His ceremonial dress included a splendid tabard, bearing the royal coat of arms, along with a sword, black leggings and buckled shoes. |
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Around the border is a series of panels and roundels with birds and animals amidst scrolling foliage and with a coat of arms. |
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By the later Middle Ages, the right to a coat of arms had become a matter for social pride and strict control. |
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The work comprises a limestone bust lodged under a classicized pediment surmounted by the poet's coat of arms and two putti. |
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Every church building had to display the royal coat of arms on the chancel arch in place of the rood. |
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The seven cuadrillas have their own banners and flags, all monocolor with the coat of arms and the name of the cuadrilla. |
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A coat of arms is usually defined as a design on a shield used as an emblem by a family, city, or institution. |
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Visitation of Yorkshire records the coat of arms of Wodde in a north window of Almondbury Parish Church. |
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Each coat of arms has a right and left heraldic side, as observed by the person carrying the shield. |
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He chose the Corbinian Bear as an heraldic device for his papal coat of arms. |
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In older illustrations of Penang's full coat of arms, the torse under the tree is of the 6 twist variety. |
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He had a delicately masoned stone plaque built into a wall by the fortress bearing his coat of arms and the year of construction. |
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On the center band is a coat of arms with a green-and-red quetzal, the national bird. |
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He also painted a tondo of the Pieta bearing Philip's coat of arms on the back, and he painted and gilded Sluter's statues. |
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It was part of Ben's family coat of arms, the Great Ash surrounded by four elk with formidable antlers. |
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In the parade, the leading families of each palace will carry the palace's coat of arms. |
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The stag is a Hardwick symbol on the family coat of arms and the oak tree a symbol of constancy. |
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If you're using only one item in the coat of arms, it would probably be placed centrally. |
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However, the unveiling of the proposed new coat of arms left most heraldists speechless. |
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A hatchment is a memorial to a person who has died and is made up from the deceased's coat of arms There are three hatchments in the church. |
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The town is on the site of an important river crossing, where there is a masoned bridge, as shown on the municipal coat of arms. |
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There is no American law by which you can obtain a coat of arms, as our government has not ever recognized coat armor. |
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Oh, yes, we chose a flag, an anthem and an emblem, a coat of arms, a national day, and so forth. |
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The coat of arms with its elaborate rococo style mantling has almost no identifiable Chinese precedent. |
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A lot of the artists who designed the knights coat of arms often used imaginary animals like the basilisk, dragon, unicorn, etc. |
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Le Notre's coat of arms is nothing if not a burlesque of heraldic traditions. |
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The smiling father sports a rifle nestled at his hip and wears a hat emblazoned with a coat of arms. |
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She also wished the table to include both her husband's coat of arms and a dedicatory inscription to him that would mention their three children. |
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For the Oriel Hall coat of arms this has been changed to a gold lion rampant on a blue field within a gold engrailed border. |
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Pictured on the coat of arms is a shield with two workers in front of a mahogany tree. |
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Those few who got a good look at the badge said that it bore the coat of arms of a foreign place and the name of an unknown knight. |
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The painted body of the stately Beekman coach is adorned with the family's coat of arms, crest, and applied floral festoons. |
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The Red Wyvern is a mythical two-headed dragon which featured on the coat of arms of the Clifford family of Appleby. |
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The lintel is carved in only one lithic piece and we can see four busts and the nobiliary coat of arms. |
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Plus they bore it on their coat of arms as a symbol of their line of Royal descent. |
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A national flag, coat of arms, and anthem are important symbols. |
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The swans became the symbol of Selby and are on the abbey coat of arms. |
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Each was then presented with an information pack about Swindon, a small tiepin bearing Swindon's coat of arms and their certificate of citizenship. |
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It was his family's coat of arms that was tattooed to her shoulder. |
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In the coat of arms of Amsterdam, the field of the escutcheon is red. |
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The basic, essential, element of a coat of arms is the shield. |
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The neo-classical house features a main doorway framed with Ionic pillars and topped by a balustraded balcony complete with carved stone coat of arms. |
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The family Hamel used as coat of arms a silver Hamel on a gold field. |
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The coat of arms, adopted in 1992, consists of a gold eagle against a blue background holding a cross in its beak, a sword in one claw, and a scepter in the other. |
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Quite often the obverse carried a coat of arms, a vignette, or a portrait. |
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A silver mural crown in five towers stamps the coat of arms. |
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The Canadian heraldic system shares with the Scottish system the requirement that the undifferenced coat of arms is borne by one person at a time. |
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The design of the coat of arms as granted, is the gyronny differenced by a silver globe at centre point, to emphasize the worldwide spread of our Clan. |
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He doubted any would stop him if they'd seen his coat of arms. |
