Heraldry is the profession, study, or art of
devising, granting, and blazoning
arms
and ruling on questions of rank or protocol, as exercised by an
officer of arms.
Heraldry
comes from
Anglo-Norman
herald, from the Germanic compound
*harja-waldaz,
"army commander". The word, in its most general sense, encompasses
all matters relating to the duties and responsibilities of
officers of arms. To most, though, heraldry
is the practice of designing, displaying, describing, and recording
coats of arms and
badges.
Historically, it has been variously described as "the shorthand of
history" and "the floral border in the garden of history." The
origins of heraldry lie in the need to distinguish participants in
combat when their faces were hidden by iron and steel
helmets. Eventually a formal system of rules
developed into ever more complex forms of heraldry.
The system of
blazoning arms that is used in
English-speaking countries today
was developed by the officers of arms in the
Middle Ages. This includes a stylized
description of the
escutcheon
(shield), the
crest, and, if
present,
supporters,
mottoes, and other insignia. Certain rules apply, such
as the
Rule of tincture. A thorough
understanding of these rules is a key to the art of heraldry. The
rules and terminology differ from country to country; indeed
several national styles had developed by the end of the
Middle Ages, but there are some aspects that
carry over internationally.
Though heraldry is nearly 900 years old, it is still very much in
use. Many cities and towns in
Europe and
around the world still make use of arms. Personal heraldry, both
legally protected and lawfully assumed, has continued to be used
around the world. Heraldic societies exist to promote education and
understanding about the subject.
Origins and history
As early as
predynastic Egypt, an
emblem known as a
serekh was used to
indicate the extent of influence of a particular regime, sometimes
carved on ivory labels attached to trade goods, but also used to
identify military allegiances and in a variety of other ways. It
led to the development of the earliest
hieroglyphs. This practice seems to
have grown out of the use of animal mascots, whose pelts or bodies
were literally affixed to staves or standards, as depicted on the
earliest
cosmetic palettes of the
period. Some of the oldest
serekhs consist of a striped or
cross-hatched box, representing a palace or city, with a
crane,
scorpion, or other
animal drawn standing on top. Before long, the Horus-
falcon became the norm as the animal on top, with the
individual Pharaoh's symbol usually appearing in the box beneath
the falcon, and above the stripes representing the palace.
Ancient warriors often decorated their shields with patterns and
mythological motifs. These symbols could be used to identify the
warriors when their faces were obscured by helmets. Army units of
the
Roman Empire were identified by the
distinctive markings on their shields. These were not heraldic in
the medieval and modern sense, as they were associated with units,
not individuals or families.
At the time of the
Norman
conquest of England, heraldry in its essential sense of an
inheritable emblem had not yet been developed. The
knights in the
Bayeux Tapestry carry shields, but there
appears to have been no system of
hereditary coats of
arms. The seeds of heraldic structure in personal
identification can be detected in the account in a contemporary
chronicle of
Henry I of England,
on the occasion of his knighting his son-in-law
Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou, in
1127. He placed to hang around his neck a shield painted with
golden lions. The funerary enamel of Geoffrey (died 1151), dressed
in blue and gold and bearing his
blue shield
emblazoned with
gold lions is the
first recorded depiction of a coat of arms.
By the middle of the 12th century, coats of arms were being
inherited by the children of
armigers
(persons entitled to use a coat of arms) across Europe.
Between
1135 and 1155, seals representing the generalized figure of the
owner attest to the general adoption of heraldic devices in
England
, France
, Germany
, Spain
, and
Italy
. By the end of the century, heraldry appears
as the sole device on seals.
In England
, the
practice of using marks of cadency arose to
distinguish one son from another; it was institutionalized and
standardized by John Writhe in the early
15th century.
