Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

coat and arms
Alfred Korzybski's family coat-of-arms ( List of Polish coats of arms Abdank coat of arms )
* Abatement ( heraldry ), a modification of the shield or coat of arms that supposedly can be imposed by authority ( in England supposedly by the Court of Chivalry ) for misconduct
The town has had a coat of arms since 1338, that of the Counts of Abensberg.
With the death of the last Count, Nicholas of Abensberg, in 1485, the estates fell to the Duchy of Bavaria-Munich, meaning that henceforth only the Bavarian coat of arms was ever used.
On 31 December 1809, a decree of King Maximilian of Bavaria granted the city a new coat of arms, as a recognition of their ( mainly humanitarian and logistic ) services in the Battle of Abensberg the same year.
The district of Offenstetten previously possessed its own coat of arms.
Alder coat of arms of Grossarl, Austria
Alder is illustrated in the coat of arms for the Austrian town of Grossarl.
* 2004 – The National Assembly of Serbia unanimously adopts new state symbols for Serbia: Bože pravde becomes the new anthem and the coat of arms is adopted for the whole country.
A very small number of his instruments survive, dated between the years of 1560 and 1574 and most bearing the coat of arms of Charles IX of France.
Alphonse's coat of arms was formed of those of France ( left ) and Castile ( right ), representing his father and mother respectively: Per pale azure semé-de-lis or dimidiating gules semé of castles or
In 1974, Acadia was granted a coat of arms designed by the College of Arms in London, England.
The coat of arms is two-tone, with the school's official colours, garnet and blue, on the shield.
Dürer's own woodcut of his coat of arms
The blazon of the coat of arms is Per pale, dexter: sable, a fess wavy argent, charged with two cotises wavy azure ; sinister: sky blue, three mullets of five argent.
The Non-Commissioned Officer insignia are the same up until Warrant Officer ranks, where they are stylised for Australia ( for example, using the Australian, rather than the British coat of arms ).
Folk etymology connects it to the German Bär, a bear, and a bear appears in the coat of arms of the city.
Even the symbols of Bosnian statehood ( flag, coat of arms ) have been chosen by the Highest Representative rather than by the Bosnian people.
In 2001, the National Guard unit was designated an official military unit of the Bulgarian army and one of the symbols of state authority, along with the flag, the coat of arms and the national anthem.
One form for the coat of arms of a Roman Catholic bishop.
The coat of arms of a Latin Rite Catholic bishop usually displays a galero with a cross and crosier behind the escutcheon ; the specifics differ by location and ecclesiastical rank ( see Ecclesiastical heraldry ).
An Eastern bishop's coat of arms will normally display an Eastern-style mitre, cross, eastern style crosier and a red and white ( or red and gold ) mantle.
Former coat of arms of Abella de la Conca, Lleida, Spain
The heraldic blazon for the coat of arms of the barony is: Or, a saltire gules, on a chief of the last a martlet of the field.

coat and Pope
Pope Paul VI abolished all administrative rights cardinals had with regard to their titular churches, though the cardinal's name and coat of arms are still posted in the church, and they are expected to preach there if convenient when they are in Rome.
Although Pope Benedict XVI replaced the triregnum with a mitre on his personal coat of arms, it has been retained on the flag.
The Pope wears the pallium, a liturgical vestment that is used heraldry | heraldically at the foot of the coat of arms of Benedict XVI.
Pere Roger de Belfort gave the roses of his coat to coat of arms of the town and later he became Pope Gregory XI, keeping it as a camerlengo of Reus, so the coat of arms was crowned with adorned with papal tiara and keys of St. Peter.
John I of Castile assumed the title and coat of arms of King of Portugal, which investiture was recognized by the Pope of Avignon, and ordered the deployment of his troops when the Bishop of Guarda and chancellor to Beatrice, Afonso Correia, promised to deliver the support of the people.
In 1849 Pope Pius IX returned from his exile in Gaeta and ordered the colors to be disposed vertically and replaced the ties with the papal coat of arms.
In a break with tradition, Pope Benedict XVI's personal coat of arms has replaced the tiara with a mitre.
The coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI has replaced the tiara with a mitre: " The Holy Father Benedict XVI decided not to include the tiara in his official personal coat of arms.
Yet another interpretation suggested by Archbishop Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo, who designed Pope Benedict XVI's tiara-less coat of arms, was " order, jurisdiction and magisterium ", while a further theory links the three tiers to the " celestial, human and terrestrial worlds ," which the pope is supposed to symbolically link.
In 2005, Pope Benedict XVI took a step further and removed the tiara from his papal coat of arms, replacing it with a mitre.
Pope Benedict XVI even removed the tiara from his coat of arms, replacing it with a mitre ( but with some symbolic reference to the symbolism of the tiara, still in use in the Holy See's coat of arms ).
The Pope wears a white watered-silk fascia, with his coat of arms on the ends.
Pope | Papal coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI | Benedict XVI is Gules chapé ployé Or or " tierced in mantle "
The current coat of arms of Ełk were adopted in 1999, after the town was visited by the Pope John Paul II.
Pope John Paul II used a slight variation of the reverse image as his coat of arms, a plain cross with an M in the lower right quadrant of the shield.
Another version is that the Kingdom of Aragon used and adopted the colours of the Papal States in their own coat of arms as a public and notorious submission to the Pope, something which the County of Barcelona would have followed shortly after according to this version.
Theocracy: The coat of arms of the Holy See, the seat of Pope | Papal government.
The trimount also is a charge on the coat of arms of Pope Pius XII, in whose pontificate Merrimack College was established.
They were approved in 1123 by Pope Callixtus II and in 1130 Pope Innocent II gave the order their coat of arms, a silver cross ( today known as the Maltese cross ) in a field of blue ( gueulles ).

2.163 seconds.