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Fruit

Pear (Period)

Pear (Period)

The term “fruit”, as it is used in heraldry, denotes the seed-pod of most plants; the term is specially reserved for the edible portions of those plants.  A full plant or tree shown bearing such fruit may be blazoned “fructed”.

 

Any fruit known to period Europeans may be used in Society armory – though, if the fruit is not itself European, its use is considered a step from period practice.  (An exception would be made for non-European fruit actually used in period European armory, but no examples have been adduced.)  Examples of fruit found in period armory include cherries, in the arms of Cheriton, c.1436 [Parker 104]; pears, in the arms of Perello, Visconte de Rodes, 1366 [Gelre 63]; peaches, in the badge of Pechey, d.1522 [Hope 191]; &c.

Cluster of ash keys (Accepted)

Cluster of ash keys (Accepted)

Hazelnut (Period)

Hazelnut (Period)

In general, those fruits that hang from a stem – i.e., those that grow from a tree or a vine – are shown with stem to chief by Society default; while those that grow from the ground are shown with the stem to base by Society default.  Thus apples, strawberries, bunches of grapes, pears, &c, have stems to chief, while artichokes, ears of wheat, &c, have stems to base.  There are numerous exceptions, of course:  one such is the “hazelnut” or “filbert”, with its stem to base, as found in the canting arms of Haseley or Hasley, 1431 [DBA3 417].

A few notable Society usages:  “Ash keys” are the fruits of the ash tree; the illustration shows clusters of ash keys dependent from their branches.  By Society convention, a “strawberry proper” is gules:  its slipping and leaving, if any, is vert, and its seeds may be Or or sable at the artist’s discretion.  The modern trapezoidal strawberry varietal is considered a step from period practice.  A “chili pepper proper” is red with a green cap, by Society convention (and carries the step from period practice mentioned above).

The illustrations show a pear, a cluster of ash keys, and a hazelnut.  For specific entries, see:  acorn, apple, clove, garlic, grain, grapes, hops, leek, mushroom, pine cone, pomegranate, poppy boll, turnip.  See also cornucopia, garb, slip.

Deborah the Dextrous bears:  Argent, three artichokes vert.

Kathryn Perry bears:  Azure, three pears Or.

Cecily Pykerynge bears:  Or, three strawberries proper.

Anne of Threadneedle Street bears:  Azure, a chevron erminois cotised engrailed on the outer edges argent between two leaved ash branches fesswise reversed, dependent from each a cluster of ash keys, and a domestic cat couchant Or.

Alice Gardener bears:  Vert, six peapods Or.

Tomas de Luna bears:  Or, a radish bendwise gules leaved vert and a bordure rayonny gules.

Wulfflæd of Hæselbroce bears:  Azure, in pale two hazelnuts Or.

This entry was posted on January 29, 2014, in .

Fence

Weir (Period)

Weir (Period)

Park pales (Period)

Park pales (Period)

A fence is an enclosure around a field or piece of land, less massive or permanent than a wall, and usually made of wood or similar material.  In period armory, the typical form was a wattle fence, drawn as wicker branches woven around posts; this form is found in the arms of Stapfer, 1605 [Siebmacher 199].  The wattle fence is also blazoned a “weir” or “yair”, which in period was submerged in streams and used to trap fish; it’s found in the canting arms of Zare, 1542 [Lindsay].

Another form of fence would be built from “park pales”:  closely set pointed stakes, modernly called a picket fence.  We find a period example of a park-pale fence in the arms of Zinhofen (sp.?), from the Hofkleiderbuch of Duke Wilhelm IV, early 16th C. [BSB Cgm.1952, image 268; see also Parker 442].  See also edifice.

George Warde bears:  Vert, a weir Or.

Edelgard Erzsébet von Württemberg bears as a badge:  Between the peaks of a mountain of two peaks argent issuant from park pales gules a hurst of trees proper.

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

Bush

Rose bush (Period)

Rose bush (Period)

A bush is a low-growing plant, with many branches spreading close from the ground.  The most common form of bush in heraldry is the rose bush (as in the illustration), but other varieties are also found; they are depicted with exaggerated branches, flowers and leaves.  The bush is a period charge, found in the arms of von Roschach, 1413 [Conz.Const. clxxiii] and di Ancius, mid-15th C. [Triv 39].  For related charges, see tree.

Arianwen ferch Edenewen bears:  Sable, a rose bush eradicated Or.

Gareth Thorne bears:  Vert, a thornbush couped between four arrows conjoined as a mascle Or.

Colin Blackthorn bears:  Argent, a pall cotised between three blackthorn bushes eradicated sable.

This entry was posted on December 11, 2013, in .