Search Results for: axe

Hammer

A hammer is a tool for striking or pounding, consisting of a blunt heavy head mounted on a handle.  It’s found in the canting arms of Martel as early as 1275 [Asp2 220].  The hammer’s default orientation is palewise, head to chief, with the main striking surface facing dexter.  Its “proper” tinctures are with a black metal head and a brown wooden handle.

As regarding types of hammers, there seems to be no default form of hammer in medieval armory, and certainly not in Society armory.  Probably no other charge has engendered such confusion of types and terms.  One type of hammer has been variously blazoned a “sledge hammer”, a “smith’s hammer”, and a “stone hammer”; the term “war hammer” has been applied to three very different types.  Indeed, the unmodified term “hammer” might be emblazoned as any form of hammer; the exact variant thus counts for no heraldic difference.  Except for the mallet and the Thor’s hammer, the illustrations should be considered representative samples rather than definitions.

Hammer (Period)

Hammer (Period)

Two forms of mallet (both Period)

Two forms of mallet (both Period)

Medievally, the most common form of hammer was drawn with claws or spikes opposite the striking face, and a handle not overlong; the illustration is taken from the arms of Martel, c.1370 [Gelre 48v].  This form is also blazoned a “martel” for canting purposes; though it’s usually assumed to be a weapon, the clawed form is also found in the arms of the Worshipful Company of Blacksmiths, 1490 [Bromley & Child 22].

Another common form of hammer in period was the “mallet”, a craftsman’s tool rather than a weapon, found in the canting arms of Mailly as early as c.1275 [ANA2 483].  The mallet’s form might vary by country or century, but was predominantly depicted in one of two basic forms, as in the illustration.

War-hammer (Period); modern war-hammer (Accepted)

War-hammer (Period); modern war-hammer (Accepted)

Thor's hammer (Accepted)

Thor’s hammer (Accepted)

Also in period we find the “war-hammer”, definitely intended as a weapon:  it had a clawed striking face for breaking through armor.  It’s found in the arms of Tusser, 1559 [Bedingfeld 50], though some modern blazons mistake it for a battle-axe.  The Society has also used the term “war-hammer” for other charges, far less documentable to period.

 

Of the variant forms unique to Society armory, the most common is the “Thor’s hammer” or “mjolnir”, a token of the Norse thunder god.  It alone among the hammers has its haft to chief by default.  The illustration is a composite of Viking age mjolnir-pendants, from finds at Birka, Rømrsdal, and Skåne.

Armorer's hammer (Accepted); bung-starter (Accepted)

Armorer’s hammer (Accepted); bung-starter (Accepted)

Chasing hammer (Accepted); carver's mallet (Accepted)

Chasing hammer (Accepted); carver’s mallet (Accepted)

Society armory also gives us examples of the “armorer’s hammer”; the “bung-starter”, a long-handled bludger for breaking open a barrel of beer; the “chasing hammer”, used by jewelers; the “carver’s mallet”, used by woodcarvers; the “smith’s hammer”, sometimes called a “cross peen hammer”; the “ball peen hammer”; the “sledgehammer”; and the “stone (throwing) hammer”.  Of these, the stone throwing hammer has not been documented to period, either as an artifact or as a charge; pending such documentation, the stone throwing hammer has been disallowed for Society use.

 

 

Smith's hammer (Accepted); ball-peen hammer (Accepted)

Smith’s hammer (Accepted); ball-peen hammer (Accepted)

Sledgehammer (Accepted); stone throwing hammer (Accepted)

Sledgehammer (Accepted); stone throwing hammer (Disallowed)

For related charges, see pick.  See also mace, pole-arm.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Raymond of Stratford bears:  Gules, a hammer bendwise argent.

Marteau de Forgeron bears:  Quarterly gules and Or, a warhammer bendwise sable.

Lughaid Eamon MacDiarmid bears:  Or chaussé ployé vert, a smith’s hammer sable.

Sandor Hackbrett bears: Argent, two hammers in saltire vert.

Falan Bitor bears:  Per chevron argent and gules, three mallets counterchanged.

Amartine du Bon Coeur bears:  Per saltire argent and azure, four ball-peen hammers in cross, handles to center counterchanged.

Ragnar the Bold bears:  Quarterly sable and Or, a Thor’s hammer argent within a bordure counterchanged.

Laeghaire O Laverty bears as a badge:  A carver’s mallet bendwise sinister sable.

William of Woodland bears as a badge:  Gules goutty d’Or, a wooden bung-starter palewise proper.

This entry was posted on February 1, 2014, in .

Grindstone

Grindstone (Period)

Grindstone (Period)

A grindstone is a stone disc mounted on an axle, with a crank for turning; it’s used for sharpening knives and other blades.  The grindstone is a period charge, found in the canting arms (Italian mola) of da Molla, mid-15th C. [Triv 227].

