Archives

Cross: Bowen

Bowen cross (Allowed)

Bowen cross (Accepted)

The “Bowen cross” is a Bowen knot turned crosswise, with its loops made angular.  Its name is a Society invention, and the cross itself was originally thought to be unique to the Society; but angular Bowen knots are a valid artistic variant, dating from 1530 [Woodcock & Robinson 149], so the Bowen cross is likewise valid.

Adler des Berges bears as a badge:  Per saltire sable and argent, a Bowen cross counterchanged.

Talan of Skye bears:  Purpure, a Bowen cross and a chief argent.

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Cross: Bottony

Cross bottony (Period)

Cross bottony (Period)

The “cross bottony” or “cross botonny” was an artistic variation on the cross crosslet in medieval heraldry; no distinction was made between them until late in our period (Legh, for instance, gives the crosses their separate names).  Society blazon distinguishes the two for the artist’s sake, but no heraldic difference is granted.

Mary of Greenmeads bears:  Per pale vert and argent, three crosses bottony counterchanged.

Annora verch Llwyd Bryneirian bears:  Azure, five crosses bottony two two and one and a bordure engrailed argent.

William Rufus Guthrie bears:  Per saltire sable and ermine, a cross bottony counterchanged.

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Cross: Barby

Cross barby (Disallowed)

Cross barby (Disallowed)

The “cross barby” is named for the barbs on the ends of its limbs.  Parker [159] cites only modern examples of its use; therefore, the cross barby may not be registered until period examples are adduced.

Jessica the Steadfast bears:  Quarterly argent and gules, a cross barby throughout counterchanged, in canton a garden rose gules slipped and leaved vert.

Wulf de Langhemerc bears:  Argent, a cross barby sable and a chief checky sable and argent.

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Cross: Avellane

Cross avellane (Period)

Cross avellane (Period)

The “cross avellane” was described by Guillim, 1610 [191], as resembling the filbert nut (avellana in Latin).  No period examples of its use in arms have been found, but it’s been accepted for Society use.

Fiadhnait ó Ghlinne Alainn bears:  Per fess embattled sable and Or, three crosses avellane counterchanged.

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Cross: Arrondi

Cross arrondi (SFPP)

Cross arrondi (SFPP)

The “cross arrondi” is a Society invention, based on the shield designs on the Bayeux Tapestry, c.1070. Its use is deemed a step from period practice.

Ælric Kyrri bears:  Azure, a cross arrondi between four roundels, a bordure argent.

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Cross: Annulety

Cross annulety (Period)

Cross annulety (Period)

The “cross annulety” (or “annuletted”) may have been a Byzantine motif, later adapted to mundane armory.  It’s found in the arms of Westle or Westley, c.1450 [DBA3 127].

Sophia de Leon bears:  Per saltire azure and argent, in pale two crosses annulety, arms formy and voided, and in fess two lions combattant counterchanged.

Hadrian Black bears:  Quarterly gules and Or, a cross annulety counterchanged.

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Cross: Annulets braced

Cross of annulets braced (Accepted)

Cross of annulets braced (Accepted)

The “cross of annulets braced” is negligibly different from a “cross of chain“.  The latter is found in the canting arms of Chene, c.1395 [DBA3 111].

Aldric Greystone bears:  Azure, a cross of annulets braced throughout Or.

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Cross: Ankh

Ankh (Accepted)

Ankh (SFPP)

The “ankh” may also be blazoned a “crux ansata” (literally “a cross with a handle”).  It was an ancient Egyptian symbol of life.  No period heraldic examples of its use have been found; the use of the ankh is deemed a step from period practice.

Mary the Melodious Lady of Flanders bears:  Gyronny ermine and vert, a crux ansata Or.

Anne the Merciful bears:  Per chevron azure and vert, a crux ansata argent.

Katriona Silverswan bears:  Per pale azure and argent, an ankh counterchanged.

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Cross: Alisée

Cross alisée (Disallowed)

Cross alisée (Disallowed)

The “cross alisée” (from the French for “reamed”) is found in the illustrated form only in Elvin [9:23]; this is the Society’s definition of the charge.  No period heraldic examples of its use are known, and the cross has been disallowed for Society use.

Edward Anselm Bruinwood bears:  Azure, on a bend gules fimbriated, between a bear rampant and a lute bendwise, three crosses alisée Or.

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Cross

Cross (Period)

Cross (Period)

The cross is an heraldic ordinary, a vertical lath conjoined to a horizontal lath.  As an ordinary, it is throughout by default, and subject to all the usual treatments – e.g., embattled, wavy, voided, cotised – but as the symbol of Christianity, it was elaborated and varied by the medievals more often than any other charge.  Medieval heralds were familiar with roughly twenty types of cross, according to Brault [Coat of Arms, I(90), Summer 74, pp.54-64]; more than three hundred types may be found in Victorian heraldry books.

Of these latter, some were distinctions made only after period, which medievally were considered simple artistic variants (e.g., cross crosslet vs. cross bottony).  Others were constructed of other charges, conjoined in the shape of a cross (e.g., cross of ermine spots); this was a period method of construction.  Most of the crosses in Victorian texts, however, were never actually used in armory, but were the invention of heraldic writers.

The term “crusilly” refers to a field or charge semy of crosses crosslet.  If another type of semy cross is desired, it must be specified, e.g., “crusilly couped” or “crusilly Maltese”.

The crosses illustrated in the following entries are all found in Society heraldry.  Some were used medievally; some were constructed from four or five other charges; some were taken from Victorian texts, before those were deemed untrustworthy; some are taken from other contexts, such as jewelry; and some are Society inventions.  Though the cross is normally throughout as an ordinary, most of its “discrete” forms are not throughout unless specifically blazoned so.  Some variations can be combined in simple cases:  e.g., a “cross flory nowy pierced” would combine those three treatments into a single cross.

Crosses that were found in period include:

cross of annulets braced, cross annulety, cross avellane, cross bottony, cross of Calatrava, cross of Calvary, cross clechy, cross couped, cross crescenty, cross crosslet, cross doubly pommeled, cross of ermine spots, cross fitchy, cross flory, cross formy, cross fouchetty, cross fourchy, cross of fusils, cross glandular, cross gringoly, cross of Jerusalem, key cross, Latin cross, Maltese cross, cross moline, cross parted and fretted, cross patonce, cross patriarchal, cross pomelly, cross portate, cross potent, cross quarter-pierced, cross rayonnant, cross of Santiago, cross swallowtailed, tau cross, cross of Toulouse, cross tripartite and fretted.

Crosses that are accepted in the Society, as of this writing:

Bowen cross, cross of Canterbury, Celtic cross, cross of Coldharbour, Coptic cross, cross estoile, cross humettycross of lozengescross of masclesNorse sun cross, cross of pheons, cross pointed, cross quadrate, Russian Orthodox cross, cross of Samildanach, crux stellata.

Crosses which carry a step from period practice:

ankh, cross arrondi, cross nowy, cross of Saint Brigid.

Crosses which have been disallowed:

cross alisee, cross barby, cross of Cerdana, fillet cross, cross of flames, fylfot, cross gurgity, Non cross, Papal cross, star cross, Ukrainian sun cross.

For related charges, see chi-rho, crucifix, saltire.  See also cypher charges, knot.

The King of Lochac bears:  Quarterly azure and argent, on a cross gules a crown between four mullets of six points, in canton a laurel wreath argent.

Rulff Sørensøn bears:  Gyronny azure and Or, a cross vert.

Elizabeth Feythe bears:  Azure, a cross engrailed erminois.

Giovanni di Milano bears:  Ermine, a cross cotised purpure.

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