In the late
Middle Ages and the
Renaissance, heraldry became a highly developed
discipline, regulated by professional officers of arms. As its use
in
jousting became obsolete, coats of arms
remained popular for visually identifying a person in other ways —
impressed in
sealing wax on documents,
carved on family tombs, and flown as a banner on country homes. The
first work of
heraldic jurisprudence,
De Insigniis et Armiis, was written in the 1350s by
Bartolus de Saxoferrato, a
professor of law at the
University
of Padua.
From the beginning of heraldry, coats of arms have been executed in
a wide variety of media, including on paper, painted wood,
embroidery,
enamel, stonework and
stained glass. For the purpose of quick
identification in all of these, heraldry distinguishes only seven
basic
colors and makes no fine
distinctions in the precise size or placement of
charges on the
field. Coats of arms and their accessories
are described in a concise
jargon called
blazon. This technical description
of a coat of arms is the standard that is adhered to no matter what
artistic interpretations may be made in a particular depiction of
the arms.
The specific meaning of each element of a coat of arms is
subjective. Though the original armiger may have placed particular
meaning on a charge, these meanings are not necessarily retained
from generation to generation. Unless
canting arms incorporate an obvious pun on the
bearer's name, it may difficult to find meaning in them.
As changes in military technology and tactics made
plate armour obsolete, heraldry became detached
from its original function. This brought about the development of
"paper heraldry" under the Tudors. Designs and shields became more
elaborate at the expense of clarity. During the 19th century,
especially in Germany, many coats of arms were designed to depict a
natural landscape, including several
charge tinctured "proper" (
i.e. the
way they appear in nature). This form has been termed "Landscape
heraldry". The 20th century's taste for stark iconic emblems made
the simple styles of early heraldry fashionable again.
The rules of heraldry
Shield and lozenge
The focus of modern heraldry is the armorial achievement, or the
coat of arms, the central element of
which is the
escutcheon or
shield. In general, the shape of the shield employed in a coat of
arms is irrelevant, because the fashion for the shield-shapes
employed in heraldic art has evolved through the centuries.
Sometimes a blazon specifies a particular shape of shield.
These
specifications mostly occur in non-European contexts — such as the
coat of arms of Nunavut and
the former Republic of
Bophuthatswana, with North Dakota providing an even
more unusual example, while the State of Connecticut
specifies a "rococo" shield —
but not completely, as the Scottish Public Register records an
escutcheon of oval form for the Lanarkshire Master Plumbers' and
Domestic Engineers' (Employers') Association, and a shield of
square form for the Anglo Leasing organisation.
Traditionally, as women did not go to war, they did not bear a
shield. Instead, women's coats of arms were shown on a
lozenge—a
rhombus
standing on one of its acute corners or a cartouche. This continues
true in much of the world, though some heraldic authorities, such
as Scotland's, with its ovals for women's arms, make exceptions. In
Canada, the restriction against women's bearing arms on a shield
was eliminated. In Scotland and Ireland, women may, under certain
circumstances, be permitted to display their arms on a shield.
Non-combatant
clergy also have used the
lozenge and the
cartouche – an
oval – for their display.
Tinctures
Tinctures are the colors, metals and furs used in heraldry, though
the depiction of charges in their natural colors or "proper" are
also regarded as tinctures, the latter distinct from any color such
a depiction might approximate. Since heraldry is essentially a
system of identification, the most important convention of heraldry
is the
rule of tincture. To provide
for contrast and visibility, metals (generally lighter tinctures)
must never be placed on metals, and colors (generally darker
tinctures) must never be placed on colors. Where a
charge overlies a partition of the field,
the rule does not apply. There are other exceptions - the most
famous being the arms of the
kingdom of Jerusalem, consisting of
gold crosses on white.
The names used in English blazon for the colors and metals come
mainly from
French and include
Or (gold),
argent (white),
azure (blue),
gules
(red),
sable (black),
vert (green), and
purpure (purple). A number of other colors –
including
bleu-celeste, sanguine, tenné and
murrey – are occasionally found, typically for special
purposes.
Certain patterns called "furs" can appear in a coat of arms, though
they are (rather arbitrarily) defined as tinctures, not patterns.
