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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 new
Today the Negro must discover his role in an industrialized South, which indicates that the racial aspect of the Southern dilemma hasn't changed radically, but rather has gradually come to be reflected in this new context, this new coat of paint.
But whenever a major purchase was contemplated forty years ago -- a new bedroom set or a winter coat, an Easter bonnet, a bicycle for Junior -- the family set off for the downtown department store, where the selection would be greatest.
The previous coat / s having dried would be white whereas the new wet coat would be distinctly pink.
As Manjiro continues to dress with painstaking slowness into ceremonial robes for the tea ritual, Kayama slowly adopts the manners and dress of the newcomers, proudly displaying his new pocket watch, cutaway coat and " A Bowler Hat ".
For example, in the sentence That poor man looks as if he needs a new coat, the antecedent of the pronoun he is the noun phrase that poor man.
He formally established equality between his two kingdoms by introducing new flags with the common Union badge of Norway and Sweden and a new coat of arms for the union.
Outgrowth follows germination and involves the core of the endospore manufacturing new chemical components and exiting the old spore coat to develop into a fully functional vegetative bacterial cell, which can divide to produce more cells.
But damaged shellac can easily be touched-up with another coat of shellac ( unlike polyurethane ) because the new coat merges with and bonds to the existing coat ( s ).
The York Chocolate Cat is a new American breed of show cat, with a long, fluffy coat and a tapered tail and most of them are chocolate.
In 2007, Lerum Municipality launched a new logotype to used instead of its official municipal coat of arms which features the head of an oxen and three oak leaves.
A new national flag ( three horizontal stripes, white-red-white ) was adopted, along with a new coat of arms ( Pahonia -- a mounted knight, Saint George, Patron Saint of Belarus, with a drawn sword — the emblem of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ).
When the coat was destroyed by a bomb from the Immortal in Italy, Spike heartbrokenly declared it to be irreplaceable ; but the Italian branch of Wolfram & Hart quickly supplied him with a whole wardrobe of new ones, nearly identical, which he happily began wearing.
The film was originally released with a conventional optical soundtrack in April 1953, but the success of the film convinced the producers to re-mix the soundtrack in May with a new three-track, stereophonic soundtrack, which was recorded and played on a 35mm magnetic full coat reel installed by Altec, in interlock on another dubber in the projection booth.
Shortly before independence was granted in 1979, a local competition was held to choose a new national flag, and a design based on the colonial coat of arms was submitted to the College of Arms.
The actual coronet is mostly worn on certain ceremonial occasions, such as the coronation of a new monarch, but a baron can bear his coronet of rank on his coat of arms above the shield.
Following Slovenian independence from Yugoslavia, the red star was removed and the new coat of arms, designed by Marko Pogačnik, was added.

coat and town
Everything was as I had left it the night before last -- her portfolio and bag for town, her lingerie and dress and shoes laid out only her mink coat was missing.
The coat of arms on the Zurich town hall | Town Hall
Examples of deer in coats of arms can be found in the arms of Hertfordshire, England, and its county town of Hertford ; both are examples of canting arms, and also in the coat of arms of Northern Ireland.
* Košice becomes the first town in Europe to be granted its own coat of arms.
The name of the town means Thor's Harbour, and it may be named after the god of thunder and lightning in Norse mythology ; thus the town's coat of arms shows Thor's hammer Mjolnir, but more likely it was named after the first settler whose name then was Thor.
The coat of arms symbolizes, with its crenelated wall and the towers within and each side, a town that was already strongly fortified by 1409.
The fishermen, like all professions in town, got their own order in 1422, and the fish found its way onto their coat of arms.
De Montfort's banner described as the ' Arms of Honour of Hinckley ', shown in the stained glass image in Chartres Cathedral, is used by the town of Hinckley, part of his Earldom in Leicestershire, in their town coat of arms.
Margrave Albert Achilles, who was also Elector of Brandenburg, presented the town Bayreuth in December 1457 which the coat of arms that it still bears today.
The oldest coat of arms used by the town of Monza is a celestial shield, which depicts a crescent moon red with a white semi-circle to the chin.
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.
The coat of arms of Tczew depicts a red griffin in honor of Duke Sambor II, who granted the town municipal rights in 1260.
The coat of arms stem from 1968, and is derived from a map from 1539, where the town Hofors was surrounded by iron mines.
It adopted a coat of arms including three herrings, and the town defences were strengthened.
Beehives appear carved in the brick of the town hall exterior, and in 1959 three bees were included in the coat of arms adopted by Beeston and Stapleford Urban District Council.
In 1187, King Alfonso VIII of Castile made the abbot of San Emeterio lord of the town, and in 1248 Santander participated in the battle for Seville, receiving a coat of arms as reward.
The basis for the foundation of the town was the rich herring fisheries, symbolised by the three herrings in the municipality's coat of arms.
The bottom part of the coat of arms of the former Amt Balve is identical Bolve's town arms.
Five golden acorns on a purple background, symbolising power and mightiness are depicted on the coat of arms of Viesīte town.
Other types of ' branding ' are also employed to bring surrounding places into the Barnsley orbit, such as the use of the Barnsley coat of arms on street signs which are well beyond the boundaries of the town itself.

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