Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Victoria University (UK)" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

armorial and bearings
The Assembly abolished the symbolic paraphernalia of the Ancien Régime — armorial bearings, liveries, etc.
In English the word " crest " is commonly ( but erroneously ) used to refer to an entire heraldic achievement of armorial bearings.
In South Africa, the right to armorial bearings is also determined by Roman Dutch law, due to its origins as a 17th-century colony of the Netherlands.
The Assembly abolished the symbolic paraphernalia of the Ancien Régime – armorial bearings, liveries, etc.
By the time of the grant of armorial bearings by the College of Arms to Somerset County Council in 1911, a ( red ) dragon had become the accepted heraldic emblem of the former kingdom.
The Chancellery of Honours also centres around the Queen and is thus administered by the governor general, whose secretary simultaneously holds the position of Herald Chancellor of Canada and, as such, oversees the Canadian Heraldic Authority — the mechanism of the Canadian honours system by which armorial bearings are granted to Canadians by the governor general in the name of the sovereign.
Such displays are commonly called armorial bearings, armorial devices, heraldic devices, or simply armorials or arms.
Historically, armorial bearings were first used by feudal lords and knights in the mid-12th century on battlefields as a way to identify allied from enemy soldiers.
However, in most of continental Europe, citizens freely adopted armorial bearings.
In addition to this change of name, the armorial bearings of Saxony were removed from the Belgian royal coat of arms ( see above ).
In English heraldry mottoes are not granted with armorial bearings, and may be adopted and changed at will.
The armorial bearings of Cardinal Fisher
In January 2008, a petition to matriculate armorial bearings for the City of Inverness was refused by Lord Lyon King of Arms on the grounds that there is no corporate body or legal persona to whom arms can be granted.
Secondly, the right of knighthood was established for the eldest sons of baronets, this was to be revoked by George IV in 1827, and thirdly baronets were allowed to add the Arms of Ulster as an inescutcheon to their armorial bearings.
Baronets of Scotland or Nova Scotia were granted the Arms of Nova Scotia in their armorial bearings and the right to wear about the neck the badge of Nova Scotia, suspended by an orange-tawny ribbon.
The armorial bearings of these three boroughs were also merged.
The carved ceiling, adorned with the armorial bearings of Doge Andrea Gritti, is part of the original décor, probably designed by Biagio and Pietro da Faenza.
* The Stucchi or Priùli Room has a double name due to both the stucco works that adorn the vault and lunettes, dating from the period of Doge Marino Grimani ( 1595 – 1605 ), and the presence of the armorial bearings of Doge Antonio Priùli ( 1618 – 1623 ), which are to be seen on the fireplace, surmounted by allegorical figures.
On the walls of the Censors ' Chamber hang a number of Domenico Tintoretto ’ s portraits of these magistrates, and below the armorial bearings of some of those who held the position.
In conjunction with the Lord High Constable he had held a court, known as the Court of Chivalry, for the administration of justice in accordance with the law of arms, which was concerned with many subjects relating to military matters, such as ransom, booty and soldiers ' wages, and including the misuse of armorial bearings.
Christophe founded a College of Arms to provide armorial bearings for the newly ennobled.
Froissart originated from Valenciennes, Hainaut, and his writings suggest his father was a painter of armorial bearings.
Appointees receive badges and the right to armorial bearings.
Intrinsically related to Paris, the guards wear the armorial bearings of the city on their uniforms.

armorial and Victoria
In 1973, a depiction of Pink Heath was added to the armorial ensign for Victoria.

armorial and representative
File: Iceland COA 13th century. png | Arms of " Roi d ' illande " ( King of Iceland ; i. e. the representative of the king of Norway ) from the Wijnbergen armorial, ca 1280.