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Badges are occasionally taken from a charge in the bearer's coat of arms, or they have a more or less direct reference to those charges. |
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On the contrary, wealthy merchants bought themselves into the nobility by becoming landowners and acquiring a coat of arms and a seal. |
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In art, a sturgeon is the symbol on the coat of arms for Saint Amalberga of Temse. |
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In 1489, out of gratitude for services and loans, Maximilian I awarded Amsterdam the right to adorn its coat of arms with the king's crown. |
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The coat of arms of Cherbourg dates from the late 12th century, at the time of the Crusades. |
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Primroses also appear as a charge in heraldry, for example the coat of arms of the Earl of Rosebery. |
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Mungo's four religious miracles in Glasgow are represented in the city's coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of his family was drawn with two purple goats on a field of silver. |
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The coat of arms of Port Coquitlam has the City's floral emblem, the azalea displayed on a collar. |
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The coat of arms of Prince Edward Island displays Lady's Slippers, the floral emblem of the Island. |
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All three colours are used in Dorset County Council's coat of arms and the red and white was used in recognition of the English flag. |
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The council or trustees may apply for an Order in Council or Royal Licence to use the former borough coat of arms. |
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A coat of arms dated older than the manor house also decorated the windows. |
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The new brewery was for the production of porter, and was renamed the Hind Brewery after the Whitbread family coat of arms. |
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The caribou is the official provincial animal of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, and appears on the coat of arms of Nunavut. |
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The name and coat of arms of the present state go back to the Germanic tribe of Saxons. |
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The hammer and sickle and the full Soviet coat of arms are still widely seen in Russian cities as a part of old architectural decorations. |
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James III of Majorca, vassal of the Kingdom of Aragon, used a coat of arms with four bars, as seen on the Leges Palatinae miniatures. |
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Among the Malatestiana Library manuscripts, two separate documents depicting the coat of arms of the Noli family were also found. |
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The coat of arms of the Bahamas contains a shield with the national symbols as its focal point. |
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Correia later depicted King Muqrin's bleeding head on his family's coat of arms. |
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The grant specifies the iconography of the coat of arms, the central portion divided into quadrants. |
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There he was knighted, and given a personal coat of arms, becoming the first conquistador to receive these honors. |
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It is made from a golden color silk canvas and embroidered in the center is its coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of England was impaled with Philip's to denote their joint reign. |
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The ancient flag of the Kingdom of Galicia was based mainly on its coat of arms until the 19th century. |
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Although Pope Benedict XVI replaced the triregnum with a mitre on his personal coat of arms, it has been retained on the flag. |
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Over time, he bought several manors at Congham, Westacre and Happisburgh and was granted a coat of arms, becoming a minor member of the gentry. |
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The Earl Marshal also remains to have charge over the College of Arms and no coat of arms may be granted without his warrant. |
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The Windermere coat of arms was commissioned in 1968 and designed by local schoolgirl, Sheila West. |
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Copley had previously refused to pay the royal herald for his own coat of arms and instead, made one up himself. |
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The legend is almost certainly medieval rather than ancient, although the town's coat of arms carries an image of the saint. |
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The coat of arms of Halifax include the chequers from the original coat of arms of the Earls Warenne, who held the town during Norman times. |
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The arms are now used as a badge by the Prince of Wales, and they appear below the shield in his coat of arms, along with his other badges. |
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Internal Revenue has its own crest or coat of arms or something. |
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Accordingly, an owner of a Scottish coat of arms may obtain a judicial order in the Court against anybody using his arms. |
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You get the Finnish state flag by defacing the national flag with the state coat of arms placed in the middle of the cross. |
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The Emperor also gave the family three fraises, or stalked strawberries, for their coat of arms. |
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The shield or emblem of Sussex, sometimes referred to as a coat of arms, consists of six gold martlets on a blue field. |
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He argues that the hawthorn bush would not be part of Henry's coat of arms if it did not have a strong relationship to his ascendance. |
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Blue and red are the traditional colours of Paris, and they are used on the city's coat of arms. |
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The horn has become the symbol of the city and represents Ripon on the Harrogate borough coat of arms. |
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Many Cornish landed gentry chose mottos in the Cornish language for their coat of arms, highlighting its socially high status. |
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In 1949, St Thomas's Hospital Medical School was granted its own coat of arms. |
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Simon Argles, secretary of UMDS, said that because of the name of the medical school it was more appropriate to use the hospital's coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms includes a depiction of the city wall, and two silver strips representing the River Avon and the hot springs. |
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The whole symbol bears a passing resemblance to the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom, particularly with the lion supporters. |
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Wigan, like most teams, originally used the towns coat of arms as their club badge until the Super League era when many clubs rebranded. |