The term “grinding wheel” is a Society blazon for a grindstone mounted in a wooden frame for use, as seen in an image in the Romance of Alexander, c.1340.  As a charge, it appears to be unique to the Society.  For related charges, see mill.  See also rock (millstone), wheel.

Wolfric Hammerfestning bears:  Azure, a grinding wheel between three axes reversed argent.

This entry was posted on January 31, 2014, in .

Fer-a-loup

Fer-à-loup (Period)

Fer-à-loup (Period)

A fer-à-loup (French fer à loup, “wolf iron”) is a forestry implement, found in Continental heraldry.  In French blazons, it may also be called a hameçon à loup; in German blazons, a wulfsangel; mundane texts also call it a “wolf-claw” or “wolf-trap”.  The fer-à-loup is a period charge, found early on in the arms of von Stein or Stain, c.1340 [Zurich 203]; in the arms of von Stein, the charge remains in that form through the end of period [Siebmacher 111].

On other coats, however, the fer-à-loup’s form evolved over time:  in some cases, with a solid bar appearing between the blade and its loop; in other cases, being reinterpreted as an axe-head.

The fer-à-loup’s convex cutting edge is to chief by medieval and Society default.  See also knife.

Rognvaldr bassi bears:  Per saltire gules and Or, a fer-à-loup sable.

Ulfarr MacDhughaill bears:  Per pale sable and azure, a fer-a-loup and an orle Or.

Natalya of Lochmere bear:  Argent, in pale three fers-à-loup sable.

This entry was posted on January 27, 2014, in .

Fasces

Fasces (Period)

Fasces (Period)

A fasces is an axe bound in a bundle of sticks (called a fascine in Latin).  The fasces was the symbol of civil justice, dating from Roman times; it’s found in the arms of Cardinal Mazarin, 1601 [Parker 250].  Its association with 20th Century Fascists does not bar the fasces from Society use, though care should be taken.  Its default orientation is palewise, as with the axe.

Charles of the Jacs bears:  Sable, a broken fasces Or.

Gaius Cornelius Ursus bears:  Quarterly vert and argent, two fasces vert.

Eóin mac Raghnaill bears:  Or, on a bend sinister sable between two falcons striking to sinister and to dexter gules, an arrow inverted bound in a fascine Or.

This entry was posted on January 27, 2014, in .

Cleaver

Cleaver (Period)

Cleaver (Period)

A cleaver is a wide, massive blade intended to chop meat into more readily edible portions.  The cleaver’s blade might vary in emblazons, as it did for the artifacts themselves, but was always broad and basically rectangular in shape.  It’s a period charge, found in the arms of von Altbach, c.1525 [BSB Cod.Icon 392d:544, 545; cf. also Hausbuch der Mendelschen, c.1436, in Amman xl].

The cleaver is palewise, handle to base and cutting edge to dexter, by default.  See also axe, knife.

Erich Küchengehilfe bears:  Per bend sinister vert and sable, a cleaver bendwise sinister reversed argent.

Nicolae la bouchiere bears:  Per pale argent and azure, a cleaver bendwise sinister counterchanged.

Cecily de Chinon bears:  Quarterly vert and sable, four cleavers argent.

Guillem Cosinier bears:  Gules, a cleaver sable.

This entry was posted on December 19, 2013, in .

Cartouche

Cartouche (Accepted)

Cartouche (Accepted)

A cartouche is an oval or elliptical figure; its default orientation is palewise.  It is considered a shape upon which arms may be borne; thus, like the lozenge and escutcheon, when used as a fieldless badge it must not itself be charged.  Straight-sided cartouches are found in ancient Egyptian art; more oval cartouches were used for heraldic display [Hope 112].  Both forms have been accepted for Society use.  See also egg.

Michael the Dane bears:  Gules, on a fess argent a cartouche fesswise gules voided argent.

Axel Bohm bears:  Argent estencely sable, a cartouche gules.

Juana Isabella de Montoya y Ramirez bears:  Barry engrailed Or and vert, a cartouche pointed in chief and base counterchanged.

This entry was posted on December 12, 2013, in .

Axle bracket

Axle bracket (Acceptable)

Axle bracket (Accepted)

An axle bracket is an iron fixture attached to a wagon that holds its axle in place.  Though it may have been a period artifact, it doesn’t appear to have been used in period armory.  The ends are to chief by Society default.  See also horseshoe.

Maximillian Mühleisen bears:  Per pale gules and argent, a U-form axle bracket sable.

This entry was posted on November 20, 2013, in .

Arrow; Arrowhead

Arrow (Period)

Arrow (Period)

An arrow is a feathered shaft, shot from a bow or crossbow as a missile.  It’s found in the allusive arms of Archer, 1320 [DBA1 10].

