User:-sche/heraldry
List of heraldry words, including words used in heraldry category names (or associated text) on Commons which are redlinks here. (List contains errors of capitalization, hyphen removal, etc. To be used manually, not by a bot.) For full list (including bluelinks) see edit history.
- Terms of uncertain (possibly varied) meaning, which need more checking: champaine, enguiché.
- Check: is banner roll sense 1 accurate or just a happenstantial use of sense 2, banderole
- (Terms whose meaning varied historically: cleché; sarcelly, sarcelled; esquire.)
- Check distinctness: inveckée, invecked, invected, invexed
- Check alternate for completeness and concision
- Check welt
- filet, fillet: sarcelly mentions a different sense than "small chief"
- Move plenitude to in plenitude like in glory, in splendor, in pride, in piety, etc?
- Likewise the syn complement to in complement (in her complement, in its complement)
- Add images to : accosted, annulletty (if real), flotant, lattice, leashed, levant, masculy [[File:Campo - maclado apuntado.svg|right|thumb|A masculy shield.]], opinicus, overt, parclose, undé
- Cleanup enté en point vs enty.
- Search for: "INVEXED. Arched or enarched, and when both sides of an ordinary are answerably bowed, it is generally termed archée, flected, or flecked, but if only on one side, and bowed inward, it is called invexed, concaved, champained, or championed; and when the bending is outwards, it is then termed shapourned and convexed. See Plate VI fig. 6, of Lines."
RFV
[edit]- point (improve defs)
- 1-2 cites:
- rempli (2)
- retorted (1)
- reverberant (2)
- tortelly (2)
- welt (1)
- RFV if not citeable:
- champ?
- helmet (seems to just mean ... a helmet; theoretically if someone called the mitre in a bishop's arms a helmet, that'd be this)
- verré (1)
- look for antelope
- und manages to be barely cited, as do repassant (3?) and rizom (3?)
- These have been RFVed:
- bevile, croissante, enmanché (only exists in French: Citations:enmanché; contrast Citations:emmanché; I also searched for emanché, manché), extendant, eyrant (ayrant), fondant, fractal, goarée (gorée), invexed, inveckée, morned, mounted, percussant, parclose, posé, ramé, rangant, rangé, recoupé, renverse (sense one), restrial/restriall, retaillé, retiercé, retranché, revertant, revestu (1 mention of "Chief vestu or revestu"), sardonyx, savage (adj), seal, segment, soarant, stola, succeedant, supercharge, tergant (only tergiant), tréflé, tricorporal, urvant, urved, versant.
verules : is verules (verolles, virolles) just a plural of virole? since virole is also attested as a discrete thing- French cites at Citations:virolles, Citations:virole.
- The OED says "In Fr. heraldry the word [enmanché] is used (I) of an axe or other weapon, having the handle of a certain tincture different from that of the blade; (2) of the field, denoting what Eng. heralds call barry-pily. Neither of these senses in recognized in England, though the former appears in some recent Eng. Dicts. The Eng. senses given below are of doubtful authenticity; sense 2 is perh. founded on the erroneous derivation from manche, fem., sleeve. / 1. Of the field: [...] per fesse dancetté of two points [...] 1586 Ferne, Blaz. Gentrie I. 199: He beareth Emaunche [printed Emanuche] Arg. and Gewles."
- étincellé (compare Old French estencele (“spark”), and the adjective fr:étincelant which modifies a charge or e.g. a star to indicate it's spark(l)ing) I can't find used (rather than mentioned) in that spelling (which makes sense, the French verb has a single l: étinceler). I also can't find any of the following other spellings searching + "heraldry" : étincellé, etincellé, étincellée, etincellé, étincellee, etincellee, etincelly, etincely, etincelée, etincelee, etincely, etencely, etencelly, etencelle, etencellee, etenzellee, etenzelle, etenzele, éstincellé, éstincellée, éstincelé, éstincelée, estincely, estincelly.
- According to Gerard J. Brault, Early Blazon: Heraldic Terminology in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries with Special Reference to Arthurian Heraldry (1997), page 106, the étincellé, the angemme or angevine (or enguegine, angeignie, anguegnie, anguegine, engeignie), and the rais or raie de soleil, were indistinct (depictions "apt to vary" and overlap), and at least the latter two (not clear if also the étincellé) were peculiar to Normandy and little known even elsewhere in France, which might be why it's hard to find English examples, but the spelling of heraldic words varies enough (e.g. geuls) that I'm concerned I'm missing something.
- I can find one English use of étincelé, and one use in a French phrase embedded in English, a use(ish) occurence of "estenzele" and "etincele", and an occurence of estenzele: Citations:étincelé. In French, several spellings can be found: Talk:étincelé.
- Mentioned in other dictionaries, but not sufficiently attested, is "disjointed" in reference to a lion having its limbs and head but not tail separated; it also applies to chevrons interrupted.
- Left:
Already have citations
[edit]- Citations:alesé (1 of alesé, 1 of alezé)
- Citations:at random (2 plus a third non-independent)
- barby, barbée, barbee, barbé : Citations:barby: 2 of barby, 2 of barbée, 1 of barbee; barbed (of a cross) File:ArrowCross.svg
- chapournet, chaperonnet (both citeable), shapournet and many other spellings, chapourned, shapourned, chapourné, etc
- Citations:cloué, Citations:clouée
- Citations:embrassé (1-2)
- Citations:en abyme (2-3 cites)
- Citations:emanchure (1)
- Citations:erminites (1-2)
- Citations:fir-twigged (2)
- ford:
- (heraldry) A base barry wavy azure and argent.
- 1780, Joseph Edmondson, A Complete Body of Heraldry:
- OXFORD City, Oxfordshire. ARMS. Ar. a bull gu. armed and unguled or, passing a ford of water in base proper.
- gunstone meaning a roundel sable (1+)
- Citations:gurgity (1 cite)
- Citations:inversed
- ogressy, Citations:ogressy (1, another for another spelling)
- Talk:raping (1-3 cites)
- stooping
- 1909, Eugene Zieber, Heraldry in America, page 385:
- Stooping. Applied to the hawk when darting down upon its prey / Stork. This bird is the emblem of piety and gratitude.
- Citations:vertant (1), also as " Uertant" in Randall Holme
- Citations:vire: viroles, not viures?
- Citations:virolee (2), virolé;
- Variations of ordinaries: enhanced, dehanced, etc
- Ordinary (heraldry):
terrace,shapournet shapourned,shakefork,etc
- various works assert pommy / pommé (pomy, pomé, pomey) and/or pommetty (pometté, pometty, pommeté, pommetée, pommetté, pommettée) as the adjective for "semy/semé of pommes i.e. roundels vert" — compare bezanty, platy, tortelly, pellety, etc (see Citations:hurty) — but I can't find it in this sense, apart from one web cite: Citations:pommy.
created:
Citations:chevronly (2-3)Citations:enchaussure (2-3)golpy, Citations:golpy (1 book, 2+ web)hurty "semy of hurts" (1 book, 2+ web, and mentions)rule of tincture
- 1894, Henry Gough, James Parker, A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, page 213:
- ... and in Edward the Second's reign we find the double-headed eagle, and in Edward the Third's reign we get the term espanie, signifying displayed, or spread out; (conf. modern fr. épandre). The mention, too, of the eagles […]
- 2018 August 28, Jonathan Malone, Roman Night, Jonathan Malone, page 362:
- SEBASTIAN HAD ALREADY paraded down the Clivus Capitolinus, the pearl-gray Arabians prancing before the Imperial chariot, which he was driving, a white D-shaped chariot with the heraldry of a gold eagle displayed and épandre mounted on […]
- 2018 August 17, Jonathan Malone, Chemtrail, Jonathan Malone:
- The American eagle of this heraldry was Displayed and Épandre, its raptorial beak turned in profile, its left eye vertically slitted. From this distance, Colonel House could not see the details, but he was familiar with them.
- 1693, Richard Blome, The Art of Heraldry. In two parts ... The second edition. With plates, page 110:
- This is the state of the Moon in her Wain, the Horns must always be turned towards the left hand of the Escocheon, as that in her Complement is towards the [...] a Moon in her detriment or Eclipse Sable […]
- 1684, Richard Blome, An Essay to Heraldry, in two parts, page 111:
- Argent, a Moon in her detriment or Eclipse Sable. The Moon is eclipsed always in her full State, and is so occasioned by the interposition of the Earth betwixt her and the Sun. Lucy. 19. Azure, a Crescent Argent, borg by Jacob […]
- 1830, Thomas Robson, The British Herald; Or, Cabinet of Armorial Bearings of the Nobility & Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, from the Earliest to the Present Time: With a Complete Glossary of Heraldic Terms: to which is Prefixed a History of Heraldry, Collected and Arranged ..., page 3:
- HURE, a French term for the head of a wild boar, bear, […]
others to add
[edit]- in base, per base??
- in bend, per bend (schräggeteilt, schräg geteilt)
- in bend sinister, per bend sinister (schräglinksgeteilt, schräglinks geteilt)
- in chevron, per chevron
- in chief, per chief
- in cross, per cross = quartered (geviert)
- in fess / in fesse, per fess / per fesse
- in orle, per orle?
- in pale, per pale
- in pall, per pall
- party per pall = tiercé en pairle = im Deichselschnitt geteilt; im Gabelschnitt geteilt (but only attested in older spelling getheilt
- in pile, per pile
- in saltire, per saltire
images
[edit]These are basic partitions:
-
party per fess (French: coupé, German: geteilt) argent and gules
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party per pale (Fr.: parti, Ger.: gespalten) gules and argent
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party per bend (French: tranché) argent and gules
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party per bend sinister (French: taillé) argent and gules
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party per cross / quarterly (French: écartelé), gules and argent
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party per saltire (French: écartelé en sautoir), argent and gules
Parting the field along these lines produces e.g.:
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(Fr.:) coupé au 1 d'azur ..., au 2 de gueules ... (Montbarrey)
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per pale gules and azure (Fr.: parti au 1 de gueules ..., au 2 d’azur)
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(Fr.:) tranché, à dextre, de gueules ...; à senestre, d'azur, ... (Douvres)
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per bend sin. gu. & v. (Fr: taillé de gu. et de sino.) (La-Bastide-sur-l'Hers)
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écartelé, aux 1 et 4, d'azur ..., aux 2 et 3, de gu. ... (Laurent Audra, 1771)
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éc. en sautoir : 1 sino., 2 gu., 3 gu., 4 azur (Ferrières-sur-Sichon)
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per fess or and argent... (Powell of Newick, in the arms of Robert Baden-Powell
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per pale argent and or (Moosbrunn, Schönbrunn)
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per bend sanguine & vert (Fr.: tranché de sanguine et de sino.) (Clayhills)
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(Sp.:) tajadoː 1 plata; 2 oro (Casas del Monte)
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party per cross, gules, azure, vert, and or (Khots'ky, Ukraine)
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per saltire argent and or... (Champion, of Riddlesworth, Norfolk)
Some lines have attributes of partitions and ordinaries:
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party per chevron, ar. & gu. is in Fr. de gu., mantelé d’ar., bc the mantel, though a part., is...
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...somewhat like an ordinary over the field: here is d'ar., au mantel de gu. (ar., a mantel gu.)
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in Swedish, the mantel is higher / smaller (cf. arms of Torsås, desc. in Fr. as mi-vêtu en chef)
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party per chevron reversed, gu. & ar. is in Fr. mantelé renversé (colours in same order)
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medieval per chief partition is now pooh-poohed, but explains why many chiefs break r. of t.
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(chiefs are now ordinaries. here's ar., a ch. tri. gu., another medieval variety of chief)
Hence:
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W. Co. of Salters' arms (1530): per chevron azure and gules
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(but in the French view: de gueules mantelé d'azur: arms of Malegoude)
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(cf. Saint-Pierre-des-Corps: de gu., au mantel d'azur, au chef gu. 4 pals sin.)
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de gueules ...; mantelé renversé et crénelé d'azur, ... (Cléry-le-Petit)
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argent, a chief gules (Fr.: d’argent...; au chef d’or: Cacé family, Brittany)
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cf.: parti de sino. et de gu. ... brochant en chef, au chef d'azur ... (Gembrie)
Other lines like mantelé which are ordinaries but have attributes of or overlap with partitions:
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gules chapé argent (Fr.: gueules, chapé d’argent; Swedish (?)spets av silver)
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argent chaussé gules
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argent, embrassé to dexter gules (Fr.: embrassé à dextre)
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ar., embr. to sin. gu. (Fr.: embr. à sénes., Sw.: (?)vänsterspets av silver)
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argent, vêtu / a vêtement gules
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per fess or & gu., each vêtu of the other (Fr.: coupé or et gu., vêtu de l'un en l'autre)
Depictions of mantelé, chapé, enté (enté en pointe or enty in point), and party per pile or per pall (rev.) vary and overlap:
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mantelé ployé
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de gueules ..., chapé ployé aussi d’argent
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parti: au 1 de gu. ... 2 de gu. ... enté en pointe de sinople
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parti ... enté de sable ...
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(extra chapé ex.: arms of Costa Rican bishop Hugo Barrantes)
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(chapé: arms of Jaroslav Pryriz, UGCC bishop)
Compare:
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English tierced per pall, gu., ar. & sa. is a partition, like Fr. tiercé en pairle de gu., d'ar. et de sa....
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& per pall rev., Fr. tiercé en pairle r., can also (Fr./Sp.) be: sa., a mantel per pale gu. & ar.
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in Engl. this is per fess, chief per pale, az., sa. & ar., but in Fr. coupé mi-parti d'az., sa. et ar.
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& per fess, base per pale, ar., az. & sa. is in Fr. coupé mi-parti en pointe d'ar., d'az. et de sa.
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bonus examples of colourful shields: per bend sinister orange and azure (Bellefontaine)
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and per chevron purpure and or (Lacy of Suffolk)
Chapé and chaussé are also to be distinguished from piles:
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argent a pile (French: pile) gules
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argent a pile reversed (French: pointe) gules
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argent a pile throughout gules
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argent a pile reversed throughout gules
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(example of party per pile ployé? Manta, Cundinamarca)
Similarly,
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a gyron (Fr.: giron) can be borne like an ordinary: argent, a gyron gules
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or as a partition: gyronny of eight, argent and gules
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hence e.g. gyrony of eight, gules and sable (Coblegh family of Brightley)
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chequy of nine / quarterly of nine (French: équipollé
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chequy gules and argent (French: échiqueté)
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lozengy
Furthermore, some lines that can be drawn upon a shield can delineate either an ordinary or a partition:
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argent, a fess (French: fasce) gules involves an ordinary, but...
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tierced per fess, gu., ar. & sa. is a partition
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argent, a pale (French: pal) gules, but...
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...tierced per pale (French: tiercé en pal), gules, argent and sable
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argent, a bend (French: bande) gules
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tierced per bend (French: tiercé en bande), gules, argent and sable
Compare:
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per fess, vert & purp. (De Maas-en Diezepolders)
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az., fillet gu. [oft larger/lower, like a fess] (Galicia)
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gules, a pale sable (Amsterdam)
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gules, a bend azure (Gilbert Denys' 1300s arms)
Similarly,
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argent, a bend sinister (French: barre) gules
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tierced per bend sinister (French: tiercé en barre), gu., ar. & sa.
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argent, a chevron gules
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tierced per chevron (Fr.: tiercé en chevron), gu., ar. & sa.