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Eventually the club reverted to an updated design of the towns coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of the Chilean city of Coquimbo features the Union Jack, owing to its historical commercial links to Britain. |
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The HBC jack is no longer in use and replaced with a corporate flag featuring the company's coat of arms. |
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It features in the design of the British Twenty Pence coin minted between 1982 and 2008, and in the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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Many nations have a seal or emblem in addition to a national flag and a national coat of arms. |
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In the heraldic traditions of England and Scotland, an individual, rather than a family, had a coat of arms. |
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Only a few of the American states have adopted a coat of arms, which is usually designed as part of the respective state's seal. |
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A country may have both a national flag and a national coat of arms, and the two may not look alike at all. |
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The symbol appears in the island's official flag and official coat of arms, as well as its currency. |
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Each overseas territory has been granted its own flag and coat of arms by the British monarch. |
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Traditionally, the flags follow the Blue Ensign design, with the Union Flag in the canton, and the territory's coat of arms in the fly. |
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British passports are burgundy, with the coat of arms of the United Kingdom emblazoned in the centre of the front cover. |
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The wolf may be a tribute to the city's founder, Sir Arthur Chichester, and refer to his own coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms of Ireland features a gold harp with silver strings on a blue background, which dates from the 13th century. |
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When the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland were united in 1603, they were integrated into the unified royal coat of arms. |
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The Union rose, shamrock and thistle are engrafted on the same stem on the coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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Passport booklets from almost all countries around the world display the national coat of arms of the issuing country on the front cover. |
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However, the official name of the institution remains the University of Durham and the official coat of arms is unchanged. |
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It is believed to be the White eagle shown in the Polish coat of arms and in the Serbian coat of arms. |
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The red kite is the landscape bird of Scania, and the coat of arms of the municipality of Tomelilla. |
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The motto used on the coat of arms of the Royal Burgh is 'Tandem Bona Causa Triumphat. |
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However, when used by the government and not by the monarch personally, the coat of arms is often represented without the helm. |
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Queens consort and the wives of sons of the monarch also have their own personal coat of arms. |
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The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain ceremonial occasions, but an Earl may bear his coronet of rank on his coat of arms above the shield. |
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Letters patent can be used for the creation of corporations or government offices, or for the granting of city status or a coat of arms. |
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A coat of arms is incorporeal heritable property, governed, subject to certain specialities, by the general law applicable to such property. |
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A specific coat of arms could be protected by copyright as a pictorial, graphic or sculptural work. |
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Without such protection, a coat of arms would be useless as a form of identification and worthless as a piece of private property. |
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They were descended from the Earls of Halifax and Scarbrough but, as the bar sinister in the Savile coat of arms suggests, illegitimately. |
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The university's coat of arms incorporates those of the founders and locations of the two colleges it is derived from. |
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The tartan was designed by the Weavers Incorporation of Aberdeen and Harry Lindley and incorporates colours from the university's coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms is still in use today, but in the main the SRU use the commercial thistle logo on jerseys and stationary. |
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Dolphins are present in the coat of arms of Anguilla and the coat of arms of Romania, and the coat of arms of Barbados has a dolphin supporter. |
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In 2009 Shrewsbury Town Council was formed and the town's traditional coat of arms was returned to everyday use. |
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The coat of arms incorporates features from the heralds of both of the former institutions. |
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It is possible these were the same 6 Sevier referred to, as the number, brass plates and Welsh coat of arms are consistent with both references. |
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You can get your own coat of arms and enjoy music with The Rat Pack, The Bravo Boys and skiffle stars Paul Leegan and the Legends. |
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The branding iron used to caramelise it burned the college coat of arms into the sugar. |
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His grave is covered by a marble monument with his effigy lying on it in full judicial robes, surrounded by eight shields holding his coat of arms. |
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Alhough the tiara was omitted in the pope's personal coat of arms, the coat of arms of the Holy See, which includes the tiara, remained unaltered. |
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In addition to its coat of arms and flag, Galicia also has an own anthem. |
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The Mexica saw this vision on what was then a small swampy island in Lake Texcoco, a vision that is now immortalized in Mexico's coat of arms and on the Mexican flag. |
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The coat of arms of Bradford City council is based on that of the former City and County Borough Council, with additions to indicate the merger of eleven Yorkshire councils. |
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A coat of arms was attributed by medieval heralds to the Kings of Wessex. |
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He returned to Lisbon by April 8, 1484, where John II ennobled him, promoting him from esquire to a knight of his household, and granted him an annuity and a coat of arms. |
