield thongs") function as charges).

In rare instances the shield may be blazoned as being displayed on a cartouche, the tincture of which is then specified.

The arms of The Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven and the late Sir Denis Thatcher, Bt
The arms of Lady Thatcher The arms of Sir Denis Thatcher
A lozenge, the traditional shape of a woman's coat of arms A shield, traditionally used only by a man

Tinctures

Main article: Tincture

There are seven main tinctures, consisting of two metals (light tinctures) and five colours (dark tinctures), although there are a number of other rare tinctures. The names of the tinctures mainly come to us from French. The first rule of heraldry is the rule of tincture: metal must never be placed upon metal, nor colour upon colour, for the sake of contrast, and because this was technically difficult to do at the time. As any rule, this admits some exceptions, the most notable being the arms chosen by Godfrey of Bouillon when he was made king of Jerusalem, featuring five Or crosses potent on an Argent field (traditionally rendered "Argent, five crosses potent Or"); a blason that might have been modelled after the Arab technique of Damascus steel.

Table of the tinctures and furs
Tincture Heraldic name
Metals
Gold/Yellow Or *
Silver/White Argent
Colours
Blue Azure
Red Gules
Purple Purpure
Black Sable
Green Vert

* "Or" is usually spelled with a capital letter (Gules, a fess Or) so as not to confuse it with the conjunction "or."

Furs, such as ermine, ermines, or vair, are regular variations of the field that represent various types of actual fur. Any charge may be of a fur.

  • Ermine is in design a field argent, semé (see variations of the field) of ermine-spots sable, but is not so regarded; it is regarded as a plain tincture.
  • Ermines is the reverse of ermine – a field sable semé of ermine-spots argent.
  • There is also vair and its variants. Basic vair is a row of small items shaped like bells with straight edges. The bells on the next row down are placed with their bottoms facing the bottoms of the bells on the row above, and so forth down.

There also exists, though rarely, two "stains": tenny/tawny (orange) and brown.

Proper: Objects may also be depicted in their natural colours. In this case, they are described as "proper".

Blazon: Historically the custom in English blazon was to reduce redundancy by referring to a particular tincture only once in the blazon, using the locution "of the first" and 'of the second" etc. thereafter, but the College of Arms has moved away from this practice in recent years.

Divisions of the field

Main article: Divisions of the field

Division of the field

The field of a shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one tincture, as can the various charges. The divisions are named according to the ordinary that shares their shape. (It should be noticed that French heraldry takes a different approach in many cases than the one described in this article, as do the heraldries of Italy, Spain, and Sweden.)

Common partitions of the field are:

  • parted (or party) per fess (parted horizontally),
  • party per pale (parted vertically),
  • party per bend (diagonally from upper left to lower right),
  • party per bend sinister (diagonally from upper right to lower left)
  • party per saltire (diagonally both ways).
  • party per cross or quarterly (divided into four quarters)
  • party per chevron (after the manner of a chevron)
  • party per pall (diagonal divisions from upper left and upper right meeting vertical division)

Charges

Main article: Charge

Charges can be animals, objects or geometric constructs (ordinaries).

Common animals are lions, leopards, martlets, eagles, gryphons, fish, boars or dolphins. There are dragons and unicorns as well, but they are not nearly as common as most people suppose. Possibly the rarest animal in heraldry is found in the coat of arms of Maidstone, Kent, which bears an iguanodon rampant on the dexter side. An animal shown langue (with its tongue sticking out) denotes fierceness or a roar.

The default position of an animal is looking dexter. Animals are found in various different positions — a flying martlet is a martlet volant, a swimming dolphin is a dolphin naiant, and a walking lion is a lion passant. Other words for positions are rampant (on hind legs), salient (leaping), sejant (sitting) and gardant (looking at the viewer). There are humans as well, although they are unusual, like wild men or Saracens. If you show only the head of, say, a lion, cut off at the neck, it is a lion's head couped if the cut is straight, and erased if it looks as if the animal's head has been ripped off.

