Search Results for: beard

Eyeglasses

Eyeglasses (Period)

Eyeglasses (Period)

Eyeglasses are a set of lenses mounted in a frame, used to correct faulty vision, dating from the 14th Century.  Period eyeglasses used thick circular lenses; the frames were either tied in place with ribbons, or else held in place by the hand for reading.  The illustration shows the latter type, as found in the arms of Latini, c.1550 [BSB Cod.Icon 268:243].

Eyeglasses are normally solidly tinctured, i.e., the frames and lenses are one tincture.  If the lenses are of another tincture, they must be explicitly blazoned, e.g., “a pair of eyeglasses argent lensed vert”.  If the lenses are removed, so that the field shows through, the charge may simply be blazoned “eyeglass frames”.  See also mask.

The Order of the Grey Beard, of Trimaris, bears:  Per pale sable and azure, in saltire a crutch Or and a sword inverted proper, in chief a pair of eyeglasses argent, stringed Or.

Edward Glass bears:  Or, a pair of eyeglass frames sable.

Leif Andersson bears:  Argent, a pair of eyeglasses sable lensed and on a chief vert two boar’s heads couped Or.

This entry was posted on January 26, 2014, in .

Enfield

Enfield rampant (Accepted)

Enfield rampant (Accepted)

The enfield is a chimerical monster, with the body of a greyhound, the head of a fox, the forelimbs of an eagle, and the hindquarters and tail of a wolf.  It’s been described as “a relative latecomer” to the heraldic scene [Dennys 156]; though no period examples of the enfield have yet been found, its form is in keeping with other monsters of the Tudor era.  The enfield is thus accepted for Society use.

Some etymological arguments suggest that the enfield and the alphyn are both variants of the same non-heraldic monster.

The enfield doesn’t seem to have a default posture; the illustration shows an enfield rampant.

Elayne Greybeard the Eclectic bears:  Vert, an enfield rampant guardant to sinister Or.

Lucrezia Lorenz bears:  Sable, an enfield passant to sinister Or.

Tavotai Koghunnoxaiyin bears:  Per fess Or and gules, an enfield rampant counterchanged.

This entry was posted on January 16, 2014, in .

Comet

Comet (Period)

Comet (Period)

A comet is a heavenly body with a long trail of light, manifesting irregularly, and considered a portent of disaster in medieval times.  In heraldry, it’s depicted as a mullet or estoile (called the “head”), trailing plumes of vapor or fire (called the “beard”).  The head is to chief by default; in Society blazonry, a comet with its head to base is sometimes blazoned a “shooting star” or “falling star”.

There are several styles of comet in heraldic art.  The most common form has an estoile as the head, trailing fire, as in the illustration.  However, it might be drawn indistinguishably from a mullet of eight points with one point greatly elongated; or as a mullet with a wavy trail.  No difference is granted between these styles.

The comet is a period charge, found in the canting arms of de Comma, mid-15th C. [Triv 121]; cf. also the civic arms of Colmar, 1605 [Siebmacher 219], and the illustration in Bossewell, 1572 [II.132].  The known examples of comets in period armory were singly tinctured; having the comet’s head a different tincture than its beard is deemed a step from period practice.  For related charges, see estoile, mullet.

Marc of Esfenn bears:  Sable, in pale three comets fesswise argent.

Elena Glamorgan bears:  Gules, a comet bendwise inverted Or.

Esmirelda Dancingstar bears:  Purpure, a shooting star bendwise sinister Or.

This entry was posted on January 3, 2014, in .

Barbel

Barbel haurient (Period)

Barbel haurient (Period)

The barbel is a fish noted for the whisker-like sense organs around its mouth, which give the fish its name (Latin barbam, “beard”).  It’s a period charge, found in the canting arms of the Dukes of Bar, c.1370 [Gelre 26v]. The barbel is frequently found haurient, its body slightly embowed (as in the illustration), but there doesn’t seem to be a default posture.

Randolph MacMorris bears:  Per bend azure and gules, a bend Or and overall a barbel haurient contourny argent.

This entry was posted on November 22, 2013, in .

Axe

Battle-axe (Period); double-axe (Acceptable)

Battle-axe (Period); double-axe (Accepted)

An axe is a chopping weapon or tool.  It is an ancient charge, found in the arms of the Kings of Denmark as early as 1244 [Asp2 205].  The axe’s default orientation is palewise, with the head to chief and blade to dexter.  The haft, when blazoned “proper”, is of brown wood.