The two common furs are
ermine and
vair. Ermine represents the winter coat of the
stoat, which is white with a black tail. Vair
represents a kind of squirrel with a blue-gray back and white
belly. Sewn together, it forms a pattern of alternating blue and
white shapes.
Heraldic charges can be displayed in their natural colors. Many
natural items such as plants and animals are described as
proper in this case. Proper charges are very frequent as
crests and supporters. Overuse of the tincture "proper" is viewed
as decadent or bad practice.
Variations of the field
The
field of a shield, or less
often a charge or crest, is sometimes made up of a pattern of
colors, or
variation. A pattern of horizontal (barwise)
stripes, for example, is called
barry, while a pattern of
vertical (palewise) stripes is called
paly. A pattern of
diagonal stripes may be called
bendy or
bendy
sinister, depending on the direction of the stripes. Other
variations include
chevrony,
gyronny and
chequy. For further variations, these are sometimes
combined to produce patterns of
barry-bendy,
paly-bendy,
lozengy and
fusilly. Semés,
or patterns of repeated charges, are also considered variations of
the field. The
Rule of tincture
applies to all semés and variations of the field.
Divisions of the field

Ordinaries.
The
field of a
shield in heraldry can be divided into more than one
tincture, as can the various
heraldic charges. Many coats of
arms consist simply of a division of the field into two contrasting
tinctures. Since these are considered divisions of a shield the
rule of tincture can be ignored. For example, a shield divided
azure and gules would be perfectly acceptable. A line of partition
may be straight or it may be varied. The variations of partition
lines can be wavy, indented, embattled, engrailed,
nebuly, or made into myriad other forms; see
Line .
Ordinaries
In the early days of heraldry, very simple bold rectilinear shapes
were painted on shields. These could be easily recognized at a long
distance and could be easily remembered. They therefore served the
main purpose of heraldry—identification. As more complicated
shields came into use, these bold shapes were set apart in a
separate class as the "honorable ordinaries." They act as charges
and are always written first in
blazon.
Unless otherwise specified they extend to the edges of the field.
Though ordinaries are not easily defined, they are generally
described as including the
cross, the
fess, the
pale, the
bend, the
chevron, the
saltire, and the
pall.
There is a separate class of charges called sub-ordinaries which
are of a geometrical shape subordinate to the ordinary. According
to Friar, they are distinguished by their order in blazon. The
sub-ordinaries include the
inescutcheon, the
orle, the
tressure, the double tressure, the
bordure, the
chief,
the
canton, the
label, and
flaunches.
Ordinaries may appear in parallel series, in which case blazons in
English give them different names such as pallets, bars, bendlets,
and chevronels. French blazon makes no such distinction between
these diminutives and the ordinaries when borne singly. Unless
otherwise specified an ordinary is drawn with straight lines, but
each may be indented, embattled, wavy, engrailed, or otherwise have
their lines varied.
Charges
A charge is any object or figure placed on a heraldic shield or on
any other object of an armorial composition. Any object found in
nature or technology may appear as a heraldic charge in armory.
Charges can be animals, objects, or geometric shapes. Apart from
the ordinaries, the most frequent charges are the
cross—with its hundreds of variations—and the
lion and
eagle. Other common animals are
stags,
Wild Boars,
martlets, and
fish.
Dragons,
bats,
unicorns,
griffins, and more
exotic monsters appear as charges and as
supporters.
Animals are found in various stereotyped positions or
attitudes.
Quadrupeds can often be found rampant—standing on
the left hind foot. Another frequent position is passant, or
walking, like the lions of the
coat of arms of England. Eagles are
almost always shown with their wings spread, or displayed.
In
English heraldry the
crescent,
mullet,
martlet,
annulet,
fleur-de-lis, and
rose may be added to a shield to distinguish
cadet branches of a family from the senior
line. These cadency marks are usually shown smaller than normal
charges, but it still does not follow that a shield containing such
a charge belongs to a cadet branch. All of these charges occur
frequently in basic undifferenced coats of arms.