Common objects are escallops (shells), crosses, mullets (a conventional five-pointed star shape, as on the American flag, which in fact represent spurs), crescents, bugle-horns, water-bougets, gauntlets, and different kinds of trees, flowers, leaves, and other plants. Circles are generally called "roundels", but in England instead of being described a roundel vert, they have different names depending on colour: bezants if they are golden, plates if silver, torteaux if red, hurts if blue, pellets or ogresses if black, pommes if green, oranges if orange, and guzes if sanguine. A roundel that is barry wavy argent and azure is called a fountain. This over-specialisation is peculiar to English heraldry; in French heraldry, for example, metal roundels are bezants and all others (colours and furs) are tourteaux.

Special charges known as "differences" may distinguish otherwise similar blazons; these often indicate "cadency", or what number son owns the shield, to distinguish him from other sons and the father.

Ordinaries

Main article: Ordinary

Ordinaries (sometimes called "honourable ordinaries") are almost like partitions, but are handled like objects. Though there is much debate as to exactly which geometrical charges constitute ordinaries, certain ones are agreed on by everyone. A pale is a vertical charge starting from the top of the shield, ending at the bottom, and wide as a third of the shield's width. A fess is the same thing as a pale, only horizontal.

There are also bends, saltires, flaunches and crosses, as well as chiefs, piles and chevrons. The pall is a Y-shaped charge throughout the field, common to Scotland.

A chief is a fess situated in the upper third of the shield. It can be associated with the fillet, a quite narrow horizontal band running along the bottom of the chief, [1] although it can be difficult if not impossible sometimes to distinguish between a fillet and a chief fimbriated, as the fimbriation of a chief occurs only along the lower line.

Fimbriation is the narrow bordering of the outline of a charge, with is then said to be fimbrated or fimbriated; a "fimbriation containing six diagonal 'tics' radiating" occurs in the badge of the 25th Flying Training Squadron of the United States Air Force. [2] The term edged is sometimes used in a similar context. There is at least one example of a triple fimbriation.[3]) The fillet is sometimes inaccurately described as a diminutive of the chief, but the chief has no diminutive. It is important to note that a chief "enhanced" (which gives it a narrower appearance), as in the arms of Martin F. J. Matthews [4], is not a diminutive.

There are diminutives of ordinaries as well. The diminutives usually exist because ordinaries must be narrowed when there is more than one in a coat of arms.

The diminutive of the pale is the pallet and the diminutive of the fess is the bar. (The diminutive of the bar is the barrulet; barrulets are never borne singly. Bars are likewise rarely borne singly, though the arms of Scheffeld are amazingly blazoned as having one-and-a-half bars.[5])

The diminutive of the quarter is the canton, a square occupying, in theory, the upper left third of the shield. In theory a canton is never an original part of the shield, but some form of later addition, but this is not true in practice. Another charge can be completely hidden by the canton (sometimes, if the charge is not part of a predictable pattern of like charges laid out elsewhere on the shield, making it impossible to correctly blazon the shield); the charge so hidden is then called "absconded". When a shield contains both a fess and canton they are always shown in their theoretical size, and with no dividing line between them; as they appear to be one continuous thing, blazoning a shield with a fess and canton can be confusing for the novice. The canton can be borne sinister (unless blazoned "a canton sinister" the canton is dexter), but this rarely happens.

Any type of charge, but usually ordinaries and subordinaries, can be "voided"; without further description, this means that the charge has been "emptied" with a hole in the shape of the charge revealing the field behind it, and only a border has been left. It is possible, however, though highly unusual, that the voiding, the hole, is of a different tincture than the field behind the charge, which tincutre must then be specified; for example, "Argent, a mullet gules, voided or". It is also possible that the voiding is of a different shape than the voided charge, as in the arms of Newton Technical High School in South Africa: "Quarterly gules and sable; a lozenge or voided of a quatrefoil; at its centre a cog wheel argent; the whole within a border or".

Besides the shield

In addition to the shield, most coats-of-arms include a crest, placed above the shield, and a motto (see below), usually placed below it.

Other items may be added to the coat, such as a helmet (decorated with mantling) in a variety of meaningful postures and designs; supporters on either side of the shield and the compartment on which they usually stand; and a variety of medals, ribbons, mural crowns and other decorations. These items are often granted as special honours by the sovereign.