The arrow’s default orientation is palewise, point down.  When fesswise, its default orientation is with point to sinister; this is sometimes blazoned explicitly.  An “arrow proper” has a brown shaft and black head, with its feathers, or fletching, to be specified; the blazonry term for the fletching is “flighted”, e.g., “an arrow gules flighted azure.”  The head and feathers are drawn greatly exaggerated in size.

Sheaf of arrows

Sheaf of arrows (Period)

A “sheaf of arrows” is a bundle of three arrows, two in saltire and one palewise, bound where they cross.

 

Arrow notch (currently Acceptable); forked arrow (Period)

Japanese arrow notch (probable SFPP); forked arrow (Period)

Of the variant forms of arrow in medieval armory, the most common is the “bird-bolt”, with a wide blunt tip; it’s also termed a “bird-blunt” or a “boson”.  It’s a period charge, dating from c.1285, in the canting arms of Bozon [ANA2 211].  Somewhat rarer is the “forked arrow”, with a two-pronged point designed to slash, rather than pierce; it’s found in the arms of Prunnster, c.1600 [BSB 307:620], but may be more familiar as a charge found in Japanese Mon [Hawley 53].

Japanese Mon have proven the basis for several arrow-like charges in Society heraldry.  In addition to the forked arrow, supra, we have the “Japanese arrow notch” (yahaza), as found in the Mon of Saiki [Hawley 54]:  this is the section of the shaft with the feathers and nock, drawn in a stylized form.

Fire-arrow (Acceptable); boson (Period)

Fire-arrow (Accepted); boson (Period)

Several variant types of arrows are unique to Society armory:  A “fire-arrow” is an arrow with pitch-soaked cloth wrapped near the point, and enflamed.  A “quarrel” is a short arrow with feathers down its length; it’s used in crossbows, rather than longbows.  A “whistling arrow” is a 13th C. Mongolian artifact, with holes in the point to create a whistle as the arrow flies; as a non-European artifact, its use is considered a step from period practice.

Quarrel, whistling arrow

Quarrel (Accepted); Mongolian whistling arrow (SFPP)

 

 

 

 

Elf-bolt (Acceptable); arrow fletching (Acceptable)

Elf-bolt (Accepted); arrow fletching (Accepted)

An “arrowhead”, without qualification, is drawn simply as a generic barbed point; it’s a usual English term for the rogacina of Polish armory.  An “elf-bolt” is a stone arrowhead, chipped and flaked; prehistoric specimens found by the ancients were attributed to the Little People.  The “arrow fletching”, the feathered end of the shaft, is found in the Mon of Hatori Masanari, d.1596 [Hawley 54]; but as such fletchings are indistinguishable from European arrow fletchings, they are blazoned without qualification.

Crescent-shaped arrowhead (Period)

Crescent-shaped arrowhead (Period)

Finally, the “crescent-shaped arrowhead” is a forked arrowhead, with two points.  It’s a period artifact; the charge (or one very similar) is found in the arms of Motringer, mid-16th C. [NW 36].  The illustration is taken from Motringer.

For related charges, see pheon, spearhead.

The Archery Marshallate bears:  Sable, two arrows in saltire Or.

The Order of Artemis, of the East, bears:  A sheaf of arrows azure.

Rumil Fletcher bears:  Azure, three arrows Or.

Loran Redbow bears:  Azure, three fire-arrows bendwise sinister in bend argent, enflamed proper.Styrbjorg Ulfethnar bears:  Argent, a demi-wolf salient proper, charged upon the shoulder with an elf-bolt argent, and issuant from a valknut gules.

Evan y Helfarch ap Llewellyn bears:  Erminois, on a pale gules in chief two bird blunts in saltire surmounted by an arrow inverted Or, a base counterchanged.

Kuji Ka Onimusashi bears:  Vert, a sheaf of forked arrows inverted surmounted by a three-pronged vajhra fesswise Or.

Daimon Isamu bears:  Argent, two axes, blades to center, between their handles two Japanese arrow notches in saltire, all gules.

Karin Ollesdotter av Augvaldsnes bears as a badge:  In fess a whistling arrow inverted vert sustained by a seahorse gules.

Rees of Northwoods bears:  Quarterly azure and gules, four arrowheads inverted argent.

Walkelin Montgomery bears:  Argent, three arrow fletchings in pall, shafts to center, a bordure sable.

This entry was posted on November 20, 2013, in .

Adze

Adze (Period)

Adze (Period)

An adze is a woodworking tool related to the axe, but distinguished by its hooked, transverse blade.  It’s used for shaping or dressing timber.  While there are several charges in period armory that can be interpreted as adzes (as in, e.g., the arms of Rodensteyn, c.1370 [Gelre 44v], on which the illustration is based), their identification is unconfirmed as of this writing.  The adze is palewise, head to chief by Society default.  For related charges, see hoe.

Sigridr Rognvaldsdottir bears:  Vert, an adze reversed Or within a bordure compony argent and azure.

This entry was posted on November 14, 2013, in .