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argent, a chevron reversed / inverted gules
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tierced per chevron reversed, gules, argent and sable
Aside from the fess, pale, bend, and chevron, the other major ordinaries (which are not divisions of the field) are:
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argent, a cross (French: croix) gules
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argent, a saltire (French: sautoir) gules
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argent, a pall (French: pairle) ''gules
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argent, a pall reversed / inverted gules
Others include:
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argent, a champagne / terrace gules (Fr.: champagne)
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argent, a side / tierce gules (French: flanc dextre)
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argent, a side sinister gules (French: flanc senestre)
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argent, a shakefork gules (French: pairle alaisé et aiguisé)
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argent, flaunches gules
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argent, a gore gules
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argent, a gore sinister gules
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gusset(s): see notes below
Early English writer Gerard Legh (Accidens of Armory, 1576), and John Guillim (Display of Heraldrie, 1611) citing Legh, say a gusset is a dishonor resembling a straight-edged gore, and blazon the image above gules, two gussets argent. Unsurprisingly, it does not seem to have been used in medieval English heraldry. (Mistholme says it's found in the arms of "Cunningham, 1610", but Cunningham bears a shakefork: the 1638 printing [not the 1611, and not some later editions] of Guillim's work says "Argent, 2. Gussets, Sanguine. Abating [...] Such a Coat as this I finde borne by the name of Coningham, saving that the Field is Sable, and the Gussets Argent, and therefore not to be taken to be of this [abating] kinde, according to the rule touching the Delfe", but this may be an error.) Early French heraldic writer Hierome de Bara (Blason des armoiries, 1581) has an uncolored image of this shape blazoned d'or à deux goussets d'azur, suggesting he also considered the two side pieces the gussets; later editions bizarrely colour the two sides gold and the one central Y shape blue but leave the caption unchanged.
In German heraldry (e.g. Siebmacher), the central Y shape is a Deichselstück / Gabelstück, an alteration of a Deichsel (seen with unfilled top in e.g. the arms of Spraitbach, and with a conjoined pall (Pfahldeichsel) in the arms of Brücktal, formerly Brück). Much modern French heraldry also blazons the above image d'argent au gousset de gueules, with the g(o)usset being the central red pall-like mark.
Especially in continental Europe, there are ordinaries resembling or resulting from combinations of the preceding:
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argent, a chief-pale gules (French: chef-pal), a single charge, in de Bara and the 1415 Concilium zu Constenz
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(French: fasce-pal)
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(French: chef-bande)
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(French: chef-barre)
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(French: chef-chevron)
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(French: chevron-pal)
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argent, a pale and pall conjoined gules (German: Pfahldeichsel)
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argent, a pale and pall reversed conjoined gules (German: Pfahlgöp(p)el)
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ar., chief & pall rev. conj. gu. (Fr.: chef réuni avec pairle renv., G.: Schildhauptgöpel)
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a gusset rev. (Fr.: gousset renv., Ger.: Göp(p)elstück) : but see gusset!
Diminutives:
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(argent, a fess gules)
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argent, a bar gules
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argent, a closet / [smaller?:] barrulet gules
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argent, a bar couped / humet gules'
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(argent, a chief gules)
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argent, a fillet gules (French: divise)
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pale
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pallet
-
-
-
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argent, a bordure gules
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argent, an orle gules
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"gules, inescutcheon argent within a bordure argent" (???)
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argent a double tressure gules
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chevron (Swedish variant)
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lozenge (Swedish: ruta)
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fusil (/lozenge?; French: losange, Swedish: spetsruta)
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roundel (red = torteau)
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annulet
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mascle
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rustre
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billet (Swedish: biljett)
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inescutcheon (French: écusson, Swedish: hjärtsköld)
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(argent, a cross gules, in the canton a) goutte de sang
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argent, a hamade (of three bars couped / humets) gules
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argent, a quarter gules
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argent, a canton gules
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argent, a label (of three points) gules
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bordure
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bordure
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fess
-
fess
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pale
-
pale
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pale
-
pale
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The arms of Hungary have, since the 13th century, placed a green trimount on a red field.
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The 13th-century arms of the king of Jerusalem have one or more gold crosses on silver (or sometimes vice versa).
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The arms of Samogitia, from the 14th century, place a black bear on a red field.
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The arms of Albania have, since the 15h century, placed a black double-headed eagle on a red field.
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quarterly with an inescutcheon (here the arms of Beynost)
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this can get arbitrarily complex, e.g. the arms of Nassau-Oranien-Fulda
diminutives in decreasing size:
- fess, bar, (closet,) barrulet
- pale, pallet, (endorse)
- bend, bendlet, (riband)
- " the orle's diminutive is the tressure"
- (Can we date this quote?), Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington), The London encyclopaedia, or, Universal dictionary of science, art, literature, and practical mechanics, by the orig. ed. of the Encyclopaedia metropolitana [T. Curtis]., page 179:
- Of these only six have diminutives, which are called as follows : That of the chief is a fillet; the pale has a pallet and endorse; the bend, a bendlet, cost, and riband; the bend sinister has the scarp and bâton; the bar, the closet and barulet; the chevron, a chevronel and couple-close. See Plate I. The chief is an ordinary [...] Its diminutive is a fillet, the content of which is not to exceed one-fourth of the chief, and stands in the lowest part thereof. This ordinary is subject to be charged with variety of figures; and may be indented, wavy, nebule, &c. The pale is [...] Its diminutives are, the pallet, which is half of the pale; and the endorse, which is the fourth part of a pale. This ordinary and the pallet may receive any charge, but the endorse should not be charged. [...]
- frame-quarter, canton, fret, voiders like flasques, billet, lozenge, guttes, fusil, rustre, mascle,
- 1854, William Sloane Evans, A grammar of British heraldry, page 88:
- THE PALLET, (which is half the Pale,) is never charged with any thing of whatsoever nature. THE ENDORSE, is another diminutive of the Pale. It has been stated that it contains one half of the Pallet, and consequently one fourth part of the field. [...] This is the opinion of many Authors; but Legh and Ferne affirm that the Pallet may not be divided into two parts, but into four, and that the Endorse is in content one fourth part of the Pallet, or one eighth of the Pale. Again: the Endorse (according to Leigh,) is never used, except when a Pale is between two of them. But Ferne says "that an Endorse may very well be borne in any Coat Armour between Beasts, Birds, Fishes, Fowls, &c." [... ...] The Bend has been said by many authors to have four diminutives; viz.: The Bendlet, (half the Bend,) - The Garter, (half the Bendlet,) — The Cost, (half the Garter,) — and the Riband, (half the Cost). But Gwillim makes no mention of the Bendlet, describing the Garter as half the Bend, the Cost as half the Garter, &c. [...] I am inclined to believe that this is the case, and thart the terms Bendlet and Garter as assigned to the SAME diminutive of the Bend.
Hungarian:
tinctures
[edit]- Citations:periwinke (obsolete form of periwinkle)
normal | planet | stone | plant |
---|---|---|---|
or | sun / Sol | topaz | ranuncula=buttercup |
argent | moon / Luna | pearl | jasmine |
azure | Jupiter | sapphire | periwinkle |
gules | Mars | ruby | rose |
vert | Venus | emerald | grass |
sable | Saturn | diamond | dwale |
purpure | Mercury | amethyst | bugloss |
murrey | dragon's tail | sardonyx | |
sanguine | dragon's tail | sardonyx | |
tenné | dragon's head | jacinth (jacinthe, jacynth, jacynthe) | poppy |
- (heraldry, rare) Vert (green), in the postmedieval practice of blazoning the tinctures of certain sovereigns' (especially British monarchs') coats as planets.
- 1693, Richard Blome, The Art of Heraldry, in two parts ... second edition ..., pages 76-77:
- 12. Venus, a Staff in Pale Sol, and thereupon a Cross Pattee, Luna surmounted off a Pall of the last, charged with 4. like Crosses fitched Saturn, edged and stringed as the second. This Coat belongs to the Archiepiscopal See of Canterbury, to whose place it appertains to Crown and Inaugurate the Kings of England.
- 1693, Richard Blome, The Art of Heraldry, in two parts ... second edition ..., pages 76-77:
- 1894, Henry Gough, James Parker, A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry, page 464:
- the planet Venus occurs in the crest of CHAMBERS, but has not been observed in any coats of arms. Blazoning by the name of Planets was invented by certain fanciful heralds in the seventeeth century, and the names employed will be found under Tinctures.
- Gerard Legh, The Accedens of Armory. With an address to the Reader by R. Argoll, age 185: [...] the nine sundry colours. As for Or, Ranuncula: for Argent the Iesemin: for Geules the Rose: for Azure, Periwinke: for Sable, Dwale: for Verte, v. leaued grasse: for Purpure, Buglasse: for Tenne Popy: for Sanguine the stock gilly flower, which colours are contained [...]
- 1804, Alexander Nisbet, A system of heraldry, speculative and practical: with the true art of Blazon ... Illustrated with suitable examples of armorial figures, and achievements of the most considerable surnames and families in Scotland ..., page 379:
- For example, if the cinquefoil be of tincture or, it should be called ranuncula; if of argent, jessamine; if gules, the rose; if azure, pirvincle; if sable, ducal; if vert, five leave grass; if purpure, bugloss; if tenny, puppie; and if sanguine, the stock-jelly-flower. If they be of any other colour besides these, and of the furrs , they are then to be blazoned cinquefoils.
- 1922, Henry Williamson, The Lone Swallows, page 18:
- sunbeam had yet touched the buttercup, unblazoned was the shield of the meadow by gules of poppy, azure of cornflower, or argent of feverfew. Fragile were the greeneries of the hedge above the brooklet, sweet the primroses under […]
- From en.WP:
metals | colours | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
g. d'or of gold |
g. d'eau of water |
g. de larmes of tears |
g. de sang of blood |
g. de poix of tar |
g. d'huile of (olive) oil |
g. de vin of wine |
top x
[edit]- (French: cercelée) — sarcelly — Citations:cercele, Citations:recersile; uncommon: resarcelled; recercilé, sarcely, sarcelled, resarcelled, sarceled, resarceled
- 1857, William Edward Flaherty, The Annals of England: An Epitome of English History, from Co[n]temporary Writers, the Rolls of Parliament, and Other Public Records, page 319:
- Our author's heraldry is here at fault, as the bishop's seal shews that he bore, not a fer du moulin, but a cross cerclée, as above represented. Walter is usually laudatory in his mention of each person, but occasionally a slight […]
- 1914, Bradley, James Augustus Henry Murray, Murray, A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles: Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by The Philosophical Society, page 108:
- 1682, John Gibbon, Introductio Ad Latinam Blasoniam. An Essay to a More Correct Blason in Latine Than Formerly Hath Been Used. ..., page 141:
- Gules, a Cross moline arg. The Author's French for this, is un cros recercilée; in which he hath been so fortunate as to have Trophée d'Armes (a modern Author) consent with him. In English he calls it a Cross reversed, which Leigh terms Sarcelé, and most French Authors Anchrée.
- 1904, The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century dictionary, ed. by W.D. Whitney, page 5341:
- Sarceled, sarcelled (sär'seld), a. [< sarcel + -ed2.] In her., cut through the middle: especially noting a beast or bird represented as so divided, and used as a bearing, the halves placed saltierwise or in some other way.
- 1869, Frederick James Furnivall, Queene Elizabethes Achademy (by Sir Humphrey Gilbert).: A Booke of Percedence. The Ordering of a Funerall, &c. Varying Versions of The Good Wife, The Wise Man, &c, page 120:
- Sarsile, 99/141 sarceled, i.e. cut ? through the middle. A cross cercelée is a cross which, opening at the end, turns round both ways, like a ram's horn. - Bailey.
- 1869, Humphrey Gilbert, Queene Elizabethes Achademy: A Booke of Precedence, the Ordering of a Funerall, Etc. Varying Versions of the Good Wife, the Wise Man, Etc. Maxims, Lydgate's Order of Fools, a Poem on Heraldry, Occleve on Lord's Men, Etc. Early English treatise and poems on education, precedence, and manners in olden time, page 99:
- The first, hole croce; the tother, engrelit be; The third, awndi; the iiij, paty in feir; 1 the v. a crois; vj, crois flarait cleir; vij botand; viij crosolat; ix batone; x fovrmie; xj crois fichye; xij sarsile fere; demolyn xiij; xiiij regle; xv sucylye, sey. quhat maner of best or bird goith rond to sene, About the feld blase it heroune verray. […]
- 1896, John Woodward, A Treatise on Heraldry, British and Foreign: With English and French Glossaries, page 484:
- RESARCELÉ - Is said of a cross, or other Ordinary, which is coticed; also of a cross which has a bordure running round it at a little distance from the edge. The figures are practically identical. RETRAIT - is said of an Ordinary […]
- 1860, Léon Vaïsse, Armorial national de France: recueil complet des armes des villes et provinces du territoire français..., page 67:
- Cercelé ou recercelé, se dit d’une croix ancrée […]
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1993, Jean Dufournet, Jean-Claude Aubailly, Et c'est la fin pour quoi sommes ensemble: hommage à Jean Dufournet : littérature, histoire et langue du Moyen Age, page 71:
- Notonsaussi qu’on avait tendance, au Moyen Age, à ne pas toujours distinguer entre les lines of partition (fr. "trait"), donc entre une bordure recercelée (ou engrelée; "engrailed" en anglais) et une bordure endentée (fr. mod. "vivré"). En admettant donc la règle générale selon laquelle un émail alterne avec un métal (Or ou Argent), […]
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1867, Pierre Larousse, A-Z. 1866-70, page 807:
- ... papelonné , patriarcale , patte , pavillonné , pendant , percé , pignonné , plumeté , potencé , rebrassé , recercelé , recoupé , recroiseté , rempli , renversé , resarcelé , semé , senestré , sommé , soutenu , supportant , sur le […]
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1830, Thomas Robson (engraver.), The British herald, or Cabinet of armorial bearings of the nobility & gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, page 14:
- Cross masclée, at each point a plate; also called a cross masculy and pommettée; and by French heralds, a cross clechée, or clechée pommettée, and a cross thoulouze. See Pl. 5, fig. 21. Cross mascle, or of mascles, [ French […]
- 1828, William Berry, Encyclopaedia Heraldica Or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry:
- […] snagg […] flurty […] 1. Cross, coronetted. […] 5 Cross, fruitagée. 6 Cross, catoosed. 7 Cross, double avellaney, or Cross mascle fruitagée. […] Cornished […] repotent […] of four battunes […] with the felloe of a wheel at the top […]
- 10 Cross, patriarchal, thrice crossed, potence, foot lambeaux. 11 Cross, masculy. 12 Cross, lambeauxed. 13 Cross of pruning hooks. 14 Cross, couped at the top and flurt. 15 Cross tau, ends convexed, grieced. 16 Cross, double triparted. 17 Cross, ferrated. […]
- 1725, James Coats, A New Dictionary of Heraldry, page 142:
- FER DE FOURCHETTE, Croix a fer de fourchette, is a Cross having at each End a forked Iron, like that formerly us'd by Soldiers to rest their Muskets, wherein it differs from the Cross fourchée, the Ends whereof turn forked, whereas this has that sort of Fork fix'd upon the Square end.
- 1735, Francis Nichols, The British Compendium: Or, Rudiments of Honour ..., page 72:
- Note, the Term fer de fourchette, is given to all Crosses and Saltires, whose Extremities end with a forked Iron, as the Example, like that formerly used by Soldiers to rest their Muskets.
- 1828, William Berry, Encyclopaedia Heraldica, Or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry: Dictionary of Heraldry:
- FER DE FOURCHETTE. See Cross de fourchette, which has at each extremity a forked iron, resembling that which was formerly used by […]
- resignant, of a lion, having its tail hidden
- see also nilé / nilée cercelée
- recoursy, raccourcie
- bourdonnée (of a cross, similar to potent but ending in knobs like the handles of a pilgrim's staff, like some depictions of the arms of Jerusalem)
- bordée / bordé, bâtonnée / bâtonné, clavelée / clavelé, alaisée / alaisé = alésée / alésé, écotée / écoté; cablé, cordé
- recroisetée / recroiseté, carrée / carré, bastionnée / bastionné
- 1883, Amédée de Foras, Le blason: dictionnaire et remarques, page 136:
- CROIX CERCELÉE ou RECERCELÉE. Est celle dont les branches, dans le genre de l’ancrée, se terminent en bouts se recourbant en cercles. Les Anglais l’appellent cross recercelee. L’évèque Antoine Bec, ( 224 ): portait ’’de gueules à croix cercelée d’hermines. (English Heraldry.)
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- bastillé, bastillée
- billettée
- bretessée
- contrebretessée
- donjonnée
- florencées
- forcéne
- fourragére
- fuselécoupé, fuselé-coupé, fuselé-coupé
- arraché, arrachée
- crane in its vigilance, in vigilance
Guttée-de-sang (blood, gules) Guttée-de-poix (pitch (bitumen), sable) Guttée-d'eau (water, argent) Guttée-de-larmes (tears, azure) Guttée-d'olives (olives, vert)
- "A bend is very frequently subjected to a modification of its margin, and is engrailed, invected, indented, embattled, counter-embattled, bretessed, raguly, champaine (or warriated), nebuly, wavy; also bevilled, cotticed and fimbriated, all of which terms will be found explained."
