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A coat of arms or armorial bearings (often just arms for short), in European tradition, is a design belonging to a particular person (or group of people) and used by them in a wide variety of ways. They were once used by knights to identify them apart from enemy soldiers. Unlike seals and emblems, coats of arms have a formal description that is expressed as a blazon. In the 21st century, coats of arms still continue to be in use, in a variety of institutions, e.g. several universities have guidelines on how their coats of arms may be used and protect their use. The art of designing, displaying, describing, and recording arms is called heraldry.

Family History Research

Celtic Giraffe Research

 

P.O. Box 125

Highspire, PA  17034

 

PHONE:  717/914-0923

 

email us at:  celtgrfe@comcast.net

Family History Research

Coat of Arms/Heraldry

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Family history researches may at some point get involved in examining coats of arms to determine the history of a family or simply for the pleasure of finding a heraldic connection to their family lines.  Many family history researchers believe that a coat of arms is only granted to families or individuals.  In fact heraldic symbols extend to corporations, communities, societies and cities as well.  There are several major classifications of heraldic arms, some of which fall outside of the family or individual type. Such classifications are Arms of Succession, Community, Dominion, Pretension, Concession, Family, Alliance, Patronage and Office.

 

One unusual category of arms was 'Arms of Attribution.'  These are fictitious arms invented by heralds in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries for royalty that actually died before coats of arms were in use.

 

The below classifications are the most generally valid categories in use from the past and today.

 

Succession - These are arms that are taken up by those who inherit certain estates by bequest, entail, or donation.

 

Community - These are arms that are associated with bishoprics, cities, universities, academies, societies, guilds and corporate bodies.  Many of these go back to a very early period.

 

Dominion (or Sovereignty) - These are the arms of the kings or sovereigns of the territories they govern, which are also regarded as the arms of the State. Thus the Lions of England and the Russian Eagle are the arms of the Kings of England and the Emperors of Russia, and cannot be altered by a change of dynasty.  In America several states have official arms of Dominion that derive from old rulers of the colony, such as in Maryland which bears the arms of Cecililus Calvert, second Lord Baltimore, who was the proprietor of the colony.

 

Pretension - These are arms of kingdoms, provinces, or territories to which a prince or lord has some claim, and which he adds to his own, though the kingdoms or territories are governed by a foreign king or lord: thus the Kings of England for many ages quartered the arms of France in their escutcheon as the descendants of Edward III., who claimed that kingdom, in right of his mother, a French princess.  Nearly all early sovereigns bore arms of this type as they constantly disputed territories.

 

Concession - These are arms granted by sovereigns as the reward of virtue, valor, or extraordinary service and deeds. All arms granted to subjects were originally conceded by the Sovereign.

 

Family (or paternal arms) - These arms are such as are hereditary and belong to one particular family, which none others have a right to assume, nor can they do so without rendering themselves guilty of a breach of the laws of honor punishable by the Earl Marshal and the Kings at Arms. The assumption of arms has however become so common that little notice is taken of it at the present time.  These types of arms sometimes are modified over time by various family members.

 

Alliance - These are arms gained by marriage.

 

Patronage - These arms are such as the lesser gentry bore as subjects to governors of provinces, lords of manors or feudal lords.  They usually derive from the coat of arms of the lord and indicate a level of dependence on such, as well as the connection to that manor.

 

Office - These are arms born by those holding certain offices such as the King of Arms in England or the Butlers of Ireland, ancestors of the Dukes of Ormond.

Last updated: 5/28/2009 6:10 PM

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