Marshalling
Marshalling is the art of correctly arranging armorial bearings.
Two or more coats of arms are often combined in one shield to
express inheritance, claims to property, or the occupation of an
office. Marshalling can be done in a number of ways, but the
principal mode is
impalement,
which replaced the earlier
dimidiation
which simply halves the shields of both and sticks them together.
Impalement involves using one shield with the arms of two families
or corporations on either half. Another method is called
quartering, in which the shield is
divided into
quadrants.
This practice originated in Spain after the 13th century. One might
also place a small
inescutcheon of a coat of arms on the
main shield.
When more than four coats are to be marshaled, the principle of
quartering may be extended to two rows of three (quarterly of six)
and even further. A few lineages have accumulated hundreds of
quarters, though such a number is usually displayed only in
documentary contexts. Some traditions, like the Scottish one, have
a strong resistance to allowing more than four quarters, and use
instead grand quartering and counter quartering (quarterly
quarterly).
Helm and crest
In
English the word "crest" is
commonly (but erroneously) used to refer to an entire heraldic
achievement of armorial bearings. The technical use of the heraldic
term
crest refers to just one
component of a complete achievement. The crest rests on top of a
helmet which itself rests on the
most important part of the achievement: the shield.
The modern crest has evolved from the three-dimensional figure
placed on the top of the mounted knights' helms as a further means
of identification. In most heraldic traditions a woman does not
display a crest, though this tradition is being relaxed in some
heraldic jurisdictions, and the stall plate of Lady Marion Fraser
in the Thistle Chapel in St Giles, Edinburgh, shows her coat on a
lozenge but with helmet, crest and motto.
The crest is usually found on a
wreath of
twisted cloth and sometimes within a
coronet.
Crest-coronets are generally simpler than
coronets of rank, but several specialized forms exist; for example,
in Canada
, descendants
of the United Empire
Loyalists are entitled to use a Loyalist military coronet
(for descendants of members of Loyalist regiments) or Loyalist
civil coronet (for others).
When the helm and crest are shown, they are usually accompanied by
a
mantling. This was originally a cloth
worn over the back of the helmet as partial protection against
heating by sunlight. Today it takes the form of a stylized cloak
hanging from the helmet. Typically in British heraldry, the outer
surface of the mantling is of the principal color in the shield and
the inner surface is of the principal metal, though peers in the
United Kingdom use standard colourings regardless of rank or what
the colourings of their arms. The mantling is sometimes
conventionally depicted with a ragged edge, as if damaged in
combat, though the edges of most are simply decorated at the
emblazoner's discretion.
Clergy often refrain from displaying a helm or crest in their
heraldic achievements.
Members of the clergy may display appropriate head wear. This often
takes the form of a small crowned, wide brimmed hat, sometimes,
outwith heraldry, called a
galero with the
colors and tassels denoting rank; or, in the case of
Papal arms until the inauguration of
Pope Benedict XVI in 2005, an
elaborate triple crown known as a
tiara.
Benedict broke with tradition to substitute a
mitre in
his arms. Orthodox and
Presbyterian clergy do sometimes adopt other forms of head gear to
ensign their shields. In the
Anglican
tradition, clergy members may pass crests on to their offspring,
but rarely display them on their own shields.
Mottoes
An armorial
motto is a phrase or collection of
words intended to describe the motivation or intention of the
armigerous person or corporation. This can form a pun on the family
name as in
Thomas Nevile's motto "Ne
vile velis." Mottoes are generally changed at will and do not make
up an integral part of the armorial achievement. Mottoes can
typically be found on a scroll under the shield. In
Scottish heraldry where the motto is
granted as part of the
blazon, it is usually
shown on a scroll above the crest, and may not be changed at will.
A motto may be in any language.