- "fretty and trellisé: A field fretty is composed of bendlets and bendlets-sinister or "scarps", interleaved over one another to give the impression of a trellis. Although almost invariably the bendlets and scarpes are of the same tincture, there is an example in which they are of two different metals.[42] It is rare for the number of pieces of the fretty to be specified, though this is sometimes done in French blazon. The bendlets and bendlets sinister are very rarely anything other than straight, as in the arms of David Robert Wooten, in which they are raguly.[43] Objects can be placed in the position of the bendlets and bendlets sinister and described as "fretty of," as in the arms of the Muine Bheag Town Commissioners: Party per fess or fretty of blackthorn branches leaved proper and ermine, a fess wavy azure.[44] Square fretty is similarly composed of barrulets and pallets.[45] Trellisé appears in the arms of Luc-Normand Tellier, where it consists of "bendlets, bendlets sinister and barrulets" interlaced.[46] These are not, strictly speaking, variations of the field, since they are depicted as being on the field rather than in it."
- 1828, William Berry, Encyclopaedia Heraldica, Or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry:
- Bend urdée, or champaine, also termed a bend warriated on the outsides, and a bend crenelle points pointed, but then the projections should be set opposite each other. See Plate XV. fig. 19. Bend urdée champained, or championed […]
- 1897, William Henry Abbott, Heraldry Illustrated: Being a Short Account of the Origin and History of Heraldry and an Explanation of Its Nature, with Practical Directions for Drawing and Painting Coats of Arms, to which is Added a Glossary of the Terms Used in the Science of Heraldry ..., page 124:
- VARRIATED or WARRIATED -- cut in the form of vair. VELLOPED - a cock is said to be armed, crested and velloped, when his spurs, comb and wattles are borne of a different tincture from the body. VERGETTE (Fr.) — a palet or small […]
- 1632, John Guillim (Rouge-Croix Poursuivant at Arms.), A Display of Heraldrie: manifesting a more easie accesse to the knowledge thereof than hath beene hitherto published by any, through the benefit of method, whereinto it is now reduced by the industry of J. Gwillim or rather of J. Barcham, with the additions of J. Guillim . With coloured illustrations. L.P., page 28:
- [...] than onely vaire, or variated, for which word variated I haue obserued, that our English Blazoners vse verrey [...] Vaire : And if it be varied, or composed of Argent and Azure, then it is so called, and no Colours named : but […]
- 1660, John Guillim, A Display of Heraldrie: Manifesting a More Easie Access to the Knowledge Therofthen Hath Hitherto Been Published by Any, Through the Benefit of Method; Wherein it is Now Reduced by the Study and Industry of John Guillim Late Pursuivant at Armes. .., page 25:
- Doubling or Fur of this nature, than onely vaire, or variated, for which word variated I have observed [...] Vaire : And if it be varied, or composed of Argent and Azure, then it is so called, and no Colours named : but if it […]
- 1896, London Society, page 585:
- Vertically from the water rise walls of rock of variated colors, pearl grey, vermillion and golden brown, interspersed with bands of glittering quartz, until when seen from below the sky overhead appears like a thin streak of azure […]
- 1845, Encyclopaedia, Encyclopædia metropolitana; or, Universal dictionary of knowledge, ed. by E. Smedley, Hugh J. Rose and Henry J. Rose. [With] Plates, page 600:
- Thus azure, a swan gules, would be false armoury. [...] When an ordinary has two sides, and is only variated on one , if that one be the upper side, the ordinary is said to be superingrailed, superinvected, &c.; but if it be the under, then it is said to be subingrailed, subinvected, &c. If the ordinary be generally curved, it is said to be arrondy, (arrondi, rounded, Fr.) or archy; if one side of the ordinary be curved inward, it is called invex, concave, or champain; when outward, chapourned, or convex.
- diminutives: fillet, "viure (?).", crosslet, saltorel; other things: orle, tressure, pile, gyron, flaunches / flaunche / flaunch; pall, skakefork, rowel, delf, cube, bezant, erminites, potent or meirré (counter-pean?); barry, paly, bendy, pily, chevronny, chevronelly, chequy, lozengy, fusilly, masculy, tortilly, fretty, latticed, gobony, masoned; raguly, dancetty, dovetailed, undy or wavy; nebuly; ounce (an animal charge, type of panther/lynx/cat), musion and lezard (types of cat), alant and levrier (dogs), reremouse (bat), tod and genet (foxes?), brocket (deer), foine (weasel?), levrets/levret (hare), sanglier and grice and marcassin (boar), shoveller and cannet and smew (duck), pinzon (finch), gannapie (cormorant), baldcoot / moorhen (coot), parroquet, sacre (falcon), powet (frog), asker (effet/effets); ged pike, chabot perch; alce and opinicus (monsters with wings), amphistere; satyral, lampago; apre, bagwyn, musimon, yale; cokar / China Cokar; osier; betony, teazel, gletver leaf, cinquefoil and sexfoil, fermail buckle, escarboucle, wriststrap, fetterlock; culverin gun, potgun; sword's bouterol; crampet, badelaire, skean, cressets beacons, beauseant, breys / brey, infula cap; pagoda medal; possenet, fleshpot, or waterpot (pots);
- in chief, in base, in pale, in fesse / in fess, barwise, bendwise, saltirewise, enhanced, embelief (sic?), sovereign (w.r.t. a field), abased, in quadrature / quadrature, ensigned by, pierced with, sustaining, surtout, brochant sur the tout (brochant), depressed, issant (issuant?), naissant, cantoned, interlaced, embraced, concentric, cottised, gemel, fimbriated, cousu, accosted; humetty, alèsé, rebated, pery, enty, bevilly, parted, inarched ("of a chevron"), fracted, biparted, fitchy, aiguisé, barby, flory, avellane, ancetty, boudonné, cramponné, annuletty, nowy; crined (with..., like armed/environed/etc with), reflexed, vambraced
- apaumy, avenant, clenched, segreant, salient, at bay, browsing, trippant, cabré, careering or in full career, at random (of dogs), combatant (of two lions), fettered (of a horse), caparisoned, spancelled, barded, maned (all of horses), belled, chevillé, defamed (lion), winged (bull), courant (dog); membered, dismembered, unguled, incsened, baillonné, massacre, dejected, nowed, queued (of tails); jellopped (of a cock), lolling (of birds), surgerant, collying, in its majesty (of an eagle); grilleté, jessed, chaperonné (of falcons); sepurture, in lure, lured, vorant, ingulphant, pamé, ecaillé, moucheté (of lampreys); gradient (of tortoises), involved (of serpents), tergiant (of lobsters), volant in arriere
- of trees: fructed, lopped, snagged, trunked, eradicated, blasted, acorned, slipped (of stalks), barbed (of leaves), bearded (of wheat), aulned or bladed; husked; graminy (of chaplets); misc: pheoned, emmaunched, embowed, bataillé of a bell, purfled (pursled?) of armour; ajouré, quadrangular, fired (of a cannon), inflamed (of a beacon), [[flamant (same), fumant (of a kiln), in splendour (of the sun), radiate, rayonnant (same); in its complement or in her... (of the moon), pendent (of a crescent); crusilly
- 1848, Archibald Barrington, A Familiar Introduction to Heraldry: Explaining in a Series of Lectures the Principles of the Science, and Shewing Its Application to the Study of History and Architecture, page 35:
- eviré - evirée - eviree, coué - couée - couee
- baillone, defamed, disjointed, tricorporated - tricorporate - tricorporal
- displayed, overt, close, rising, vigilant, overture,
- segreant, combatant or respectant, glissant
- acculé, cabré, effaré, effarouché, effrayé, forcené, furieux
- sejeant, sejeant; sejant erect; lodged (couchant); salient = springing; saltant; mortine = morné, baillone, diffame, infamed, defame; paissant, rizant, rousant,
- contourné, en arrière
- guardant or in full aspect
- in trian aspect, trian, Trian
- rousant, combatant; vareghna, khvarenah; displayed = éployé, éployée; closed; Sachsen, Saxen; abaissé, abaissée; membered (having limbs of a different color than the body); bicapitate, tricapitate;
- In full aspect describes one with his head facing the onlooker. In trian aspect (a rare, later 16th and 17th century heraldry term) describes when the head is facing at a three-quarter view to give the appearance of depth, with the head cocked at an angle somewhere between profile and straight-on.
- overture or close: when the wings are shown at the sides and close to the body (closed), always depicted statant
- trussed - the term when depicting domestic or game birds with their wings closed - is not used of the eagle
- espanie or épandre (expanded) : when the eagle is shown affronté (facing the viewer with the head turned to the dexter) and the wings are shown with the tips upward
- abaisé, abaisée, abaisee, abaisy or abaissé, abaissée, abaissee, abaissy or abasy, abassy, abasey (lowered) : when the eagle is shown affronté (facing the viewer) and the wings are shown with the tips downward
- Kleestängel (Kleestengel); Polish przepaska, Latin perizonium or perisonium, which may refer to Kleestängel, or Brustspange, Brustmond, Brustsichel, an elongated crescent across the breast and wings, in English blazoned a crescent, or if the ends terminate in trefoils, a crescent trefly or treflée or treflé or trefoily, trefoilé, trefoilée
- expanded, elevated
- rousant or essorant or rising: preparing to fly, but with feet still on the ground, the eagle's version of statant
- addorsed = endorsed = adossés, adossé, adossée
- decapitate
- "originally erne or alerion in early heraldry referred to a regular eagle. Later heralds used the term alerion to depict baby eagles."
AB
[edit]- A : a bouché / bouché, abouté(s), accessories / accessory, accolade, accolé, accompagné, accosted, accroupi, accrued "used to express a tree which has attained its full growth", achievement, acorné, acorned, acoté, addorsed / adossed, addossé, adorned, advancers "upper branches of a stag's horns", affronté, agneau pastoral / agneau, aguilated / aigulated, aiglette, aislé, ajouré, alant, a la quise / quise = cuisse, alb "white garment worn by priests", aliaizé / aliecé vs alisé / alaissé, almoner, altar ("usually born surmounted by flames"), alterné, amalthea, ambulant "walking or passant", coambulant / co-ambulant "walking together", amphisien cockatrice, ananas, ancient / ancyent "a small pointed flag carried by an officer similar to the modern ensign, who was also known as an ancient", angenne, anglé, angled, anille, animé, annelet, annodated, annulet, annuletté / annulated, annuletted, etc: having a ring or annulet at each extremity; anserated, anshent, anté / enté, antic / antique s. ancient; antique crown, Eastern crown, apaumé / appalmed, apres "a fictitious animal, like a bull, but having the tail of a bear", aquilated ("adorned with eagles' heads, as a In blazoning the human arm as a charge, or [a] cross aquilated"), ar., arg., arazed = erased, arbaleste, archduke's crown, arched / arché / archy, armarium honoris, armé, armed, armes parlantes s. rebus, arming buckles, armoiries, armoyé, armys = arms or armor, armys harnyayd?, arondé, arondia, arraché, arraswise, arrasways, arrayed, arrayer, arrieré, arrondie, pheoned, aseare / asewre = azure, ash keys or ashen keys, asker = egg-breeding reptile, aspect, in full aspect, aspectant, aspecting, aspersed, ass "the lively emblem of patience", assailant, assaultant, or assaulting adj. (also n.), assemblé, assieta or assiette, assis, assurgent, asteroid or astroid = star, astrolabe, Athelstan's cross, attired, auré, ave, avellaned pomel / pomel, averlye, aversant, dorsed, aylets, or sea-swallows, ayrant
- 1847, Henry Gough, A Glossary of Terms Used in British Heraldry: With a Chronological Table, Illustrative of Its Rise and Progress, page 31:
- AULNED, or Bearded : words used when ears of corn are spoken of. AURÉ. See GUTTÉ d'or. AURIFLAMME. See ORIFLAMME. AWNED. See AULNED. AXE : (fig.1.) the common hatchet, which must not […]
- 2009 June 1, Charles Norton Elvin, Elvin, Dictionary of Heraldry, Genealogical Publishing Com, →ISBN, page 11:
- Augmented. Having Augmentations. Auk, A bird, an inhabitant of the arctic or northern seas. P. 34, f. 32. Aulned. The aulnes, or awnes, are the beards about the ears of barley, etc., generally termed bearded. Aure.
- 1908, Arthur Francis Pimbley, Pimbley's Dictionary of Heraldry: Together with an Illustrated Supplement, page 7:
- Assaultant— (As-sa'ult-ant) Assailant. Applied to a predatory animal when represented on the escutcheon as if leaping / Aulned— (awn'd) Awned; bearded (Used of ears of corn.)
- 1910, Walter Arthur Copinger, Heraldry Simplified: An Easy Introduction to the Science and a Complete Body of Armory, Including the Arts of Blazoning and Marshalling, with Full Directions for the Making of Pedigrees and Information as to Records &c, page 327:
- AULNED, the Aulnes or aunes are the beards about the ears of barley, & c., the term bearded is likewise used. AURE, the same as gutteé d'or, drops of gold. AURIFLAMME. See Oriflamme. AVANT MUR, signifies a wall attached to a […]
- B : B. or b. = blue i.e. azure; bachelor (one at the first stage of knighthood), badelaires, brock badger, bagwyn, baillonné, bale corded, balista, ballistra s. sweep; bandé = bendy, banderole, bandrick, bandrol, banneret, bar., bar-gemelle, barbé, cresté, barbée, crested, barbel, barbelé, barelle, barellé, barking, barnacle, breys / brey - curb on a horse's upper lip, barralet / barrulet, barre, barre une, barruletté, barruletty, barrullé, barrully, barry, barry bendy, bar-shot, barways / barwise, baston / baton / batton, batune, baudrier, bauteroll, beauseant, beautified, becqué, bequé, beddeth, beffroy, belfry, belic, belled, belling, berly, besant, besaunte, besca, betw., bevi;, bevel. bevile, bevy, bezants, besants, bezanté / besanté, bezantlier, bezantry, bicapitated / bicapited, bicorporated, billetté, billettes, billetty, biparted, bird-bolt, bitt - bit (snaffle, manage bit), bittern, bladed, blanche = white, blasted or starved (of a branch w. no leaves), blazing star, blemished, bois de cerf, bois de diam, boltant, bordé, boterall / boteroll, botoned, bottonry, bouchier knot / bourchier knot, bouckys, bouclé, bouget, bourdon, bouse; bouterolle, braced, brazed, branché, brasses (engraved brass plates placed on tombs), brassettes "armor for the arms" vs brassarts "armor for the elbow", brectesches, brettessé, breys, brique, brimsey, brinded / breended / brindled, brisé, decouplé, bristled, bristled, brisure / brizure, brochant, broches, brock - badger, brocket, brogue, bronchant, brow-antler, bruske, tenné, bullets, bur, burelle, burellé, burganet, burst, bust, bustard, butcher's axe, slaughter-axe, buttoned "applied to buckles when ornamented"
- 1586, Sir John Ferne, The blazon of gentrie: deuided into two parts. The first named The glorie of generositie. The second, Lacyes nobilitie. Comprehending discourses of armes and of gentry. Wherein is treated of the beginning, parts, and degrees of gentlenesse, vvith her lawes: of the bearing, and blazon of cote-armors: of the lawes of armes, and of combats. Compiled by Iohn Ferne Gentleman, for the instruction of all gentlemen bearers of armes, whome and none other this worke concerneth, page 208:
- Endented: Bebally. Lentally. Fessely. [...] for Bebally indented is, when as the coate-armor is indented of two diuers cullors, in the loength of the coate, that is to say, from the chiefe to the foote, as heere is the example, being nowadays blazed, partie per pale endented, Argent and Gewles, but the olde Heraldes would hauve said this: be beareth a Quadrat finall, viz. Endentely bebally, Arg. and G. The [...] Lentally, and that was, an indenting of the coate with two diuers cullors in the bend of the coate-armor [...] This we call now, partie per bend Endented, Or, and Gewles: they called it Endentely, Lentally, Or and G. [...] Armes which were called Fessely, were of seuerall sorts, whereof the first was called Fesse generall, and that is, the third of the Endentiles afore named: for, if the coate were Endented per fesse, [...] that is to say, fessely Endented, [...] The other two coate-armors Fessely, was Fessy Target (whereof we spake before) and Fessy Bagy.