There was great variation in the forms of the axe, even for the same coat of arms in period; many strange forms are blazoned simply as an “axe”.  No difference is therefore counted between the variants.  The most common form is the “battle-axe” or “war-axe”; any axe whose form is unspecified may be safely drawn in this form.  The battle-axe is single-bladed by default.  The double-bladed form is virtually unknown in period armory – the arms of Maberger, c.1460 [GATD 19v] may be an example, though identification is uncertain – but is quite common in Society armory; this form must be specified in the blazon.  A “bearded axe” has an extended cutting edge trailing below the axe-head.

Danish axe (Period); Lochaber axe (Disallowed)

Danish axe (Period); Lochaber axe (Disallowed)

The “Danish axe” and the “Lochaber axe” are similar in form:  both have a long, curved haft and broad blade.  The Danish axe is found in the arms of the Kings of Norway:  de Bara, 1581 [234] explicitly terms it une hache dannoise.  By the end of period it was being drawn with a notch in the top of the blade [Siebmacher 2; Woodcock & Robinson, plate 19], which in modern times has become one of its defining features [Parker 29].  The Lochaber axe, as used in Scots heraldry, is similar but defined by a hook at the end [Parker 29].  The distinction between it and the Danish axe, such as it is, is considered simply a guide to the artist; pending period heraldic examples of the Lochaber axe, it is no longer registerable in the Society.

 

 

Broad axe (Period)

Broad axe (Period)

The “broad axe” was fairly common in Continental armory; modern blazons term it a doloire (cooper’s axe), as this form of axe was used for chopping barrel staves.  It had a short haft and a wide, smooth blade; the blade is exaggerated in heraldic art.  The broad axe is found as early as c.1370, in the arms of Renty [Gelre 48v; also GATD 74, on which the illustration is based]; the English term “brode axe” was used in the grant to the Worshipful Company of Coopers, 1509 [Bromley & Child 56].

Carpenter's axe (Period); woodsman's axe (Acceptable); headsman's axe (Acceptable)

Carpenter’s axe (Period); woodsman’s axe (Accepted); headsman’s axe (Accepted)

The “carpenter’s axe” has a recess behind the cutting edge for the hand to hold and guide the blade.  The form is found in period emblazons, such as the arms of von Axt, 1605 [Siebmacher 48].  The term “carpenter’s axe” is the Society’s; the charge is termed a cognée in modern French blazons, but it was unlikely to have been distinguished in period blazons.

 

 

 

Francisque (Acceptable); labrys (Acceptable)

Francisque (Accepted); labrys (Accepted)

Of axe variants unique to Society armory, there are the “hatchet” or “hand-axe”, with a plain head and a proportionally shorter haft; the “francisque”, a hand-axe with an angled head, made for throwing (used mainly for a cant); the “labrys”, a ceremonial double-bladed axe from ancient Crete; the “woodsman’s axe”, also called the “felling axe”, which is fairly plain; and the “headsman’s axe”, also called the “slaughterer’s axe”, also quite plain.

For related charges, see adze, fasces, pick, pole-arm. See also cleaver.

The Thrown Weapons Marshallate bears:  Sable, two axes in saltire surmounted by a spear Or.

Sean Ruabarua MacGillaphaidraic bears:  Vert, an axe Or.

Sefferey of Wessex bears:  Gules, three axes argent.

Richard of the Fens bears:  Per chevron vert and Or, six battle-axes counterchanged.

Adelhardt Werner bears:  Per pale purpure and Or, a double-bitted axe counterchanged.

James of Prussia bears:  Sable, a francisque palewise argent, to the sinister a dagger palewise argent.

Karl vom Acht bears:  Gules, a labrys argent bearing two horns issuant from the haft and curving to meet the blades Or.

Dynadan do Pico bears:  Quarterly Or and argent, in saltire two headsman’s axes and dependent from the junction a hangman’s noose sable, all within a bordure gules.

Roger Carpenter of Rye bears:  Or, in pale a carpenter’s axe reversed and a carpenter’s square, point to base, and on a chief azure three annulets Or.

Michel von Alterstetten bears:  Per pale sable and Or, four broadaxes two and two counterchanged.

Thorkell Óláfsson bears:  Purpure, on a pile Or a Danish axe gules.

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