Supporters and other insignia
Supporters are human or animal figures
or, very rarely, inanimate objects, usually placed on either side
of a coat of arms as though supporting it. In many traditions,
these have acquired strict guidelines for use by certain social
classes. On the
European
continent, there are often fewer restrictions on the use of
supporters. In the United Kingdom only
peers of the realm, a few baronets, senior
members of orders of knighthood, and some corporate bodies are
granted supporters. Often these can have local significance or a
historical link to the armiger.
If the armiger has the title of
baron,
hereditary
knight, or higher, he or she may
display a coronet of rank above the shield. In the United Kingdom
this is shown between the shield and helmet, though it is often
above the crest in Continental heraldry.
Another addition that can be made to a coat of arms is the insignia
of a baronet or of an order of knighthood. This is usually
represented by a collar or similar band surrounding the shield.
When the arms of a knight and his wife are shown in one
achievement, the insignia of knighthood surround the husband's arms
only, and the wife's arms are customarily surrounded by a
meaningless ornamental garland of leaves for visual balance.
Differencing and cadency
Since arms pass from parents to offspring, and there is frequently
more than one child per couple, it is necessary to distinguish the
arms of siblings and extended family members from the original arms
as passed on from eldest son to eldest son. Over time several
schemes have been used; see
cadency.
National styles
The emergence of heraldry occurred across
western Europe almost simultaneously in the
various countries. Originally, heraldic style was very similar from
country to country. Over time, there developed distinct differences
between the heraldic traditions of different countries. The four
broad heraldic styles are German-Nordic, Gallo-British, Latin, and
Eastern. In addition it can be argued that later national heraldic
traditions, such as
South African and
Canadian have emerged in the twentieth century. In general there
are characteristics shared by each of the four main groups.
German-Nordic heraldry
Coats of
arms in Germany, the Scandinavian
countries, Estonia
, Latvia
, Czech lands and northern Switzerland
generally change very little over time.
Marks of difference are very rare in this tradition as are heraldic
furs. One of the most striking characteristics of German-Nordic
heraldry is the treatment of the crest. Often, the same design is
repeated in the shield and the crest. The use of multiple crests is
also common. The crest is rarely used separately as in British
heraldry, but can sometimes serve as a mark of difference between
different branches of a family.
Torse is
optional.
Heraldic courtoisie is
observed.

A Danish coat of arms in the
German-Nordic tradition
Dutch heraldry
The
Low Countries were great centres
of heraldry in medieval times. One of the famous armorials is the
Gelre Armorial or
Wapenboek,
written between 1370 and 1414.
Coats of arms in the Netherlands
were not controlled by an official heraldic system
like the two in the United Kingdom, nor were they used solely by
noble families. Any person could
develop and use a coat of arms if they wished to do so, provided
they did not usurp someone else's arms, and historically, this
right was enshrined in
Roman Dutch
law. As a result, many merchant families had coats of arms even
though they were not members of the nobility. These are sometimes
referred to as
burgher arms,
and it is thought that most arms of this type were adopted while
the Netherlands was a
republic
(1581-1806). This heraldic tradition was also exported to the
erstwhile
Dutch
colonies.
Dutch heraldry is characterised by its simple and rather sober
style, and in this sense, is closer to its medieval origins than
the eloborate styles which developed in other heraldic
traditions.
Gallo-British heraldry
The use of cadency marks to difference arms within the same family
and the use of
semy fields are
distinctive features of Gallo-British heraldry (in Scotland the
most significant mark of cadency being the bordure, the small
brisures playing a very minor role). It is common to see heraldic
furs used. In the United Kingdom, the style is notably still
controlled by royal officers of arms. French heraldry experienced a
period of strict rules of construction under the Emperor
Napoleon. English and Scots heraldries
make greater use of supporters than other European countries.
Latin heraldry
The heraldry of southern France, Portugal, Spain, and Italy is
characterized by a lack of crests, and uniquely-shaped shields.