- 2019 October 20, S.E. Brunson, The Book of Saint Albans: Part 3 - Heraldry, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 77:
- ... of heraldry ➢ The fifth quadrant is called endently in three different ways, that is to say bebally, lentally, and fesly. ➢ Bebally is when heraldry is called endently of two different colors running the length of the heraldry.
- 1829, Hugh Clark, Thomas Wormull, An Introduction to Heraldry: Containing the Origin and Use of Arms; Rules for Blazoning and Marshalling Coat Armours; the English and Scottish Regalia; a Dictionary of Heraldic Terms; Orders of Knighthood, Illustrated and Explained; Degrees of the Nobility and Gentry; Tables of Precedency, Etc., Titles and Duties of the Great Officers of State; and of the Officers of the College of Arms, Etc; and a New Chapter on Heraldry as in Conjunction with Architecture ..., page 95:
- BEBALLY, an ancient term for party per pale. BEE-HIVE, Bees are the most wonderful and profitable insects yet known; they have three properties of the best kind of subjects; they keep close to their king; are very industrious […]
- 1910, Walter Arthur Copinger, Heraldry Simplified: An Easy Introduction to the Science and a Complete Body of Armory, Including the Arts of Blazoning and Marshalling, with Full Directions for the Making of Pedigrees and Information as to Records &c, page 331:
- BEBALLY, a term used by some old writers for party per pale. BECKIT, a bird resembling a Cornish chough. BECQUE, or Bequé. See Beaked. BEDDETH, a term to express where the roe takes up his lodging. BEFFROY, same as Vair.
- 1829, Hugh Clark (heraldic engraver.), An introduction to heraldry, by H.Clark, page 95:
- BEBALLY, an ancient term for party per pale. BEE-HIVE. Bees are the most wonderful and profitable insects yet known; they have three properties of the best kind of subjects; they keep close to their king; are very industrious […]
CD
[edit]- C : cablé = corded, caboched / caboshed / cabossed / caboché / cabossé / ?cabochy / ?cabossy; cabré or effray / ?effré, cadency, calamine stone, calf as the young of a stag; galtrap / caltrap, calza, camelopardel, campaned, campanes, canellé, cannet, cantond / cantonné, cap-a-pie, cap of liberty, caparaconné / caparisoned, capuchon hood closed on every side, carbuncle, careering = saliant (of a horse), cartouche of a Pope or churchman, case = stuffed skin of an animal, cased = flayed, casque = helmet, cat-a-mountain, caterfoil = quartrefoil, catoose = scroll, caudé, ceckko = checky, cercelé / recercelé, cercle, cerclé, cerise = a torteau, chafant = of a boar - depicted enraged; chain-shot, chame = annulet w. a sharp point rising from one side, champ = the field, chantant, chape or crampit - bottom of scabbard, chapeau = cap of maint., chaperon / chaperoun / chaperonne = hood, or small shield on a horse's head; chaperonné / shafferoné - hooded, chaperonnet - little hood, chaplet, chapournet - chief divided by a curved line, "used incorrectly by some English heralds for chaperonnet", chappé or chapé = cloaked; chargé / charged, chasuble, chatter or chatterer = Bohemian lark; chaussé - shod, wearing shoes, "in blazon it is the opposite of chapé, and it is formed by two lines drown from the upper corners of the field and meeting at the lowest point of the escutcheon"(??); chaussé-trappes - galtraps, cheapeau-wise / chapeau-wise / chapeauwise - like a chapeau, checkers = checky, cheeseslip - an insect; chef or chefe - chief; cheque or chequy - checky; chess rook or cocke / cock - piece used in chess, chevaltrap - galtrap, chevelé = crined, chevellé - streaming, of a comet; chevillé - attired; chevroné / chevronné / chrevronny / chrevronnee / chevronee / chrevony; chevronel, chevronways / chevronwise, chewerond - chevron, cheynyd, crownyd; chissel / chizzel - chisel; chough, cimier - crest, circumflexant-bent = bowed around; clarenceux, claricord, clariné, clarion / claricord / rest - "a conventional figure in heraldry" various supposed to be a musical clarion or a lance-rest; clasped or conjoined; clos, closs, cloudy = circling towards the centre?; cloué = nailed (a certain tincture); cloven or sarcelled; clymant, cocquel, codded - applied to pease, beans, etc when borne in the cod or pod; co-erectant / coerectant / coerect, coeur, cognizance, coiffé - hooded, collared gemelle (s. gemelle) - double-collared; collaterally disposed, collying, combatant / confronté = fighting or rampant / face to face; combattand (sic) = assaulting or lifting up a weapon; combed and wattled = barbed and crested; combel = fillet, commise cross = cross Tau; commixt / comixt / comixed / commixxed = indiscrim. intermingled; compartment; compassed / encompassed, complexed = folded or twined together; complicated (of wings); surgeant; compon / camp / componé / compony / gobony - applid to an ordinary composed of one row of squares of atlernate metals and colours; when of two rows it is compony-counter-compony, when of three, checky; concaved, conger-eel, conjoined / conjunct, conjoined in lure - two wings joined together with their tips downward; conspicuous or conspitiant - of a charge placed in front of another; cont' escartelé / contre-escartelé (escartelé) = counter-quartered; contoise, contourné, contra-nuage / contre-nuage = convered with escallop shells lying like the scales of a fish, each overlapping parts of two below it; nuage; contrary / contra / contre / contre-; contrebandé / contre-bandé - bendy per bend sinister counterchanged; contrebarré / contre-barré - bendy sinister per bend counterchanged; contre-escartelent - quarterly quartered (cf earlier), escartelent; contre-facé, contre-hermines - erminet; contre-palé, palé, paly, contre-point, contre-potencé, contre-tenant, contrevaire, converted, convexed, conyd = counter???; coote - a waterfowl smaller than a duck; coppé / copped; coquille; corbie - raven; corbyws - raven; cordals, cor de chasse, corded; cordilière (cordelière?) = silver cord which sometimes encircles the arms of widows; cordirobe - Roman garment; cordon, corled = coiled (???); cormorant; corned, corneille, cornet, cornichons, cornished, coronated, coronet, cost / cotice / cotise - dim. of bend; coticé - (of esc.) divided bendways into many equal parts; coticed or cotised - accosted, sided, or accompanied by another charge, or placed between two charges (really not same as previous?); cotoose = modillion; cotoyé - coticed; hanks of cotton; couchant or couched or couching (couchy?) - lying down, with had lifted up; couché - of a shield, suspected by a belt (really not previous?); couched - of a chevron, issuing from the dexter side; coué - coward; coulter - plough part; counter;
- counter-attired, counter-changed, counter-componé, counter-couchant, counter-embowed, counter-fleury, counter-passant, counter-potent, counter-salient, counter-tripping, counter-vair,
- contre-attired, contre-changed, contre-componé, contre-couchant, contre-embowed, contre-fleury, contre-passant, contre-potent, contre-salient, contre-tripping, contre-vair,
- coupé et parti / couped, humetté, couplé, couple close, coupled, courant, courbé - embowed, courlett = cuirass; in one's course / in his course; couste - cost, cousu - sewed to (as a metal to a metal); coutre - coulter; couvert, cowed / coward; crampette / crampit - chape; crampetté; cramponné; crampoons / cramps; crancelin - a bend treflé, vert; crefish, creneaux / crenellé / enmanché - embattled; crenelles; crescented cross, cresset - beacon; cresté, crêté, crined, crochet musical note; croissant, croisette / croisetté, croix recroisée, cronel - iron head of a tilting spear, crose or drawing board used by coopers; crosier - crozier; crossways (so as to form a cross); crossys; cruceil or crucellette - cross crosslet; crusilly / crusuly - strewn with crosses; crystal "used in fanciful blazoning for argent; pearl is more common, however"; cubit arm - arm couped at the elbow; cuffed, cullivers or culboers - cuisses / thigh armor; culter - ploughshare; cumbant - lodged; cuppa - a heraldic fur composed of pieces formed potent counter-potent, sometimes called varry-cuppa; cuppules - bars gemelle; cuppy - "by some writers held to be a fur, by others not"; currant / courant / coursant - running; currier; curvilinear; cutlass; cutt or cloven - cut in half; cygnet;
- cendré as var. of cendrée?
- D : dacre / Dacre; dalmatic / Dalmatic - deacon's garment; dancete, double-dancette, danché, dath's head, debased, debruised - "used when a bend or other ordinary is placed over any animal, whereby it is debarred of its natural freedom", decapitated = decapité deffait = decollated, dechaussé - dismembered (of legs only?) or without claws; decked - ornamented; marguette (of feathers), declinant or declivant; decouped / decoupé; decoupled / decouplé / uncoupled; decours, decresnent, descressant, decrescent and other spellings; defamed or disgraced - of a creature: represented without its tail; defendu / armed / tusked / ?defendé / ?defended; degraded or degreed - of a cross: having steps at each end; degrees - steps; dejected, despectant; delf - square clod or block of coal; delf-tenne, demembré - dismembered; demi or demy, demie-jarretière / demi-jarretière / jarretière - demi-garter (garter) or per close; demy vol (one wing) / vol; dentals / dentels / dentees / dens = the indents or teeth of indented; denté - tusked?; dentelle / viurie - indented?; denticules / denticles - small squares taken from the entablatur in Ionic architectur; derraché - dismembered, desarmé, descendant - volant downward; descent; despectant; despouille; detranché; detriment; devouring; dez - dice?; diadem; diamond = sable (in "blazing by precious stones"); diapered / diapré; diffamé - defamed; diffamed - of a lion, going to sinister; dilated - of a compass etc, open or extended; dimidated, dimidation; disclosed - displayed; dishevelled - with loose-flowing hair; disjointed, dislodging, dismembered, dismembré, distilling = dropping; disveloped - displayed; diving = uriant or urinant?; donjonné, dormant, dors or dors endorsed = back to back, dorsed = aversant, dosser = water bouget / bouget, doublé, fitchée / fitché / fitchy; queued and double-queued = tailed / double-tailed; double tête = having two heads; tressure; downsett or daunsett - of the separated parts of an ordinary, one being set upon the other; drapeau, duciper, cannetts = ducks, dufoil or twyfoil / twifoil; dung-fork - three-pronged fork; dungeoned - donjonné; duparted or biparted, dwal = nightshade = sable when blazoning by flowers;
- diaper, diapered; Citations:diapered
- 1735, Francis Nichols, The Irish Compendium [of titles] of all the Nobility of Ireland [...] vol. III of the British Compendium, second edition, page 70:
- Argent, a Border Gules, diaper'd Or. The Word diaper'd signifies a Border fretted, as the Example, and charged between the Frets with Things both quick and dead, which ought to be express'd; this being charged with Crescents, Stars, Besants, and Caterfoils, and with Birds and Beasts, both whole and in Part.
- 2013 April 16, Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, A Complete Guide to Heraldry - Illustrated by Nine Plates and Nearly 800 Other Designs, Read Books Ltd, →ISBN:
- The terms we have adopted are as follows: For drops of gold, "gutté-d'or"; silver, "gutté-d'eau"; for gules, ... The term semé must not be confused with diapering, for whilst the objects with which a field is semé are an integral part […]
- 1892, The Scottish Review, page 252:
- From a very early period fields and ordinaries are frequently decorated with diapering, usually of the same […]
- Air Force Combat Units of World War II (DIANE Publishing, →ISBN, page 341:
- Shield: Per bend gules and vert, a bend argent charged with a bendlet azure, between a wing of the third and a compass proper (bezant, with diapering green, bordered argent, thereover a four-pointed star compass, gules and azure).
EF
[edit]- E : spread, eaglet; eared, ecaillé, ecartelé, echiqueté, echiquier, eclaté, eclipsed, eclope, ecusson, eel-basket, effellonie, effray / effearé, cabré, eguisée, electoral crown, emanche, emaux de l'escu, embattled, embordered, embowed, embraced, embrassé droit / embrassé, embrued, emmancé, viuré, serrated; emmanche or creneaux, emmets = ants, emmusellé, empoigmé, enaluron, enarched, en arriere "borne with the back to view"; en band, enceppe, enclavé, encountering, en croix, endenché / endenté, endorse, endorsed (1. placed between two endorses; 2. addorsed), enfiled, englanté, engoulant, engouled, engrailé / engreslé, enhanced / enhansed, enhendée a cross, enlevé, enmanché "used where the chief has lines drawn from the centre of the upper edge of the chief to the sides, to about half the breadth of the chief. It differs from chappé, wich comes from the top to the bottom of the chief.", en pied, enraged = salient (of a horse), ensanglanté, ensigned, entangled, enté, enté en rond, entire, entoire / entoyer, entrailed / pursled / shadowed / adumbrated, entwined, entwisted, envecked, enveloped, enwarped, enwrapped, epaulette, epaulier, epimacus / opinicus, eployé, equippé / equipped, equise, eradicated, erased / arased, erect, ermine vs ermines, erminites, erminois; errant = hauriant, escaillé, escarboucle = escarbuncle, escartelé / ecartelé (by itself, or ~ en sautoir), escarteler, esclatté, escloppe, escrol, essonier, estete / etete, estoile / etoile, estropie (dismembered), exasperated, exhalation (fall of rain or water-spout), expanded / expansed, eyed;
- F : facé / fascé, face-lined, faillis, false cross, fanon, far-roebuck (roebuck in 5th year), fasce = fesse, flighted; feeding = preying?; fendue en pal = voided per pale; fer de dard / fer de Dard; fer de fourchette, fourchette, fer de mouline or millrind; fermau or fermail "buckle of a military belt"; ferr = horseshoe; fesse - fess, fesse point (centre of the escutcheon), festoon, shackbolt, fiery furnace / fiery, figetive, figured bearings (depicted with a human face), file = label, filet = narrow strip; fillet "the only dimunitive of the chief[,] contains one fourth of the chief in area,and always occupies the lowest portion"; fimbriated, finned (applied to fish whose fins are of a different tincture from that of the body), fire-ball = bomb; fire-beacon cf beacon; fire-brands cf brand; firme; fissure or staff "a diminutive of the bend sinister, one-fourth of it in size", fitchée, fitched, fitchy, fixed, = pointed, applid to crosses with the lower band ends in a point; fine-leaved grass / cinquefoil, fixed = firme, flagon, flamant / flambant = flaming; flank; flanches or flanques "the flanch is formed by an arched line drawn from the upper angle of the escutcheon to the base point of that side, they are always borne in pairs, the arches almost meeting in the middle of the field"; flanque point, flanch; flasques = "like flanches but smaller"; flax-breaker, cf hemp-break; flecked = "a line of partition"(?); flect, flectant, flected = bent in contrary directions like the letter S; fleece, flesh-hook, flesh-pot - iron pot with 3 legs; fleur-de-lis; fleuroné or fleur-de-lisé = fleury, flexed, float = an instrument used by bowyers; flook = a flounder; flory = flowered with the French lily (so, fleury?); flourette, flourished, flower of the flag, fly (length of a flag from fastened end to free end); flying column, focked, foldage, foliage, foliated, fondant, fontal, forcené, fore-staff, forest bill = wood bill, forked, form "the resting place of the hare", fortified "surrounded with towers", fountain "a roundal barry wacy of six argent and azure [...] represented flat, not spherical"; fracted = broken; fraise fraiser, fraze, frazier, framed saw, franché or frangé or frange, fresné s. forcené, fret "figure resembling two sticks..."; frette = fret; fretté or fretty; fretted, frightened s. forcené, fringed, frontal (noun), fructed, fulgent, fumant, furchy = forked; furiosant, fusée, fuselé, fusil "spindle of yarn"; fusillé, fusilly; fylot fylfot or gammadion
GH
[edit]galthrap, galtrap, caltrap, gamashes or buskins, garb or garbe, gardant or guardant, gardebras or garbraille, garden-pales, gardevisor or guardevisure, garter-plate or stall-plate, genet, genuant, gerated or gerratty, gerbe, gimmal rings, gironetté, gisant = jessant, givers or gringalé, gored, gorged, goshawk, goutté, grady = having steps, grice / grices = young wild boars, grieces = steps, gilleté = belled, grittie = field composed equally of metal and color, grose, guay, guige / gurge / gunge, guirlande, guivre, gyronways;
habeck or habick, habillé, habillement, habited, habited, hacked = applied to an indented charge when the notches are curved, hackle, hake-fish, hanchet = bugle-horn, harboreth = applied to the place where a beast of chase is lodged, harrow, hatchment, hause or hausse = enhanced, heinuse = the roe in its third year, helved = an axe is helved of its handle, Heneage knot, herissé = set with long sharp points like those of a herisson = hedgehog, hernshaw or heron, herse = a harrow or portcullis, or a bar or framework with upright spikes for the reception of candles; heurts = hurts, hirondelle = a swallow, honored = borne with a crown upon its head (of an animal); on scent (of a bloodhound or hound), houssé = caparisoned, huchet = bugle horn, hure = head of a boar or dolphin, hurst;
I
[edit]ibex = imaginary beast like an antelope with two straight horns from the forehead, serrated; imbattled = having battlements; imbordered = applied to a field which has a border of the same tincture; imbowed, imbrued = spotted or dropping with blood; impale, in base, in bend, in chevron, in chief, in cross, in fess / in fesse, in foliage, in glory, in her piety, in his majesty, in his pride, in his splendor, in leure or in lure = applied to the wings of a bird borne without the body and joined together at the place where they would naturally meet the body; in orle, in pale, in pile, in saltire, incensant, insense, increment or increscent, indented, ...