Other elements denoting the status of the bearer could be placed behind the shield. Those include anchors in saltire for admirals, batons for marshals etc. In ecclesiastic heraldry crosier are also used.

Coat of Arms Motto

A Coat of Arms motto is a phrase or collection of words intended to describe the motivation or intention of families with coats of arms. In heraldry, a motto is often depicted in a coat of arms, typically on a scroll under the arms, or else above it as in Scots heraldry. These mottos are traditionally in Latin or Romance languages, as well as in English or German.

Supporters and other additions

The coat-of-arms of Saskatchewan, with parts labelled
The coat-of-arms of Saskatchewan, with parts labelled

An armiger may be entitled, depending upon their rank to several other items.

  • Supporters: peers of the realm, senior members of British orders of knighthood and some corporate bodies have supporters on either side of the shield. Often these can have local significance (such as the Fisherman and the Tin miner granted to Cornwall County Council) or a historical link (such as the lion of England and unicorn of Scotland on the two variations of the Royal Arms in Great Britain).
  • A coronet of a design appropriate to a peer's rank would be placed on top of the shield.
  • Helm: all coats of arms may be displayed with a helm or helmet, which sits over the shield and carries the crest (see below). The form of the helmet may vary with the rank of the armiger.
  • Mantling or lambrequin is drapery tied to the helmet above the shield. It forms a backdrop for the shield.
  • The crest rests above coronet (if applicable) and helm, usually on a 'wreath' of twisted cloth in the two principal colours of the coat of arms. Often but not exclusively an animal, crests were used to identify a knight at the joust and were, therefore, at first, a sign of the superior rank expected of participants in medieval tournaments. Since Tudor times, however, crests have been granted with all English coats of arms. The City of Sunderland's crest is a wild boar, a remembrance of the parish of Hetton-le-Hole, which became part of the City in 1974. A woman does not display a crest (just as no woman would have fought in a medieval tournament). The crest rests on the helm, as it would have done in real life, or it may be illustrated directly above the shield without a helm (as in the illustration of the arms of Sir Denis Thatcher). His wife, Lady Thatcher, as a woman, displays no crest but her coronet as a baroness is placed above her arms.
  • Clergy, like women, and for the same reason (their non-participation in combat), traditionally do not display a helm or crest. Higher clergy, such as bishops or abbots, may display appropriate headwear (the mitre) above the shield, similar to the display by peers of their coronets. Lower clergy often use clerical hats with tassells appropriate to their seniority: this practice began in the Roman Catholic church but was subsequently adopted by some Anglican clergy. The Chief Herald of Ireland has granted Father William Richardson the crest A dexter hand couped at the wrist Gules holding a crown of thorns Proper., but this is often shown next to the shield, the only item above the shield being the historical tasselled hat of a priest.

Modern heraldry

Heraldry continues to flourish today. Institutions, companies, and members of the public may obtain officially recognized coats of arms from governmental heraldic authorities. This typically has the force of a registered trademark. The first recorded corporate coat of arms was granted to the Drapers' Company of the City of London in 1438 (see Coat of Arms of The Drapers Company). However, many users of modern "heraldic" designs do not register with heraldic authorities, and some designers do not follow the rules of heraldic design at all.

Some people who have interests in heraldry as a hobby participate in the Society for Creative Anachronism and other such medieval revivals, or in micronationalism. Many more people see heraldry as a part of their national, and even personal, heritage, as well as a manifestation of civic and national pride.

See also

External links

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Heraldry-generating software

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The Heraldry Series

Blazon | Cadency | Canting arms | Coat of arms | College of Arms | Herald

Badge | Crest | Compartment | Mantling | Mon | Quartering | Shield | Supporters

The Blazon Series

Charge | Divisions | Field | Lines | Ordinary | Tincture

Bend | Canton | Chevron | Chief | Cross | Fess | Flaunch | Pall | Pale | Saltire

National flags and coats of arms
Flags of sovereign states | Coats of arms of sovereign states
Flags of dependent territories | Flags of unrecognised sovereign states

Note

  1. One possible exception might be the arms of the University of Northern British Columbia.[6]

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