Portuguese and Spanish heraldry occasionally introduce words to the
shield of arms, a practice disallowed in British heraldry. Latin
heraldry is known for extensive use of quartering, because of
armorial inheritance via the male and the female lines. Moreover,
Italian heraldry is dominated by the Roman Catholic Church,
featuring many shields and achievements, most bearing some
reference to the Church.
Central and Eastern European heraldry

Austria-Hungary Coat of Arms
(1850.
Eastern
European heraldry is in the traditions developed in Serbia
, Croatia
, Hungary
, Lithuania
, Poland
, Ukraine
, and
Russia
. Eastern coats of arms are characterized by
a pronounced, territorial,
clan system — often,
entire villages or military groups were granted the same coat of
arms irrespective of family relationships. In Poland, nearly six
hundred unrelated families are known to bear the same
Jastrzębiec coat of arms.
Marks of cadency are almost unknown, and shields are generally very
simple, with only one charge. Many heraldic shields derive from
ancient house marks. At the least, fifteen per cent of all
Hungarian personal arms bear a severed Turk's head, referring to
their wars against the
Ottoman
Empire.
Modern heraldry
Heraldry flourishes in the modern world; institutions, companies,
and private persons continue using coats of arms as their pictorial
identification. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the English
Kings of Arms, Scotland's
Lord Lyon King of Arms, and the
Chief Herald of
Ireland continue making grants of arms. There are heraldic
authorities in
Canada,
South Africa, Spain, and Sweden that grant or register coats of
arms. In
South Africa, the
right to armorial bearings is also determined by
Roman Dutch law, inherited from the 17th
century Netherlands.
Heraldic societies abound in
Africa,
Asia,
Australasia, the
Americas, and Europe. Heraldry aficionados
participate in the
Society for Creative
Anachronism, medieval revivals,
micronationalism, et cetera. People see heraldry
as a part of their national and personal heritages, and as a
manifestation of civic and national pride. Today, heraldry is not a
worldly expression of aristocracy, merely a form of
identification.
Military
heraldry continues developing, incorporating blazons unknown in
the medieval world. Nations and their subdivisions — provinces,
states, counties, cities, etc. — continue building upon the
traditions of civic heraldry. The
Roman Catholic Church, the
Church of England, and other Churches
maintain the tradition of
ecclesiastical heraldry for their
high-rank prelates, religious orders, universities, and
schools.
Extended bibliography
General heraldry
- Fox-Davies, A.C..
The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopedia of Armory.
- Parker, James. A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry.
Oxford: James Parker & Co., 1894 (Newton Abbot: David &
Charles, 1970); see online
version
United Kingdom
- Boutell, Rev. Charles - Edited and revised by J. P.
Brooke-Little, MVO, MA, FSA, FHS
- one time Norroy & Ulster King of Arms (later Clarenceux King
of Arms). Boutell's Heraldry. London and New York:
Frederick Warne, 1983 - ISBN 0 7232 3093 5
- Burke, Sir Bernard, C.B. LL.D., Ulster King of Arms. The General
Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales; Comprising a
Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present
Time. London: Burke's Peerage, 1884 (Baltimore: Genealogical
Publishing Co., 1967).
- Dennys, Rodney. The Heraldic
Imagination. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1975.
- Elvins, Mark Turnham. Cardinals
and Heraldry (Illustrated by Anselm Baker, foreword by
Maurice
Noël Léon Couve de Murville, preface by John Brooke-Little). London: Buckland
Publications, 1988.
- Fairbairn, James. Fairbairn's Crests of the Families of
Great Britain & Ireland. 2v. Revised ed. New York:
Heraldic Publishing Co., 1911 (New York: Bonanza Books, 1986 in 1
vol.). Originally published 1800.
- Humphery-Smith, Cecil. Ed
and Augmented General Armory Two, London, Tabard Press,
1973.
- Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, G., Scotland's Herauldrie: the
Science of Herauldrie treated as a part of the Civil law and Law of
Nations Heir of Andrew Anderson, Edinburgh, 1680
- Nisbet, Alexander A system of Heraldry T & A
Constable, Edinburgh, 1984, first published 1722
- Innes of Edingight, Malcolm,(Marchmont Herald) revisor,
Scots Heraldry (third edition) Johnston & Bacon,
London, 1978
- Paul, James Balfour (Lord
Lyon King of Arms). An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public
Register of All Arms and Bearings in Scotland. Edinburgh: W.
Green & Sons, 1903
- Reid of Robertland, David and Wilson, Vivien, An Ordinary
of Arms, volume 2 [1902-1973], Lyon Office, Edinburgh
1977
- Moncreiffe of Easter Moncrieffe, Iain (Kintyre Pursuivant)
& Pottinger, Don (Herald Painter) Simple Heraldry -
Cheerfully Illustrated Thomas Nelson and Sons, Edinburgh and
London, 1953
- Wagner, Sir Anthony R.
Heralds of England: A History of the Office and College of
Arms. London: HMSO, 1967.
Mainland Europe
- Le Févre, Jean. A European Armorial: An Armorial of Knights
of the Golden Fleece and 15th Century Europe. (Edited by
Rosemary Pinches & Anthony Wood) London: Heraldry Today,
1971.
- Louda, Jiří and Michael
Maclagan. Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe.
New York: Clarkson Potter, 1981. Reprinted as Lines of
Succession (London: Orbis, 1984).
- Rietstap, Johannes B.
Armorial General. The Hague: M. Nijhoff, 1904-26
(Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1967).
- Siebmacher, Johann. J. Siebmacher's Grosses und Allgemeines
Wappenbuch Vermehrten Auglage. Nürnberg: Von Bauer &
Raspe, 1890-1901.
See also
Notes
- Appendix I. koro-.
- Stephen Friar, Ed. A Dictionary of Heraldry. (Harmony
Books, New York: 1987), 183.
- Fox-Davies, A Complete Guide
to Heraldry, (Thomas Nelson, 1925).
- Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk
& Pottinger, Simple Heraldry (Thomas
Nelson, 1953).
- John Brooke-Little. An Heraldic
Alphabet. (Macdonald, London: 1973),2.
- Notitia Dignitatum, Bodleian Library
- C. A. Stothard, Monumental Effigies of Great Britain
(1817) pl. 2, illus. in Wagner, Anthony, Richmond Herald,
Heraldry in England (Penguin, 1946), pl. I.
- Beryl Platts. Origins of Heraldry. (Procter Press,
London: 1980), 32.
- Woodcock, Thomas &
John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
1.
- Wagner 1946:8.
- Squibb, George. (Spring 1953). "The Law of Arms in England".
The Coat of Arms II (15): 244.
- Jack Carlson. A Humorous Guide to Heraldry. (Black
Knight Books, Boston: 2005), 22
- David Williamson. Debrett's Guide to Heraldry and Regalia.
(Headline Books, London: 1992), 24.
- Arthur Fox-Davies. A Complete Guide to Heraldry
(Grammercy Books, New York: 1993), 99.
- Fox-Davies (1909). pp. 74-5, 88.
- William Whitmore. The Elements of Heraldry.
(Weathervane Books, New York: 1968), p.9.
- Government of Nunavut. n.d. About the Flag and Coat of Arms.
Government of Nunavut, Iqaluit, NU, Canada. Accessed October 19,
2006. Available here
- Hartemink R. 1996. South African Civic Heraldry-Bophuthatswana.
Ralf Hartemink, The Netherlands. Accessed October 19, 2006.
Available here
- US Heraldic Registry
- American Heraldry Society - Arms of
Connecticut
- Stephen Slater. The Complete Book of Heraldry. (Hermes
House, New York: 2003), p.56.
- Bruno Heim. Or and Argent (Gerrards Cross, Buckingham:
1994).
- Michel Pastoureau. Heraldry: An Introduction to a Noble
Tradition. (Henry N Abrams, London: 1997), 47.
- Thomas Innes of Learney. Scots
Heraldry (Johnston & Bacon, London: 1978), 28.