other
[edit]- only French
- accroché
- 1963, Julian Franklyn, Shield and Crest: An Account of the Art and Science of Heraldry:
- Accroché : obs. of one charge hooked in another; exa.: staple and horseshoe. Accroupi : alt . for a coney when in the […]
- allumé
- 1856, The Monthly Packet of Evening Readings for younger memebers of the english church, page 459:
- They are most frequently borne embowed and naiant, but sometimes haurient, that is, erect and breathing: When feeding, they are termed vorant; allumé when their eyes are bright, and pamé when dying. They are either represente singly, or in twos or threes. When triple, they may be regarded as emblematic of the Holy Trinity […]
- 1892, Hugh Clark, An Introduction to Heraldry, page 39:
- Occasionally we meet with the terms allumé when their eyes are bright, and pamé when their mouths are open. When the kind of fish is not named, the ordinary shape is implied, similar to a dace or herring .
- environné
- not heraldry-specific
sort
[edit]- taillé
- tanné
- taré
- targe
- tenant
- terrasse
- tierce
- tiercé
- tiercé en bande
- tiercé en barre
- tiercé en chevron
- tiercé en chevron renversé
- tiercé en fasce
- tiercé en pairle
- tiercé en pairle renversé
- tiercé en pal
- tierce-feuille
- tigé
- timbre
- timbré
- timbrer
- tire
- tombant
- torque
- torquette
- tortil
- tortillant
- torty
- tourelée
- tourné
- tourtelé
- tourteler
- guivré ostensibly = gringolly; vivré also ostensibly = that, but really:
- 1885, Collection de documents inédits sur l'histoire de France, page 115:
- sous un chef chargé d’un vivré , penché , timbré d’un heaume cimé d’une tête de biche ?, supporté par deux lions . ..dit le borgue Quittance de gages . — 18 janvier 1418 , n . st . ( Clair . , r . 140 , p . 2725. ) […]
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2001, Michel Pastoureau, The Devil's Cloth: A History of Stripes and Striped Fabric, Columbia University Press, →ISBN, page 29:
- are wavy , fascé - crénelé when they are notched , fascé - dentelé when they are cut into little teeth , fascé - vivré when the teeth are more exag- gerated . The system is infinite and the code always open - ended .
Lowercase a-z
[edit]- aaltokoro
- afgerukt
- afgewend
- aftontare
- agró
- ainmal
- alfàbia
- alziend
- arbocera
- armillaaripallo
- aspblad
- astförmig
- aufbäumend
- avellaners
- avsliten
- avslitet
- balkvis
- barev
- basztami
- beflammter
- berličkový
- besikaunantys
- beskrifning
- biegnący
- binnenzoom
- bića
- bjælke
- björnspjut
- bjørnspyd
- bonasia
- boothaak
- bordonada
- borstschild
- bowedembowed
- broye
- brīvlaukums
- burelas
- byzantiner
- bågsnitt
- bőségszaru
- canelado
- capocroce
- capopalo
- caracteristica
- chamaemorus
- chante-pleures
- chefpal
- chessrook
- chessrooks
- chevronnel
- chiefpale
- chmelová
- christianus'
- claricord
- contornat
- contourned
- contrafloronado
- contragebretesseerde
- contrarmellinato
- contrehermine
- coquerelles
- cornucòpia
- corquete
- coupeau
- coupeaux
- cyclocarpum
- cànter
- címerkép
- címerképek
- d'Arc
- d'Ivoire
- d'abondance
- d'aigle
- d'aigua
- d'albero
- d'alliance
- d'amore
- d'ancoraggio
- d'angle
- d'animal
- d'anneaux
- d'arme
- d'armes
- d'armi
- d'asta
- d'aulne
- d'azur
- d'eau
- d'engrenage
- d'hast
- d'honneur
- d'horloge
- d'héraldique
- d'oiseaux
- d'olivera
- d'olivier
- d'om
- d'organisations
- d'orme
- d'ortie
- d'ours
- d'una
- d'une
- d'échiquier
- d'émail
- d'épines
- dagys
- dell’Italia
- demieagle
- demihorse
- demilicornes
- demiunicorns
- demivol
- desramificado
- dobletrechor
- doubleheaded
- doublequeued
- drakenbloedboom
- drieblad
- drzewcowa
- dyrehoved
- dýrlingur
- ebracada
- eightpointed
- eihera
- eikekrans
- eingekerbt
- ekkrans
- elzenblad
- eraldik
- escussó
- essonnier
- expicitly
- ezki
- figurája
- firtwigged
- fiskveiðar
- fivebastioned
- fivepointed
- fivetoed
- fjällskura
- flammesnitt
- flamskura
- fleurdelis
- fleursdelis
- flexedreflexed
- florat
- floronat
- fodros
- forcene
- fortesë
- fouche
- fourleaf
- francquartier
- fullfaced
- fumall
- furskins
- g/o
- gaffelkors
- gamssi
- geblokte
- geitenkop
- gekanteeld
- geleliede
- geschacht
- geschakeerd
- gespickelt
- gestürzt
- getand
- gevoegd
- geënte
- ginbalk
- ginpost
- ginstam
- glasblåsarpipa
- golvende (golvend?)
- gotejat
- grankvistskura
- granskura
- grantoppskura
- grbavi
- greinasnið
- grejhundo
- grenskure
- gridlined
- griezumu
- gråverkskura
- gulpe
- guls
- gìzɛ᷅gŋà
- gömbvégű
- haardhaal
- hajókerék
- hanenkop
- harpyje
- harántormós
- hempbrake
- heraldycznej
- heralidsch
- herbach
- hermesstav
- heroldská
- hersehend
- hertenkop
- heráldique
- hestehoved
- hevosenpää
- hippocastanum
- hippotragues
- hiéraldique
- hjørnefelt
- hojnosti
- hondenkop
- hondstand
- horse’s
- houthakkersbijl
- hvolfi
- hyld
- hùldà
- hřeby
- hřívy
- idaeus
- ilveksenpää
- infattning
- iratze
- irtireväisty
- issantes
- izrobota
- jabučasti
- jahodníku
- jalavanlehti
- jefepalo
- jordbruksverktyg
- jātnieks
- kahvakoro
- kairėn
- kalapüük
- karhukeihäs
- karhunpää
- karvskure
- kavennettu
- kelttikala
- kerevit
- kersenboom
- kirkonkukko
- klöverblad
- koeiekop
- konjenica
- konjeniška
- konjeniški
- konksrist
- konteiners
- kormila
- korslagte
- kosmé
- kotkanpää
- kremlis
- kropsdel
- kruķu
- kryckskura
- kukonpää
- kuusikoro
- l'adjectif
- l'arrière
- l'autre
- l'enfant
- l'escut
- l'heràldica
- l'héraldique
- l'orle
- laddles
- lanmè
- laskowane
- leliestaf
- lidská
- liekkikoro
- liepsniškas
- liljakehä
- liljeinnfatning
- liljurammi
- linbråka
- linkerschuinbalken
- linksgewendet
- lionnés
- lisdodde
- listnatý
- lobsterSee
- lomblevelű
- loofkrans
- lulesh
- lískový
- maconné
- mansikanlehti
- marteauxpilons
- merletat
- millsailwise
- minaCaves
- miskelk
- mispelbloem
- mitangeführt
- mitangeführt.
- mitološkog
- mlýnský
- molenwiek
- montfloré
- mortaisées
- morušovník
- motvända
- mořská
- murallaSee
- muratinlehti
- napoleonic
- nebesky
- nell'araldica
- nivéole
- nostro
- nyhäkoro
- nåletræ
- nébulé
- oblakové
- oeilletThis
- oges
- ogoesse
- okaspuu
- olejová
- olijftak
- olivkvist
- omgekeerde
- ondat
- opačných
- opevnenie
- orangetawny
- orientální
- orjanlaakerinlehti
- orleta
- ostralegus
- ostrev
- otelle
- overvloeds
- oškrdy
- paceante
- pagriezusies
- pajzsocska
- palissadé
- palizado
- palmtak
- partido:en
- pasisukęs
- pašijové
- pelswerk
- perola
- perzikboom
- phrygian
- phéon
- pihlajanoksa
- pijlijzer
- pijlkoker
- pilovitá
- pinnipèdes
- planifolis
- pluhu
- plöntu
- polepšení
- polvivarras
- poppelinlehti
- portinsärkijä
- potencé
- precisly
- premilo
- prunifera
- prémféleség
- puginał
- páncélon
- põõsa
- přezka
- querstehendem
- qvo
- ramentiškas
- ramskop
- rastell
- rayonée
- recerclée
- recroisetées
- redorte
- representerande
- republiky
- revessat
- riddar
- riikinkukon
- ryttarens
- rūmas
- sVG
- saarnenlehti
- sahats
- sakarakoro
- saksanpähkinän
- salkoase
- sapiné
- saracenic
- sarcely
- schildhoofd
- schildje
- schrägbalkenweise
- schräglinksbalkenweise
- schuinbalk
- schuinbalken
- semiprofile
- senestrochère
- sextifoil
- seřazené
- shewolf
- shkurre
- sidebyside
- sinoble
- sinoplo
- sisaknyakék
- skråbjelke
- skábjálki
- skýjasnið
- sněhová
- sotahansikas
- spendýri
- spurrowel
- stilizált
- stångvapen
- subcotegires
- szarufa
- sädeskärve
- sågskura
- sénestrochère
- sümbol
- takajaloilleen
- tammenoksa
- tandskura
- tasselated
- tegengeblokt
- tegengeleliede
- tegengoudhermelijn
- tegenhermelijn
- tenalla
- tetrix
- threeleaf
- threelegged
- threesided
- tiercefeuille
- tiloló
- tinnskura
- toordinary
- topografiskt
- torrejada
- trangla
- trechor
- trefly-countertrefly
- treixor
- trianglé
- trifoils
- tripletowered
- tripleturreted
- trnová
- trupit
- trzema
- tréflée
- trêcheur
- tweelingbalk
- tweelingsbalken
- twotailed
- tálgusnið
- třmeny
- tűlevelű
- ulmifolius
- usw
- vaakunakuvat
- vaatav
- vartiotuli
- vasakule
- vastajänne
- vastapalkki
- vastapieli
- veerandik
- venábulo
- vidlice
- viikatteen
- vikingschip
- vildman
- vildmand
- vilené
- viljad
- vinestick
- vinsjestativ
- vishaak
- vivré
- vlagzalm
- vlasbraak
- vlierboom
- vlnitost
- vogelpoot
- vuorimies
- vuurhaak
- vuurijzer
- vydutý
- vänstervänd
- vågskura
- vågskuror
- wahlweise
- wapenfiguur
- weintrauben
- weverspoel
- weversspoel
- wiekenkruis
- wildeman
- wolfskop
- wolkenförmig
- wspiętego
- z.B
- zarots
- zbrojnoš
- zedro
- zeehoorn
- zeehoren
- zkřížený
- znaku
- zumar
- zwrócony
- zúžené
- Árboles
- Árnyék
- Ässäkoro
- Élans
- Éperons
- Épicéa
- Éviré
- Örgelpiep
- ágaskodó
- árgen
- årklykor
- échiqueté
- échiquetée
- émanché
- ĉielbluo
- Čejky
- Čeština
- ķepa
- Łańcuch
- ŋɛ́kŋà
- Ősember
- ŝtalkoloro
- šachová
- šerninė
- šištice
Capital A-K
[edit]- Abedul
- Abete
- Acciaio
- Acier
- Adarbakarrak
- Adits
- Adlerfang
- Adlerflug
- Agaves
- Agnus
- Agrifoglio
- Ahornblatt
- Aigle, Aigles
- Ajonc
- Alas
- Albán
- Alcoraz
- Aldegonde
- aleirones, aleriones, alerions, alérions
- Alfenfuß
- Allodola
- alouettes
- Alpacas
- Also
- Amalberga
- Amaranth
- Amphoras
- Ampulla
- Anatrella
- Anderlecht
- Andienne
- Anglesola
- Angrie
- Ankare
- Ankkuriristi
- Anrhydedd
- Antoniuskors
- Apilaristi
- Apollinaris
- Araldica
- Arancio
- Arboç
- Arma
- Armbrustschaft
- Armilla
- Armillary
- Armille
- Armoiries
- Aryeh
- Ascia
- Aspergilla
- Assenede
- Atalayas
- Atunes
- Aumentato
- Aurochs
- Auréole
- Autours
- Autruches
- Avantmurs
- Avanyu
- Aviz
- Avoine
- Awdry
- Awls
- Axes
- Babér
- Balais
- Balbuzards
- Balestra
- Ballenstedt
- Balloons
- Balmung
- Bamboos
- Banana
- Bananas
- Bandejas
- Baobabtree
- Baptismal
- Barbed
- Barbels
- Barnacle
- Barnacles
- Barrete
- Barrulets
- Barwy
- Basarabov
- Basinets
- Baskets
- Bat
- Bathtubs
- Batons
- Battant
- Batteries
- Battering
- Battleaxes
- Battles
- Bavo
- Bayards
- Bayerische
- Bayonets
- Beacons
- Beakers
- Beans
- Beards
- Bearings
- Bedoll
- Beechnuts
- Beggars
- Being
- Beizeichen
- Belegt
- Bendlets
- Bends
- Bendwise
- Bendy
- Berlines
- Berro
- Berło
- Beschauer
- Between
- Bezantes
- Bezants
- Białe
- Biblische
- Bicolor
- Bicycles
- Bifurcated
- Big
- Billes
- Billhooks
- Birds
- Birkenblatt
- Bisonte
- Bjelbo
- Blackberries
- Blackbird
- Blackbirds
- Blackcock
- Blackcocks
- Blackgame
- Blason
- Blasoned
- Blasonierungen
- Blast
- Blazon
- Bleu
- Blixtskura
- Blueberries
- BlumeSee
- Blutfahne
- Blå
- Blühender
- Boars
- Boats
- Bobbins
- Bobola
- Bogenflanke
- Bogenschnitt
- Bohrtürme
- Bolas
- Bonfires
- Boors
- Bordures
- Boreholes
- BorjaDoms
- Bottles
- Bottoniera
- Botvid
- Boucs
- BourbonArtois
- BourbonConti
- BourbonParma
- BourbonProvence
- Bourul
- Bouteilles
- Bouterolles
- Boutres
- Bows
- Boží
- Bracke
- Brackenkopf
- Branches
- Braques
- Bras
- Bread
- Breaking
- Breakwater
- Breitblättriger
- Brennende
- Brezo
- Brigs
- Briquets
- Brisure
- Britská
- Brochet
- Brooms
- Bruc
- Brugo
- Brunâtre
- Brustschild
- Bruyère
- Brün
- Buchel
- Buchenblatt
- Buchstabendevise
- Buchstabenwappen
