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gorget and shown
The adult male, ( shown in the photo ), has a white breast, rufous face, upperparts, flanks and tail and an iridescent orange-red throat patch ( gorget ).
The adult male, shown in the photo, has a ruby red throat patch, also known as a gorget which may appear black in some lighting, and a dark forked tail.

gorget and Washington
Josiah Quincy III subsequently gave the gorget to the Washington Benevolent Societies | Washington Benevolent Society of Boston.

gorget and by
The chin and upper throat are creamy-white, and are bordered behind and below by a solid black gorget.
The head was protected by a close helm, burgonet or lobster tail pot helmet, usually worn with a gorget for the neck.
In later versions of the bascinet ( from the end of the 14th century onwards ) the mail aventail was replaced by a plate defence, termed the gorget.
The same use of the gorget also continues in Norway, worn by officers / corporals responsible for guard changes, and " Inspecting Officers " ( officer of the day ).
A gorget patch as worn by an RAF Officer Cadet

gorget and worn
It is known to have been worn on the caps of South Carolina's revolutionary soldiers, and it is likely according to many experts that it is a gorget, not a moon as is commonly thought.
Most German sallets were worn with a separate scoop-shaped plate gorget, called a bevor, that extended from the upper chest to just below the nose and protected the wearer's lower-face and throat.
* Kettenhund — " chained dog ", slang for a Military Policeman ( derived from the metal gorget worn on a chain around the neck ).
The gorget hanging from a chain around the neck ( and a last survival of medieval armour ) was the only universally recognised mark of an officer until epaulettes developed from clusters of ribbons formerly worn on the shoulder.
The scarlet patches still worn on each side of the collar of the tunics of British Army general officers, and senior officers ( in red, blue, crimson, yellow, or green according to branch ) are called " gorget patches " in reference to this article of armour.

gorget and part
Mexican Federal army officers also wore the gorget with the badge of their branch as part of their uniform until 1947.

gorget and uniform
A brigadier's uniform may also have red gorget patches.
The gorget was revived as a uniform accessory during Germany's Third Reich, seeing widespread use within the German military and Nazi party organizations.
Following the German example, the Finnish Defence Forces still use a metal gorget as a distinguishing mark of the duty conscript of a company, and the highly prussianised Chilean army still use the German style metal gorget in parades and in the uniform of their own Military Police.
The uniforms of British Army officers have " gorget patches " of a color different from the rest of the uniform sewn on their lapels, and so did many arms of the German military.

gorget and Indian
Air officers in the Indian and Sri Lankan air forces also wear gorget patches with one to five stars depending on their seniority.

gorget and War
In the Second World War, the military police of the German Army still used a metal gorget as an emblem.

gorget and Officer
However, use of the gorget was revived in 1799, when the Officer of the day was given the privilege of wearing a gorget which featured the Swedish lesser coat of arms.

gorget and |
A gorget | pectoral of tumbaga, of the Quimbaya civilization | Quimbaya culture ; 300 – 1600 AD.

gorget and officer
RAF officer cadets wear white gorget patches on their service dress and mess-dress uniforms.

gorget and was
The goddess Bast sometimes was depicted holding a ceremonial sistrum in one hand and an aegis in the other – the aegis usually resembling a collar or gorget embellished with a lioness head.
The goddess Bast was sometimes depicted holding a ceremonial sistrum in one hand and an aegis in the other — the aegis usually resembling a collar or gorget embellished with a lioness head.
General Adrian devised a breastplate which joined the abdominal defence which was also provided with a gorget.
There are also pieces that depict the courtly life-helmets for jousting tournaments, a crossbow for hunting, a ceremonial gorget, and an anvil that was used to manufacture such pieces.
A gorget () originally was a steel or leather collar designed to protect the throat.
For those of captain's rank the gorget was gilt with the king's monogram under a crown in blue enamel, while more junior officers wore silver-plated gorgets with the initials in gold.
The gorget was discontinued as a rank insignia for Swedish officers in the Swedish Armed Forces as of 1792, when epaulettes were introduced.
Instead, she was buried alongside a wall and adorned with jewelry, including a ring of electrum, a Bronze braziere, and a gorget believed to have come from Babylonia and already a thousand years old when it was buried.

gorget and .
A small gorget of folded fabric is sewn in around the collar to prevent an opponent's blade from slipping under the mask and along the jacket upwards towards the neck.
The list comprised a helmet, a gorget, a chain mail shirt, a lamellar coat or cuirass, leg armour, gauntlets, sword, shield, two bows with spare strings, 30 arrows, axe or mace, and horse armour.
It has green upper parts, yellow throat, black gorget, and rich brown upper breast fading to buffish ocre on the belly.
It is mainly green with a yellow throat, blue gorget and black eye stripe and beak.
It is an easy tit to recognise, for besides its erectile crest, the tip of which is often recurved, its gorget and collar are distinctive.
Males have a double band across the breast while females have a single gorget that is often broken in the middle.
The face is white with a black gorget.
Adult Red-legged Partridges are sandy-brown above, pinkish-buff on the belly, and pale grey on the breast, with a prominent gorget of black streaking, bold rufous and black flank-bars, a cream throat, pink legs, and a red bill and eye ring.
This black colouration continues behind the eye, where it broadens, and then extends down around the throat-patch to meet the upper edge of the gorget.
The face is white with a black gorget.
The sharply defined gorget distinguishes this species from the Red-legged Partridge which has the black collar breaking into dark streaks near the breast.
A Renaissance-era full suit of plate armour would have consisted of a helmet, a gorget ( or bevor ), pauldrons ( or spaulders ), couters, vambraces, gauntlets, a cuirass ( back and breastplate ) with a fauld, tassets and a culet, a mail skirt, cuisses, poleyns, greaves, and sabatons.
The symbolism of this has long been a matter of controversy – suggestions have included a crescent moon and a gorget.
These are due to the dark pigmented and bare skin that are present in both sexes and sometimes give the appearance of a dark gorget.
This has an unbroken white gorget like the Long-tailed Nightjar but the tail is shorter.

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