- Stephen Friar and John Ferguson. Basic Heraldry. (W.W.
Norton & Company, New York: 1993), 148.
- Carl-Alexander von Volborth.
Heraldry: Customs, Rules, and Styles. (Blandford Press,
Dorset: 1981), 18.
- Stephen Friar, Ed. A Dictionary of Heraldry. (Harmony
Books, New York: 1987), 259.
- Stephen Friar, Ed. A Dictionary of Heraldry. (Harmony
Books, New York: 1987), 330.
- Woodcock, Thomas & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
60.
- John Brooke-Little. Boutell's Heraldry. (Frederick
Warne & Company, London: 1973), 311.
- Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk and
Don
Pottinger. Simple Heraldry, Cheerfully Illustrated.
(Thomas Nelson and Sons, London: 1953), 20.
- David Williamson. Debrett's Guide to Heraldry and
Regalia. (Headline Books, London: 1992), 128.
- Thomas Woodcock & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
14.
- Edmundas Rimša. Heraldry Past to Present. (Versus
Aureus, Vilnius: 2005), 38.
- Peter Gwynn-Jones. The Art of
Heraldry. (Parkgate Books, London: 1998), 124.
- Ottfried Neubecker. Heraldry: Sources, Symbols, and
Meaning. (Tiger Books International, London: 1997), 186.
- Julian Franklyn. Shield and Crest. (MacGibbon &
Kee, London: 1960), 358.
- http://www.baronage.co.uk/jag-ht/jag008.html
- Davies, T.R. (Spring 1976). "Did National Heraldry Exist?".
The Coat of Arms NS II (97): 16.
- von Warnstedt, Christopher. (October 1970). "The Heraldic
Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms XI
(84): 128.
- Alan Beddoe, revised by Strome Galloway. Beddoe's Canadian
Heraldry. (Mika Publishing Company, Belleville: 1981).
- von Warnstedt, Christopher. (October 1970). "The Heraldic
Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms XI
(84): 129.
- Thomas Woodcock & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
15.
- Neubecker, Ottfried. Heraldry. Sources, Symbols and
Meaning (London 1976), p. 158
- Pinches, J.H: European Nobility and Heraldry . (Heraldry Today,
1994, ISBN 0-900455-45-4, p. 82
- Carl-Alexander von Volborth.
Heraldry: Customs, Rules, and Styles. (Blandford Press, Dorset:
1981), p. 88.
- J.A. de Boo. Familiewapens, oud en nieuw. Een inleiding tot
de Familieheraldiek. (Centraal Bureau voor Genealogie,
The Hague:
1977)
- Roosevelt Coats of Arms: Theodore and Franklin
Delano at American Heraldry Society.
Accessed January 20, 2007.
- Cornelius
Pama Heraldiek in Suid-Afrika. (Balkema, Cape Town:
1956).
- von Warnstedt, Christopher. (October 1970). "The Heraldic
Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms XI
(84): 129.
- Carl-Alexander von Volborth.
Heraldry of the World. (Blandford Press, Dorset: 1979),
192.
- Thomas Woodcock & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
21.
- von Warnstedt, Christopher. (October 1970). "The Heraldic
Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms XI
(84): p.129.
- Thomas Woodcock & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
pp.24-30.
- von Warnstedt, Christopher. (October 1970). "The Heraldic
Provinces of Europe". The Coat of Arms XI
(84): pp.129-30.
- Thomas Woodcock & John Martin Robinson. The Oxford
Guide to Heraldry. (Oxford University Press, New York: 1988),
28-32.
- See the College of Arms newsletter for quarterly
samplings of English grants and the Chief Herald of
Ireland's webpage for recent Irish grants.
- See the Public
Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada at this page
- Cornelius Pama. Heraldry of South African families: coats
of arms/crests/ancestry. (Balkema, Cape Town: 1972)
- Stephen Slater. The Complete Book of Heraldry. (Hermes
House, New York: 2003), p.238.
Further reading
External links