- Buckets
- Buckweizen
- Buglehorns
- Bugles
- Buildings
- Bullfinches
- Bullhead
- Bulrush
- Bulrushes
- Bumblebees
- Bundle
- Bundles
- Buoys
- Burial
- Burning
- Buses
- Bustard
- Bustards
- Butterflies
- Buttons
- Byvåpen
- Bárd
- Bástya
- Bâton
- Bärentatze
- Bécassines
- Béjar
- Bökenbladd
- Bœufs
- Caballería
- Cabbages
- Cadency
- Caduceus
- Caesarius
- Cages
- Calabashes
- Calendar
- Caltraps
- Calumets
- Campanillas
- Canastas
- Cancellato
- Candles
- Canetto
- Canids
- Canines
- Cannonballs
- Canoes
- Canting
- Cantons
- Capercaillie
- Capercaillies
- Capitals
- Carapeteiros
- Caravels
- Carbasses
- Carillons
- Carnation
- Carnations
- Carnivorans
- Carnivores
- Carquois
- Carriages
- Carrots
- Cartwheels
- Cascavells
- Casserole
- Castles
- Catalot
- Català
- Categoria:Heráldica
- Categories
- Category
- Categoría:Felinos
- Categoría:Jarrones
- Catfishes
- Catherina
- Cattails
- Católicos
- Cauldrons
- Cavalry
- Caves
- Cendrée
- Centered
- CentreVal
- Cercelée
- Cereals
- Cetaceans
- Cetro
- Cette
- Chairs
- Chakrams
- Chalands
- Chalbots
- Chalices
- Chamois
- Chamomile
- Chandeliers
- Chaplets
- Charcoal
- Chardonnerets
- Charges
- Chaste
- Chatra
- Chaudrons
- Chaîne
- Checky
- Chemical
- Chequy
- Cherubkopf
- Cherubs
- Chessboards
- Chessrooks
- Chested
- Chevronels
- Chickens
- Chieflets
- Chiefpales
- Chiefs
- Children
- Chilenische
- Chimere
- Chimneys
- Chimère
- Chisels
- Chom
- Choughs
- Chozas
- Chrisme
- Chrysogonus
- Chufa
- Chula
- Churches
- Chênes
- Ciboria
- Cicadas
- Cien
- Cincles
- Cinquefoils
- Cipreses
- Circled
- Circoli
- Ciseaux
- Cities
- Citylines
- Ciupagas
- Civada
- Civic
- Civica
- Clairvaux
- Clarions
- Claws
- Clefs
- Cliche
- Cloches
- Clochettes
- Clogs
- Clothing
- Cloudberries
- Clouds
- Clovers
- Cloves
- Coal
- Coat
- Cobras
- Cockades
- Cockatrices
- Cockrels
- Cockscombs
- Coconuts
- Cod
- Coeur
- Cog
- Cogs
- Coiffe
- Coing
- Cold
- Collados
- Collection
- Colmenas
- Colonels
- Colonial
- Color
- Cols
- Columbanus
- Columnarios
- Columns
- Combat
- Comets
- Command
- Commission
- Company
- Compass
- Compasses
- Complete
- Compony
- Composiciones
- Conception
- Condors
- Confalón
- Confrontedanimals
- Conies
- Conifers
- Connects
- Consecration
- Conseil
- Consoles
- Constellations
- Contact
- Contents
- Contributions
- Control
- Cony
- Cooking
- Cooling
- Coots
- Copernicia
- Copihues
- Coqs
- Corbeaux
- Corbies
- Corbinian
- Cordelière
- CorelDRAW:Ecclesiastical
- Cormorants
- Corncobs
- Cornejas
- Cornflowers
- Cornucopia
- Corporate
- Correct
- Corseques
- Corvidaes
- Cottises
- Couchant
- Count
- counterchanged
- counterermine
- Countries
- Counts
- Couple
- Courge
- Courlis
- Couronnes
- Couvrechefs
- Covenant
- Covered
- Cow
- Cowrie
- Cows
- Coyotes
- Crabs
- Cradles
- Crampons
- Cramps
- Cranberries
- Crancelins
- Cranes
- Crayfish
- Crayfishes
- Create
- Crequier
- Crescent
- Crescents
- Crescione
- Creu
- Crismón
- Crocodiles
- Croix
- Crops
- Crossbow
- Crossbows
- Crossed
- Crosses
- Crosslets
- Crowned
- Crowns
- Croziers
- Crucifixes
- Crussol
- Crustaceans
- Crutch
- Crutches
- Créixens
- Crémaillères
- Créquier
- Cubes
- Cucharones
- Cuckoos
- Cucumber
- Culture
- Curlews
- Cushions
- Custodia
- Cutlery
- Cyclamor
- Cyriacus
- Cá
- Cántaros
- Církevní
- Cœurs
- Dagas
- Damage
- Damaszierung
- Damaszkolás
- Dams
- Darat
- Das
- Daymarks
- Deacons
- Debased
- Debruised
- Deciduous
- Deers
- Defence
- Defense
- Demianimals
- Demibears
- Demibucks
- Demicharges
- Demicrosses
- Demidogs
- Demieagles
- Demifleursdelis
- Demigriffins
- Demihorses
- Demilions
- Demiunicorns
- Demiwater
- Demiwheels
- Demons
- Dentelée
- Depicts
- Designwise
- Detachment
- Developers
- Devices
- Dextrochère
- Dharmacakra
- Dhows
- Diamonds
- Diapering
- Diapré
- Dictionaries
- Die
- Different
- Digit
- Digits
- Dimidiation
- Dinosaurs
- Disclaimers
- Distinctive
- Distinguish
- Doctrine
- Documents
- Dodenkopp
- Dogs
- Dolmens
- Doloires
- Domesticated
- Dominiak
- Dominoes
- Domus
- Donkeys
- Door
- Doors
- Doper
- Dormouse
- Doubleheaded
- Doubletailed
- Dovecotes
- Doves
- Dovetailed
- Dracheköpfe
- Drachenbaum
- Dragonflies
- Dragons
- Dragonslayers
- Drawknives
- Dreebladd
- Dreiberg
- Dreiblatt
- Drillingssparren
- Drills
- Drinking
- Drops
- Drudenfuss
- Drudenfuß
- Ducal
- Ducks
- Duestjertsnitt
- Dunes
- Durchbohrte
- Dwarfs
- Dziki
- Déierekapp
- Důlní
- Earlier
- Earls
- Ears
- Ebereschenzweig
- Ecclesiastical
- Ecuatorial
- Editor:Ecclesiastical
- Eeg
- Eels
- Efeublatt
- Eggs
- Egyszarvú
- Ehrenkränzlein
- Eichenkranz
- Eight
- Eighth
- Eightpointed
- Einhornköpfe
- Eisenbahnsymbole
- Eisenfarbe
- Ejército
- Elderberries
- Elders
- Electoral
- Electrical
- Electricity
- Electrodes
- Electronics
- Ellerbladd
- Embattled
- Emberi
- Embroidery
- Endenté
- Enebros
- Enfieldi
- Engineer
- Engrailed
- Engraved
- Engravings
- Entença
- Enté
- Envelopes
- Eopards
- Episcopus
- Equatorial
- Erased
- Erasure
- Erbsenpflanze
- Erdbeerblatt
- Erlenblatt
- Ermine
- Ermines
- Erminois
- Erroneous
- Escallops
- Escarbuncles
- Eschenblatt
- Escobas
- Escudo
- Escudos
- Escutcheons
- Esfera
- Espainiako
- Espenblatt
- Esskura
- Essorant
- Estados
- Estoiles
- Executioners
- Exotic
- Expeditionary
- Explanation
- Explosions
- Explosives
- Extinct
- Eyes
- Faces
- Facet
- Faceted
- Facing
- Factories
- Falconry
- Families
- Faravahar
- Farmhouses
- Fasces
- Faucilles
- Faucons
- Feet
- Fehwammen
- Felids
- Felines
- Female
- Fences
- Fensterrauten
- Feone
- Fermail
- Ferryboats
- Ferrymen
- Fers
- Ferulas
- Ferules
- Fetterlocks
- Feuerstahl
- Feuilles
- Fibbia
- Fibulae
- Fictional
- Fictitious
- Fidei
- Fifteenth
- Figs
- Figureeight
- Figures
- Fillet
- Fimbra
- Fimbriated
- Finches
- Fircones
- Fire
- Firearms
- Fireballs
- Firebirds
- Firebrands
- Fireplace
- Firesteels
- Fischaadler
- Fischereigerät
- Fishermen
- Fishing
- Fishtail
- Fishtailed
- Flachsbreche
- Flag
- Flagellum
- Flails
- Flames
- Flammenschnitt
- Flammes
- Flanchis
- Flashes
- Flasks
- Flaunches
- Flederbeerbusch
- Fleurdelis
- Fleursdelis
- Flies
- Flintlock
- Floodgates
- Floral
- Flowering
- Flutes
- Fléau
- Flößerhaken
- Fløterhake
- Fontänen
- Francisque
- Francoquartel
- Francouzská
- Frankokuartel
- Französische
- Französischer
- Frauenarme
- Freising
- Freisinger
- Fretado
- Frets
- Fretty
- Fretté
- Fridolin
- Frying
- Fuentidueña
- Fuglehoveder
- Furnaces
- Furniture
- Fusi
- Fusils
- Fusos
- Fusées
- Futro
- Fylfots
- Fylkesvåpen
- Försök
- Füürtoorn
- Gabelstück
- Gads
- Gajasimha
- Galeros
- Galicia-Volhynia
- Galleons
- Gamaun
- Ganado
- Gandía
- Gangolf
- Garbs
- Garlic
- Garter
- Gatehouses
- Gauntlets
- Gavels
- Gavillas
- Gazelles
- Gears
- Geese
- Geflügeltes
- Gegensparren
- Gekreuzte
- Gemeine
- Gemeinfigur
- Genette
- Genicera
- Genitalia
- Genitals
- Genêt
- Geographic
- Geometric
- Geometrical
- Geraldika
- Gerbe
- Gerbes
- Gerros
- Gewöhnliche
- Gibraltar –
- Gillyflowers
- Giraffes
- Gironny
- Girons
- Gitterrost
- Gitterwerk
- Glasbläserpfeife
- Glasmacherpfeifen
- Glassblowing
- Glasses
- Globes
- Globo
- Glossary
- Gloves
- Goatheaded
- Goats
- Goblets
- Godehard
- Godwits
- Goldenen
- Goldenes
- Goldfinches
- Golpes
- Gondolin
- Gonfalon
- Gonfalono
- Gonfanon
- Gonfanons
- Gorged
- Gorges
- Gorgonius
- Gorse
- Gorses
- Goshawks
- Gottesauge
- Goujon
- Gousset
- Gouttes
- Grabmale
- Graelles
- Grammar
- Grammatically
- Granatapfelbaum
- Grapen
- Grapevines
- Grapnel
- Grappes
- Grasshoppers
- Grassland
- Graylings
- Great
- Greater
- Gregorius
- Grenades
- Gridirons
- Griffins
- Griffons
- Grouse
- Grouses
- Grozing
- Gröna
- Guardant
- Gudgeons
- Guelders
- Gui
- Guillemots
- Guitares
- Guitarras
- Guitars
- Guivres
- Guldmärken
- Gurges
- Gussets
- Gutte
- Guttée
- Guttéedesang
- Gyronny
- Gyrons
- Gélinotte
- Göpel
- Götterbote
- Habitual
- Haches
- Hackberries
- Halberds
- Halskleinod
- Halstarit
- Halszierde
- Hammaskoro
- Hammermills
- Hamns
- Handshakes
- Hanedanı
- Hares
- Harkályok
- Harpie
- Harpies
- Harpoons
- Harppuunat
- Harpuner
- Harrowing
- Harrows
- Hasselnööt
- Hatchets
- Hats
- Hauptpfahl
- Hauptschragen
- Hautain
- Havukoro
- Hayas
- Haystacks
- Hazelnuts
- Hazels
- Headgear
- Headquarters
- Heads
- Heckster
- Hedgehogs
- Heekt
- Heidebrem
- Heidekräuter
- Helicopters
- Helier
- Hellparte
- Helmets
- Hempbrakes
- Hens
- Heradik
- Heraldic
- Heraldica
- Heraldică
- Heraldika
- Heraldiska
- Heraldyka
- Heralidk
- Heraudica
- Herby
- Herders
- Hereditary
- Hermagoras
- Hermelinschwänzchen
- Hermelinstulpe
- Hermenegild
- Heroldsbild
- Herons
- Herrings
- Herzschild
- Heráldica
- Heráldico
- Heura
- Hexagrams
- Hie
- Hiedra
- Higos
- Hirschgeweih
- Hirschkopf
- Historical
- History
- Hives
- Hobbles
- Hoc
- Hoguera
- Hollies
- Hondskapp
- Honeycombs
- Honeysuckles
- Hooded
- Hoopoes
- Hoppen
- Hornbeam
- Horseflies
- Horseradish
- Horses
- Horseshoes
- Hoses
- Hourglasses
- Houseleek
- Houses
- Hrvatski
- Huemuls
- Huis
- Humettée
- Hummingbirds
- Humorous
- Hunnenkopp
- Huître
- Hydras
- Hydropower
- Hyvlar
- Häränotsat
- Héraldique
- Hêtres
- Hình
- Höylät
- Hỏa
- Ibex
- Ibexes
- Ibérica
- Icebergs
- Ichthys
- Identification
- Iesvagel
- If
- Ikurrina
- Il
- Ilmu
- Imprese
- Indalo
- Infantado
- Inflamed
- Ingots
- Initialwappen
- Ink
- Inmaculate
- Innenbord
- Iustitia
- Jakobskreuz
- Jamones
- Jangada
- Jaszczurka
- JeanBaptiste
- Jessantdelis
- Jesuskind
- Jetelový
- Jilguero
- Jirones
- Jodenhoed
- Johannisschüssel
- Jougs
- Judenhut
- Jugs
- Juice
- Jumelle
- Jungfrauenadler
- Junipers
- Järnmärken
- Jülicher
- Kairattu
- Kalkan
- Kalyna
- Kanarischer
- Kantele
- Karlavagnen
- Kastanienblätter
- Kateřiny
- Katharinenrad
- Katzenelnbogen
- Kaulkopf
- Keros
- Keruing
- Kestrels
- Ketels
- Ketting
- Keystones
- Keythongs
- Khamsa
- Kienapfel
- Kiewitt
- Kingdom
- Kirchenfahne
- Kirchliche
- Klao
- Klauenflügel
- Klöverbladskors
- Kniaz
- Knives
- Knots
- Known
- Kobzars
- Koekepan
- Kolcolist
- Komeet
- Kommunevåpen
- Kopparmärken
- Korbiniansbär
- Korolyov
- Kosíře
- Kowadło
- Krakuska
- Krampen
- Kriekenbaum
- Krises
- Krojidla
- Krückenschnitt
- Kuhkopf
- Kukris
- Kulkors
- Kumlen
- Kummelit
- Kumokärjet
- Kuovit
- Kurkölnischen
- Kursch
- Kuularisti
- Kuusi
- Kyljet
- Kärjet
- Kärpät
- Kürsch
Capital L-Z
[edit]- l'ancre
- l'animal
- l'aulne
- Labels
- Laboratory
- Labori
- Labrys
- Lagopèdes
- Lambertus
- Lampagoes
- Lampreys
- Landelin
- Lauburus
- Laxstjärtskura
- Lebensbaum
- legionario
- Leingarben
- Leones
- Leopardierter
- Leopardo
- Leopards
- Lewark
- Liebesknoten
- Liebesseil
- Lierre
- Liesure
- Liljekors
- Lindenblatt
- Lindenzweig
- Lindworm
- Lindworms
- Linked
- Linnenbladd
- Linstocks
- Literature
- Lizards
- Lleng
- Lli
- Llossa
- Llosses
- Llunell
- Lobray
- Lobsters
- Locomotives
- Log
- Logistics
- Lohenpyrstökoro
- Lokys
- Looms
- Loriots
- Lotuses
- Lovak
- Lozenges
- Lozengy
- Luces
- Lucies
- Ludovingian
- Lumberjacks
- Lundy’s
- Lunel
- Lunello
- Luokka:Kirkolliset