armorial and three
The original armorial blazon reads: Shield: " Gules, three pairs of swords in saltire argent, hilts and pommels or ; Crest: An elephant's head couped gules, armed or ".
The Brownlow Hall contains a giant frieze of the goddess Venus surrounded by putti with an armorial centrepiece and three early-Twentieth Century murals.
* saltorel, is sometimes said to be a diminutive saltire, but is best thought of simply as a saltire couped, the word being sometimes used when there are three or more ( rather like lioncel and eaglet were used at times when there were three or more lions or eagles in a coat )— a 19th century armorial uses ' saltorels ' only once for every ten or eleven ' saltires '.
The College armorial bearings are " Per pale dexter Argent a Cross Gules on a Canton Azure a Cross of St Cuthbert proper sinister impaling Allen Argent three Rabbits couchant in pale Sable.
This deed has an armorial shield displaying three mullets between two bendlets engrailed ; the helmet is surmounted by a dove ; the legend is " sigillum henrici scaresbrec ".
A large pointed arch opening in the gable immediately above the main door contained a large sequence of windows, the uppermost of which was a circular or rose window and dates to a period between 1422 and 1435 — just above it can be seen three coats of arms ; on the right is that of the bishopric of Moray, in the middle are the Royal Arms of Scotland and on the left is the armorial shield of Bishop Columba Dunbar ( Fig.
These elements were incorporated on the right hand side of the Denton UDC armorial shield, along with the two red bars on a white background on the left hand side of the shield, and the three cinquefoils, originating from the Denton arms.

armorial and Per
* Royal Burgh of Cullen, a 20th century armorial: Per fess sable and argent, in chief on a sedilla or cushioned gules diapered or the Blessed Virgin enthroned proper habited gules mantled azure crowned or and holding in her dexter hand a sceptre surmounted of a fleur de lis or and in her sinister arm the Holy Child enhaloed also proper in base a talbot passant of the first ( Public Register, vol 41, p 37, 1956 )

armorial and chief
His armorial bearings displayed both a red armoured arm brandishing a sword and a red lion rampant upon a white shield, with two red bars running across the chief.
In jurisdictions such as the Republic of Ireland the authority to grant armorial bearings has been delegated to a chief herald that serves the same purpose as the traditional king of arms.

armorial and Or
The naming of the ship, the " Golden Hind ", of Sir Francis Drake is sometimes given a mythological origin, though Drake actually renamed his flagship, in mid-voyage, 1577, as a gesture to flatter his patron Sir Christopher Hatton, whose armorial bearings included the crest " a hind Or.

armorial and with
The earliest source that indisputably links the red flag with a white cross to a Danish King, and to the realm itself, is found in a Dutch armorial, the " Gelre Armorial " ( Dutch: Wapenboek Gelre ), written between 1340 and 1370 ( some sources say 1378 or 1386 ).
The College's Hall has a fine hammerbeam-roof, painted in black and gold and decorated with the armorial devices of its benefactors.
Initially, those closest to the lords and knights adopted arms, such as persons employed as squires that would be in common contact with the armorial devices.
This Italian tricolour, defaced with the armorial bearings of the former Royal House of Savoy was the first national flag and lasted in that form for 85 years until the birth of the Italian Republic in 1946.
The flag of Saskatchewan features the armorial bearings ( coat of arms ) in the upper quarter nearest the staff, with the floral emblem, the western red lily, in the fly.
The mythic hippocamp has been used as a heraldic charge, particularly since the Renaissance, most often in the armorial bearings of people and places with maritime associations.
Dish with a scene of the Trojan War, from a large armorial service of maiolica commissioned by Montmorency from Guido Durantino of Urbino, 1535
They also included the Royal Arms of France in their own armorial achievements, even after they had lost their French possessions ( with the exception of Calais ) after 1450.
On 30 July 1980, Queen Elizabeth II augmented the armorial bearings by Royal Warrant with a crest, supporters, and a motto.
On the cornice is an armorial cartouche decorated with flora festoonns, between two flaming urns.
In 1954, DePaul adopted its current armorial seal with coat of arms and motto: " Viam sapientiae monstrabo tibi " (" I will show you the way of wisdom ", Proverbs, IV, 11 ).
In addition the cutters perform the role of ceremonial Livery Barges with the canopies and armorial flags flying on special occasions.
The Pomian coat of arms, being born by multiple families, as with most Polish armorial bearings, has multiple variations to the basic design.
Dodford church has the distinction of being the first church that the antiquary Elias Ashmole ( founder of the Ashmolean Museum ) is known to have visited with the aim of recording its inscriptions, armorial bearings etc.
Stone effigies of Sir James and his wife Joan with their armorial bearings cover their tomb in the choir of the Dalkeith Collegate church.
This may be displayed in a pavilioned form, draped behind the complete achievement of arms-or the armorial shield alone-tied open with cords and tassels and surmounted by the chapeau.
Oscar Wilde's novel Dorian Gray, speaks of Edward II giving armorial vestments made with Jacinths to his lover Piers Gaveston, 1st Earl of Cornwall.

0.339 seconds.