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Australian shillings, twenty of which made up one Australian pound, were first issued in 1910, with the Australian coat of arms on the reverse and King Edward VII on the face. |
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The town's flag is blue, overlaid with the coat of arms in colour. |
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The etymology of the town's name is reflected in the presence of a squirrel in the town's coat of arms, a feature first documented by the 1441 seal. |
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As Sovereign, Victoria used the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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Many Canadian flags and coat of arms have floral emblems on them. |
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This part of the coat of arms is the basis of the flag of Amsterdam, flown by the city government, but also as civil ensign for ships registered in Amsterdam. |
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The coat of arms of Amsterdam is composed of several historical elements. |
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From 1932 until its abolition in 1965, the Municipal Borough of Barnes in London used feathers based on those of the Prince of Wales on its coat of arms. |
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Henry was the first monarch of the House of Tudor, and during the reign of that dynasty the royal coat of arms included the Welsh Dragon, a reference to the monarch's origin. |
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Hinde claimed that in 1799, six soldiers had been dug up near Jeffersonville, Indiana on the Ohio River with breastplates that contained Welsh coat of arms. |
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By the time of the Norman conquest in 1066 it was under the control of Edwin of Tegeingl, from whose Lordship the Flintshire coat of arms is derived. |
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The gold in the county coat of arms symbolises the wealth of the area. |
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The programme for that event also sported the new coat of arms of the SRU that was granted by the Lord Lyon King of Arms on 28 February 1973, for the centenary season. |
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For Birmingham Civic Society's coat of arms, a petition was submitted by the executive council to the Earl Marshal, including a list of key aspects of the work of the society. |
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It appears on the coins and coat of arms of the Republic of Ireland. |
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A coat of arms can only belong to one particular person at a time. |
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In contrast, a coat of arms in Scotland is often, not without controversy, said to be a fief annoblissant, similar to a Scottish territorial peerage or barony. |
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For example, the University of Texas at Austin has registered its emblem and coat of arms for use in its capacity as an institution of higher education. |
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Indeed, upon ennoblement, a count or baron not from an armigerous family might actually assume his own, original coat of arms without recourse to any authority. |
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A specific rendition of a coat of arms is protected through copyright law and a coat of arms can be used as a trademark and will thus be protected by trademark law. |
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The saltire also appears in the coat of arms of the County Mayo town of Westport to commemorate the visit of St Patrick to the nearby mountain, Croagh Patrick. |
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It is usually decorated with official colors and symbols such as flag, presidential stripes and coat of arms of countries, states or municipalities. |
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In 1501, Gibraltar passed back to the Spanish Crown, and Isabella I of Castile issued a Royal Warrant granting Gibraltar the coat of arms that it still uses today. |
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The shield in the coat of arms is supported by two leopards. |
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Keane stated that it was too late to change the flag registered with the IOC, but was hopeful that the coat of arms of Ireland would be adopted afterwards. |
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From the union of the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1603, they have appeared quartered on the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom. |
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The arms are effectively identical to the coat of arms of Sweden. |
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This language has its own vocabulary, grammar and syntax, or rules governing word order, which becomes essential for comprehension when blazoning a complex coat of arms. |
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In heraldry and heraldic vexillology, a blazon is a formal description of a coat of arms, flag or similar emblem, from which the reader can reconstruct the appropriate image. |
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The Vatican City State and the Holy See each have their own coat of arms. |
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The coat of arms on an escutcheon forms the central element of the full heraldic achievement which in its whole consists of shield, supporters, crest, and motto. |
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This was used as the main jersey emblem until 1991, when the St Helens sports club emblem, not dissimilar to the coat of arms used previously, was seen. |
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The club's jerseys were initially adorned by the town's coat of arms. |
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The club crest is derived from the Manchester City Council coat of arms, although all that remains of it on the current crest is the ship in full sail. |
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Speght is also the source of the famous tale of Chaucer being fined for beating a Franciscan friar in Fleet Street, as well as a fictitious coat of arms and family tree. |
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A bergrisi appears as a supporter on the coat of arms of Iceland. |
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On the south side of the Ward is King Henry VIII's gateway, which bears the coat of arms of Catherine of Aragon and forms the secondary entrance to the castle. |
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However, the St Thomas' Hospital coat of arms has still been used. |
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The current coat of arms was developed following the mergers with Queen Elizabeth College and Chelsea College in 1985 and incorporates aspects of their heraldry. |
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The shield depicts the royal coat of arms together with an inescutcheon of the House of Hanover, while the supporters embody King's motto of sancte et sapienter. |
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There is no flag or coat of arms for the Bailiwick of Guernsey. |
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The allegorical figures standing on trimounts appear like guardians, flanking an archway formed by two fruit trees which frame the composite coat of arms. |
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Labels display the sea horse emblem of Cardiff City's coat of arms. |
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