- Lurbira
- Lures
- Lvové
- Lyhteet
- Lymphads
- Lynxes
- Lyres
- Lá
- Lävistetty
- Légion
- Lüün
- l'araldica
- l'heràldica
- l'héraldique
- Maces
- Machannelboom
- Machinery
- Mackerels
- Macles
- Madroño
- Maestranza
- Maestranzas
- Magazines
- Magnifying
- Mahseer
- Maimed
- Maintenance
- Mammals
- Mammoths
- Mandolins
- Mannelboom
- Mantling
- Maples
- Maps
- Marcellinus
- Maretak
- Markmeißnischer
- Marmots
- Marquess
- Marshalled
- Marsupials
- Martlet
- Martlets
- Martyred
- Martyrs
- Mascles
- Masonry
- Massacre
- Massacres
- Matchlock
- Mater
- Maternus
- Maueranker
- Mauerhaken
- Maulbeerbaum
- Maunches
- Maurerkelle
- Mazanky
- Meander
- Medal
- Medals
- Medical
- Medieval
- MedinaSidonia
- Medinaceli
- Medlar
- Meerfrau
- Meißener
- Meißner
- Melee
- Melocotoneros
- Melocotones
- Melons
- Melusines
- Melón
- Membres
- Menorah
- Menschenkopf
- Merkurstab
- Merleta
- Merlette
- Merlettes
- Mermaid
- Mermaids
- Mermen
- Metallurgy
- Methods
- Midaskopf
- Middle
- Middleearth
- Milanos
- Milchkanne
- Milestones
- Millets
- Millrinds
- Millstones
- Minecarts
- Miniaturowej
- Minvera
- Mirrors
- Mispelblüte
- Missile
- Missiles
- Missle
- Mistletoe
- Mitres
- Modern
- Monasteries
- Monastery
- Mondo
- Monile
- Monkeys
- Monogram
- Monograms
- Monstrances
- Montfloré
- MontmorencyLaval
- Monuments
- Moorcocks
- Moorslayer
- Moreheaded
- Morgensterne
- Morions
- Mortars
- Motto:Primus
- Mouflons
- Mounted
- Mounts
- Mulberries
- Mulino
- Multiple
- Municipal
- Mushrooms
- Musicians
- Musikzeichen
- Muzeum
- Muérdago
- Myrtles
- Mythological
- Mytishchi
- Mál
- Máselnice
- Médaille
- Mélusines
- Mésanges
- Möhl
- Möhlsteen
- Mönk
- Mühleisen
- Mühleisenkreuz
- Městská
- Naked
- Named
- Names
- Naresuan
- Narwhals
- Natural
- Naularisti
- Nautical
- Navigational
- Navy
- Necklace
- Necklaces
- Nepomuk
- Nesselblatt
- Netelbladd
- Nets
- Nettle
- Netřesk
- Niedersachsenross
- Ninth
- Nisou
- Nivelles
- Noix
- Nomadejado
- Notices
- Ntor
- Nuclear
- Number
- Nuns
- Nuthatches
- Nuts
- Nébulé
- Nó
- Oak
- Oaks
- Oars
- Oats
- Obelisks
- Objects
- Objetos
- Objets
- Occupations
- Octopuses
- Odonates
- Oil
- Oiseaux
- Old
- Olika
- Olivenboom
- Olives
- Olivos
- Ombro
- Omnes
- Onchú
- One
- Onze
- Operational
- Operations
- Opinicus
- Optical
- Oranges
- Orbs
- Orchid
- Orchids
- Ordnance
- Ordo
- Ordre
- Organic
- Orles
- OrléansLongueville
- Ortband
- Ortigas
- Oryxes
- Ospreys
- Ostrev
- Ostriches
- Otelles
- Othala
- Other
- Otherwise
- Our
- Ouroboros
- Ovejas
- Overhand
- Overseas
- Owl
- Owls
- Oxar
- Oxes
- Paaslam
- Paddles
- Padlocks
- Paillé
- Painting
- Palabras
- Palaces
- Palewise
- Palissado
- Pallets
- Paly
- Pancratius
- Panelas
- Panzerarm
- Panzerbein
- Paons
- Papagoi
- Papal
- Paper
- Papermaking
- Pappelblatt
- Parachutes
- Parchemins
- Participate
- Partly
- Partridges
- Passionsnagel
- Patens
- Pathfinder
- Patriarchal
- Patriarchs
- Paviour
- Pavos
- Paws
- Países
- Pear
- Pearls
- Peasants
- Pedestals
- Pegasos
- Pelicans
- Pellets
- Pelourinhos
- Pelzwerk
- Penguins
- Peninsula
- Pens
- Pentagrams
- Pentalfa
- Península
- People
- Perces
- Percussion
- Perdrix
- Pergaminos
- Periwinkle
- Permanent
- Perroquets
- Pertama
- Petita
- Pets
- Peuplier
- Peuranotsat
- Pferdepramme
- Pflanzenknollen
- Pfälzer
- Phaleristics
- Pheasants
- Pheons
- Photographs
- Pickaxes
- Pickets
- Picotas
- Pics
- Pieta
- Pigs
- Pillories
- Pilums
- Pineapples
- Pinienzapfen
- Pinnipeds
- Pioppi
- Pira
- Piran
- Pistols
- Planché
- Planets
- Plates
- Platoon
- Pliers
- Ploughshares
- Plows
- Plowshares
- Plumeté
- Plumetée
- Pobocznica
- Poggenstohl
- Pointes
- Polar
- Poleaxes
- Polnische
- Polskie
- Polská
- Pomegranate
- Pomegranates
- Pomeis
- Ponds
- Popinjays
- PopulusQue
- Porcupines
- Portcullis
- Porticos
- Portugiesische
- Português
- Potatoes
- Pots
- Pottery
- Pour
- Pouring
- Powerdriven
- Powered
- Powts
- Połònia
- Prayer
- Preachers
- Preferences
- Prehistoric
- Prelates
- Presses
- Pretzels
- Priests
- Principauté
- Printable
- Privacy
- Products
- Profesjonalnej
- Propellerpropellerhélice
- Propellers
- Protractors
- Psychological
- Ptarmigans
- Publisher
- Pumpjacks
- Pumpkins
- Punitive
- Pärttyli
- Pégases
- Quadruple
- Quartering
- Quarterly
- Quarters
- Quartz
- Quatre
- Quatrefoils
- Querbalken
- Quernstones
- Quintuple
- Quivers
- Rabbits
- Rabescato
- Radishes
- Rafal
- Rafts
- Ragenilda
- Rail
- Railroad
- Railway
- Ramsons
- Random
- Rapeseed
- Rappenantilopen
- Rapphohn
- Rapporteurs
- Rapsblüten
- Raspberries
- Ravens
- Rayonny
- Rays
- Readiness
- Rear
- Rearing
- Rebuses
- Recent
- Rechtssparren
- Recontres
- Recuentros
- Redcurrants
- Redortes
- Reeds
- Regardant
- Regional
- Reindeer
- Reliefs
- Religious
- Reliquaries
- Remaclus
- Remigius
- Representaciones
- Reptiles
- República
- Resaca
- Resting
- Results
- Reticles
- Retort
- Revolutionary
- RhinelandPalatinate
- Rhinoceroses
- Rhombuses
- Ribands
- Ribbands
- Ribbons
- Richtrad
- Rieksappel
- Rifles
- Rijksmuseum
- Risti
- Roads
- Rockcrystal
- Rockets
- Rockrose
- Rodents
- Rodło
- Roggenähre
- Rohrkolbe
- Roofs
- Roosters
- Ropes
- Rosebushes
- Rosemaries
- Roseta
- Rossbremse
- Roundels
- Rowans
- Rowing
- Rowlocks
- Roßbremse
- Rošty
- Rudders
- Rudenband
- Ruined
- Rundlar
- Runelike
- Runestones
- Ruota
- Rushes
- Rushnyks
- Rustres
- Rustros
- Rutenkranz
- Râteau
- République
- Résistance
- Röda
- Rööv
- Saag
- Sables
- Sabres
- Sachsenross
- Saddles
- Sailboats
- Sailing
- Sails
- Sailships
- Salamakoro
- Salient
- Salkoaseet
- Salomea
- Saltire
- Saltires
- Saltirewise
- Salvator
- Sambar
- Sambuchi
- Samoa –
- Sanguine
- Sanguíneo
- Sant'Illario
- Sapere
- Sapin
- SaracenicSurvey
- Sarcophagi
- Saskarmok
- Sasszárnyak
- Satanta
- Satellites
- Sauces
- Saufeder
- Scabbards
- Sceptres
- Schachbalken
- Schachkreuz
- Schaduff
- Schattenfarbe
- Schiffssteuerräder
- Schildfuß
- Schildlein
- Schildteilung
- Schools
- Schooners
- Schreitende
- Schrägbalken
- Schrägfaden
- Schräglinksbalken
- Schuppenschnitt
- Scientia
- Scientific
- Scimitar
- Scimitarra
- Scimitars
- Scissors
- Scobedos
- ScolopendraJazz
- Scrolls
- Sculptures
- Seabass
- Seabirds
- Seadogs
- Seahorses
- Sealeaves
- Sealions
- Seapies
- Seashells
- Seastags
- Seaweed
- Seaxes
- Second
- Secretarybird
- Section
- Sedges
- Seeblatt
- Seigneurie
- Sepulchre
- Sepulchres
- Sepulcros
- Series
- Serpents
- Serrated
- Servatius
- Seventh
- Sevillas
- Sewilli
- Sextifoil
- Sextuple
- Sfinx
- Shacklebolts
- Shadoofs
- Shakeforks
- Shamrocks
- Sharks
- Sharpsburg
- Shashkas
- Shawl
- Sheafs
- Sheep
- Sheeps
- Shellfishes
- Shepherds
- Shinbones
- Ships
- Shooners
- Shooters
- Shoulder
- Shovelers
- Shovels
- Shrubs
- Shuttles
- Siehe
- Sieves
- Signo
- Signs
- Similar
- Singha
- Sinister
- Sittelles
- Sitting
- Sixte
- Sixth
- Sixtus
- Sjöblad
- Skeins
- Skiing
- Skyskuror
- Slagor
- Sleds
- Sleeve
- Sleeves
- Sleipnir
- Slings
- Slovenčina
- Snaffle
- Snail
- Snails
- Snakes
- Snigg
- Snowflakes
- Society
- Socijalistička
- Sodalitium
- Sods
- Soil
- Soldiers
- Sources
- Soybeans
- Sparrenleiste
- Sparrows
- Spearheads
- Specific
- Spetsar
- Spickel
- Spiders
- Spielwürfel
- Spindles
- Spinning
- Spirals
- Spitzenschnitt
- Splendor
- Sporenrädlein
- Spornrad
- Sprig
- Springböcke
- Squids
- Squirrels
- Srpy
- Stags
- Stahlfarbe
- Starlings
- Statistics
- Statues
- Stauferlöwen
- Steam
- Stechpalmenblatt
- Steernbild
- Stehlík
- Stemless
- Stemma
- Stepped
- Sternenbilder
- Stierhörner
- Stierköpfe
- Stirrups
- Stoats
- Stocherstange
- Stockfish
- Stoles
- Strawberries
- Straws
- Struccok
- Structures
- Study
- Stummelästen
- Sturzsparren
- Subclass
- Submarines
- Sudis
- Sugarloaf
- Sulpitius
- Sundials
- Sunflowers
- Sureau
- Surrendered
- Sursum
- Sustainment
- Svantevit
- Svenska
- Svíčky
- Swallowed
- Swine
- Syarikat
- Sztuki
- Sääksi
- Süül
- Tables
- Tacı
- Tadpoles
- Taevasinine
- Talbots
- Tamgha
- Tamghalike
- Tandraderen
- Tannenschnitt
- Tarasque
- Targets
- Teaghlach
- Tears
- Teasels
- Teeth
- Templarios
- Tentera
- Testo
- Thuribles
- Tiaras
- Tierced
- Tiercefeuilles
- Tierkopf
- Tierköpfe
- Tiles
- - Tillbakaseende
- Tilting
- Timekeeper
- Tipvogn
- Tits
- Toads
- Tobacco
- Toison
- Toisón
- Tolosanerkreuz
- Torches
- Torii
- Torques
- Torses
- Torteaux
- Tortoises
- Torture
- Towels
- Toys
- Traba
- Tractors
- Traditional
- Transmission
- Transportation
- Transyilvania
- Trapezoids
- Trays
- Tre
- Trefoils
- Trellis
- Trellised
- Tressures
- Treuil
- Triangles
- Tridents
- Trierer
- Trifoils
- tripleheaded
- Trishula
- Triskelions
- Trivets
- Trouts
- Trowel
- Trowels
- Truffel
- Trummel
- Trushes
- Tryzub
- Tränenbestreut
- Tschechischen
- Tubs
- Tudorkroon
- Tudorów
- Tughra
- Tulusrauta
- Turdinés
- Turkeys
- Turkishes
- Turkiskoro
- Turnierhut
- Turnips
- Turnpikes
- Turnstiles
- Tuunfisch
- Two
- TwoSiciles
- Twoman
- Tygers
- Tälje
- Tétraonidés
- Tétras
- Têtard
- Tête
- Têtes
- Třmen
- Uccelli
- Uittohaka
- Ulmenblatt
- Umbraculum
- Umbrellas
- Uncial
- Unicorn
- Unicorns
- Unidos
- Unit
- Universal
- University
- Université
- Unknown
- Upon
- Urns
- Urogallos
- Uross
- Use
- Used
- Users
- Using
- Usually
- Vaches
- Vagelfoot
- Vair
- Valašky
- Valid
- Valleys
- Valois-Anjou
- Valois-Bourgogne
- Valor
- Valramienne
- Varied
- Varstat
- Vartiotulet
- Vases
- Vasijas
- Vebjørnsson
- Vegetables
- Vehicles
- Veils
- Vereinigten
- Verricello
- Vert
- Verwechselte
- Vessels
- Veterinary
- Vexillology
- Viceroyalties
- Vicuñas
- Vielles
- Viento
- Vierberg
- Vierung
- View
- Viiri
- Vikimedya
- Vilené
- Village
- Villas
- Vinces
- Violins
- Vires
- Virtuti
- Vischio
- Vogelfuß
- Volant
- Volcanoes
- Vrouw
- Vulkaan
- Vultures
- Vyshyvanka
- Vårdkasen
- Vêtements
- Včelí
- Wachsende
- Wachsglocke
- Wagg
- Wagtails
- Walczącej
- Wallnut
- Walnussblatt
- Walnuts
- Walramian
- Wapen
- Wapendeert
- Wappen.png
- Wappenbild
- Wappenfigur
- Wappenschilden
- Wars
- Wasserlilie
- Weberschiffchen
- Wechselzinnenbalken
- Weinleitern
- Weinmesser
- Welfenross
- Wellen-Andreaskreuz
- Wellenbalken
- Wellendeichsel
- Wellendießel
- Wellengöpel
- Wellenleiste
- Wellenpfahl
- Wellenschildhaupt
- Wellenschnitt
- Wellenschrägkreuz
- Wellensparren
- Welwitschia
- Westfalenpferd
- Weten
- Widderkopf
- Wikingerschipp
- Wildcats
- Wilderness
- Willibrord
- Windlasses
- Windmill
- Windmills
- Winemaker
- Wineries
- Winged
- Wings
- Winkelhaken
- Winkelmaß
- Winlasses
- Wisents
- Witches
- Within
- Wolfkopf
- Wolfsanker
- Wolkenbalken
- Woodmen
- Woodpeckers
- Woolpacks
- Wopefigur
- Workers
- Wounded
- Wreaths
- Writing
- Wulfskopp
- Wulk
- Wurfparte
- Wyverns
- Xiprers
- Xops
- Yales
- Yarn
- Years
- Yellow
- Yews
- Yokes
- Yurts
- Zarapitos
- Zbruch
- Ziegenkopf
- Ziegenkopfadler
- Zinnenschildhaupt
- Zinnenschnitt
- Zirbelnuss
- Zithers
- Znak
- Zubr
- Zwillingsbalken
- Zwillingsschrägbalken
- Zwillingssparren
- Zwingwerkzeug
French Wiktionary terms
[edit]Terms categorized as heraldic on fr.Wikt.
- à dextre
- à plomb
- à senestre
- à sénestre
- abaissé (eagle sense attested?)
- abouté
- abyme
- accolé
- accolés
- accompagné
- accompagnement
- accorné
- accosté
- accroupi
- acculé
- acculés
- ache
- achement
- acier
- acorné
- adextré
- adossé
- adossés
- affaissé
- affronté
- affrontés
- affûté
- aigle impériale
- aiguisé
- ailé
- aire
- ajouré
- alaisé
- alésé
- alézé
- alezé
- allumé
- alterné
- amade
- amanché
- arg.
- anché
- ange
- angemme
- angenne
- armes à enquerre
- armes fausses
- armes parlantes
- armigère
- armoiries
- armorial
- armoriste
- arrêté
- assis
- assomptif
- au naturel
- au pied nourri
- au point du chef
- azur
- bâillonné
- bande
- bandé
- banneret
- banqué
- barbé
- bardé
- barre
- barré
- barré-bandé
- base
- bastillé
- bastogne
- batail
- bataillé
- bâton
- baussant
- becqué
- becquée
- besanté
- bezan
- bezant
- bezanté
- billeté
- blason
- blasonnement
- bordure
- boule
- bourdonné
- boutoi
- boutoir
- boutonné
- brassardé
- bretessé
- bretesses
- bridé
- bris
- brisé
- briser
- brisure
- brochant
- brochant sur le tout
- brocher
- brun
- burelé
- burèle
- burelle
- câblé
- caboché
- cabré
- câbré
- cadril
- carnelé
- carneler
- champé
- chantant
- chape
- chapé
- chapé-chaussé
- chapé-flammé
- chapé-ployé
- chaperonné
- charge
- chargé
- chargeure
- chargeüre
- châtelé
- chat-huané
- chaussé-ployé
- chef
- chevelé
- chevillé
- chevron
- chevronné
- cimer
- cimier
- claires-voies
- clariné
- clavelé
- clé
- clef
- clés de saint Pierre
- cœur
- colleté
- comble
- comété
- compon
- componé
- componure
- comte
- contourné
- contre-bandé
- contre-barré
- contre-bretêché
- contre-cart
- contre-chevron
- contre-chevronné
- contre-componé
- contre-écart
- contre-écarteler
- contre-échangé
- contre-fascé
- contre-flambant
- contre-fleuri
- contre-fleuronné
- contre-hermine
- contre-herminé
- contre-manché
- contre-palé
- contre-passants
- contre-pointés
- contre-posé
- contre-potencé
- contre-rampant
- contre-saillant
- contre-vair
- contre-appaumé
- contre-embrassé
- contre-écartelé
- contrevair
- contrevairé
- coupé mi-parti
- coupeau
- coupeaux
- couponné
- courant
- courante
- courante en
- courantes en
- courbé
- couronne
- couronné
- couronne comtale
- couronne murale
- couronne navale
- couronne royale
- courti
- couture
- couvert
- cramponné
- crénelé
- créquier
- croisure
- croix
- croix celtique
- croix fédérale
- croix fléchée
- croix helvétique
- croix occitane
- croix pattée
- croix suisse
- d’acier
- danché
- d’aplomb
- d’argent
- d’azur
- de bleu céleste
- de brun
- de carnation
- de cendré
- de dextre
- de fer
- de gueules
- de mûre
- de péan
- de pourpre
- de prasine
- de profil
- de sable
- de sanguine
- de senestre
- de sénestre
- de sinople
- de tanné
- de tenné
- de vair
- de vair en pal
- de vair en pointe
- de vair ondé
- de vair renversé
- debout
- de contre-hermine
- de contre-vair
- découplé
- décussé
- degré
- de menu-contre-vair
- de menu-vair
- denché
- denchure
- détranché
- devise
- dévorant
- dextre
- d’herminais
- d’hermine
- d’herminite
- diapré
- divise
- donjonné
- d’or
- d’orangé
- dormant
- dragon
- dragonné
- écaillé
- écart
- écartelé
- écartelé en sautoir
- écarteler
- écartelure
- échiqueté
- écoté
- écran
- écusson
- effaré
- effarouché
- effrayé
- effréné
- élancé
- émail
- émanche
- émanché
- émanchure
- émaux
- embâtonné
- embâtonner
- embouté
- embrassé
- emmanche
- emmanché
- émoussé
- empenné
- empiétant
- empoignant
- empoigné
- en abîme
- en bande
- en barre
- en chef
- en cœur
- en fasce
- en nombril
- en pal
- en pals
- en pied
- en pointe
- en sautoir
- enchaîné
- enchaussé
- enclavé
- enclos
- endanché
- enfilé
- englanté
- engoulé
- engrêlé
- engrêlure
- enguiché
- enquerre
- ensanglanté
- enté
- enté en pointe
- entravaillé
- entrelacé
- entretenu
- entretenues
- épanoui
- éperon
- éperonné
- épine
- éployé
- équipé
- équipollé
- équipoller
- escarre
- esquarre
- essonier
- essorant
- essoré
- étagé
- étaie
- étendu
- étincelant
- étincelé
- évidé
- éviré
- failli
- fanon
- fasce
- fascé
- fascer
- faux
- fendu
- fenestré
- fer
- ferlé
- fermaillé
- ferré
- feuille
- feuillé
- feuille d’argent
- feuille d’or
- fleureté
- florencé
- fourcheté
- fourchu
- fourrure
- franc-quartier
- frette
- fretté
- fruité
- fumée
- furieux
- futé
- garni
- gemme
- giron
- gironné
- gironné en croix
- gisant
- glandé
- gorgé
- gousset
- goutte
- gravissant
- grille
- grilleté
- grimpant
- gringolé
- gringoler
- gueules
- guivré
- habillé
- hachure
- hamaïde
- haméïde
- hardi
- haussé
- heaume
- héraldique
- héraldiser
- héraldisme
- hérissonné
- herminais
- hermine
- herminé
- herminite
- hersé
- homme vert
- houppe
- houssé
- housser
- immortalité
- incendié
- isalgue
- issant
- joug et flèches
- juge d’armes
- l’un sur l’autre
- l’une sur l’autre
- lacs d’amour
- lambel
- lambrequin
- lampassé
- lampasser
- langué
- léopardé
- levé
- levée
- levron
- lionné
- lis
- liston
- litre
- longé
- loré
- losange
- maçonné
- mal-gironné
- manteau
- mantel
- mantelé
- mantelé renversé
- mariné
- marqueté
- masqué
- membré
- menu vair
- menu-vair
- métal
- mi-vêtu
- miraillé
- mise en abyme
- mitre
- monstrueux
- morné
- morner
- mornette
- mortaisé
- nébulé
- nille
- nillé
- nombril
- noué
- noueux
- nourri
- obiit
- ombre
- ombre de
- onceau
- onglé
- opposé
- or
- orangé
- oreillé
- organeau
- orle
- orlé
- orné
- ouvert
- ouverte
- paillé
- paissant
- pal
- pâmé
- pampré
- panelle
- panne
- pannon
- papelonné
- para-héraldique
- parahéraldique
- parqué
- parti
- parti mi-coupé
- partition
- passant
- patience
- patté
- pâturant
- pavillonné
- péan
- peautré
- penché
- pennache
- penne
- percé
- perché
- péri
- pic
- pics
- pièce
- pièce diminuée
- pièce honorable
- pied
- piété
- pignonné
- pile
- plaine
- planté
- plongeant
- ployé
- plumail
- plumeté
- pointe
- pommeté
- pommetté
- portée
- porter
- posé
- posé en
- posés en
- potence
- potencé
- pourpre
- pur
- quartier
- qui n’a pas d’armes porte un lion
- radié
- rai
- ramé
- rampant
- ranchier
- ravissant
- rayonnant
- rebattement
- rebattu
- recercelé
- recoupé
- recroiseté
- redorte
- regardant
- rehaussé
- renversé
- retourné
- rinceau
- roc
- rompu
- rouant
- sable
- saillant
- sanguine
- sautant
- sautoir
- sauvage
- scie
- séant
- sellé
- semé
- senestre
- senestré
- senois
- sicamor
- sigillant
- sinople
- sommé
- source
- soutenant
- soutien
- stangue
- superposé
- support
- supports
- sur le tout du tout
- surbrisure
- surchargé
- surmonté
- tabar
- tabard
- tout
- trabe
- tranché
- tranche-maçonné
- trangle
- trangles
- traversé
- tréflé
- trescheur
- tronçonné
- versé
- vêtement
- vêtu
- vexillifère
- vidé
- vigilance
- vilené
- vivré
- voguant
- vol
- volant
- volté
- voûté
- vuidé
Meubles héraldiques en français
[edit]- Catégorie:Meubles héraldiques en français
- abeille
- accouple
- accouple de chiens
- aéroplane
- affût
- agneau
- agneau pascal
- aiglat
- aiglats
- aigle
- aigle bicéphale
- aigle impériale
- aiglette
- aiglettes
- aigliau
- aiglon
- aiglons
- aile
- Airavata
- alcyon
- alérion
- amphiptère
- amphisbène
- amphistère
- ancolie
- ancre
- ancre bouclée
- ancre de muraille
- âne
- ange
- angelot
- anille
- anille de muraille
- anneau
- annelet
- annille
- antélope
- antilope héraldique
- aqueduc
- aquilon
- arbalète
- arbre
- arc
- archange
- arche d’alliance
- avant-mur
- avion
- badelaire
- balai
- balance
- baleine
- ballon
- bannière
- bar
- baril
- barrière
- barrique
- basilic
- bateau
- bâton de prieur
- bâton prieural
- batteur en grange
- beffroi
- bélier
- besant
- besant-tourteau
- biche
- biche à lait
- bidon à lait
- bièvre
- billette
- bison
- bisse
- bocquet
- bœuf
- bombe
- bonnet albanais
- bonnet phrygien
- borée
- bouc
- bouclier
- bouquetin
- bourdon
- bourdon de pèlerin
- bourrelet
- bouse
- boussole
- bouterolle
- bras
- brebis
- bris-d’huis
- broie
- broye
- bûcheron
- buffle
- burin
- buse
- cadril
- caducée
- calice
- canard
- cancerlin
- cane
- canette
- canon
- cantonner
- carré
- carreau
- carreau de jeu de cartes
- castor
- centaure
- centaure-sagittaire
- cep de vigne
- cerbère
- cerf
- chabot
- chaîne
- chamois
- champion
- chantepleure
- chapelle
- chaperon
- chardon
- chariot
- chat
- château
- château-fort
- chausse-trape
- chaussure
- chauve-souris
- chêne
- chérubin
- cheval
- chevalier
- chevalier du Temple
- ciseau à bois
- ciseau de sculpteur
- ciseaux
- claire-voie
- claricorde
- clé
- clef
- clés de saint Pierre
- cloche
- clochette
- clou
- clou de la Passion
- cochon
- cœur
- cœur vendéen
- couronne comtale
- couronne d’épines
- couronne de laurier
- couronne de reine
- couronne fleuronnée
- couronne murale
- couronne navale
- couronne royale
- couteau
- couteau de chasse
- couteau de tanneur
- couteau de vigneron
- coutelas
- crabe
- crampon
- crancelin
- crantzelin
- crapaud
- crevette
- cristal de givre
- cristal de neige
- crocodile
- croisette
- croissant
- crosse
- cyclamor
- cygne
- dahu
- daim
- dard
- dauphin
- défense
- demi-ramure
- demi-vol
- derrick
- dextrochère
- diadème
- donjon
- doublet
- drakkar
- écot
- écrevisse
- écureuil
- écurieu
- église
- élan
- éléphant
- émeraude
- émerillon
- enclume
- engrenage
- entre-mur
- Éole
- épée
- éperon
- épervier
- épieu
- équerre
- Erawan
- escarboucle
- étendard
- éternité
- étoile
- faisceau
- faisceau de licteur
- falot
- fanal
- faucheur
- faucon
- fayard
- fer de dard
- fer de flèche
- fer de lance
- fer de pique
- fer-de-moulin
- feu
- flambeau
- flamme
- flèche
- fleur de lis
- flobard
- flocon
- flocon de neige
- fontaine
- fontaine héraldique
- force
- forces de tondeur
- forgeron
- foudre
- foudre ailé
- four
- four à chaux
- fourmi
- francisque
- fusée
- fusil
- fût de canon
- gabarot
- galère
- gant
- gantelet
- genette
- gerfaut
- givre
- globe
- gonfalon
- gonfanon
- gouffre
- goupil
- grêlier
- grelot
- grenade
- grenouille
- griffon
- grille
- grillet
- grue
- guêpe
- guidon
- guitare
- guivre
- gulpe
- guse
- hache
- hache à double tranchant
- hache d’armes
- hache franque
- haie
- hallebarde
- hanap
- harpe
- harpie
- hast
- hérisson
- héron
- herse
- herse de labour
- herse sarrasine
- heurte
- hibou
- homard
- houe
- houseau
- huchet
- huître
- hulotte
- huppe fasciée
- hure
- hydre
- if
- jambe
- jambière
- jars
- javelot
- khamsa
- kriss
- lacs d’amour
- lampe
- lampe de mineur
- lance
- lance de tournoi
- lapin
- léopard
- levrette
- lévrier
- lézard
- libellule
- licorne
- lièvre
- lion
- lionne
- locomotive
- losange
- loup
- lune
- lunel
- luth
- lyre
- macle
- maillet
- main
- main de Fatima
- mammouth
- manche
- manche mal-taillée
- marteau
- marteau d’armes
- marteau de Thor
- massacre
- massacre crucifère
- masse
- masse d’armes
- massette
- massue
- mélusine
- membre
- mer
- merlette
- merlusine
- meunier
- mitre
- Mjöllnir
- molette d’éperon
- monde
- mont
- montagne
- montgolfière
- mouche
- moucheture d’hermine
- mouflon
- moulin
- moulin à vent
- mousquet
- mouton
- mur
- navette
- navire
- nef
- nuage
- nuée
- obélisque
- œil de faucon
- ogoesse
- oie
- olifant
- ombre de soleil
- ombrelle
- onde
- orgue
- oriflamme
- otelle
- otelles
- ouroboros
- ours
- palissade
- paon
- papillon
- patte
- pavillon
- pégase
- pélican
- pennon
- phare
- phénix
- phéon
- pic de mineur
- pigeon
- pin
- pioche
- piolet
- pique
- plaquebière
- plate
- pointerolle de mineur
- poisson
- pomme
- pont
- porc
- porc-épic
- poulaine
- proboscide
- puits
- pyramide
- quadril
- quartz
- quintaine
- quintefeuille
- rais d’escarboucle
- ramure
- ranseur
- rapière
- rapporteur d’angle
- râteau
- renard
- rencontre
- rivière
- roc d’échiquier
- rocher
- rose
- rose des vents
- roue
- roue d’engrenage
- roue d’horloge
- roue de moulin
- roue de Sainte-Catherine
- roue dentée
- rubis
- rustre
- sabot
- sabre
- saint
- salamandre
- sanglier
- saumon
- sauterelle
- sauvage
- scie
- senestrochère
- sénestrochère
- serpent
- sicamor
- sirène
- sirène à double queue
- soleil
- soleil couchant
- soleil éclipsé
- soleil éteint
- soleil non figuré
- soleil rayonnant
- soleil vidé
- soleil virgulé
- somme
- soulier
- sphère
- sphère armillaire
- sphinx
- taon
- tarasque
- taureau
- temple
- templier
- tenaille
- tête
- tête de Maure
- tête de râteau
- tête humaine
- TGV
- tiare
- tonneau
- torche
- torque
- tortue
- tour
- tourteau
- tourteau-besant
- tourterelle
- triangle
- triquètre
- triquètre sicilienne
- triskel
- triskèle
- trompe
- trompe d’éléphant
- trompe de chasse
- truie
- truite
- tumulus
- vache
- vaisseau
- vannet
- vautour
- verrat
- vièle
- vigneron
- violon
- vire
- vires
- vivre
- vol
- volet
- volute de crosse
- vouivre
- vuivre
- almagams - rare misconstruction of amalgams