GLOSSARY OF TERMS
This Glossary is a copy of the glossary found on the Laurel Sovereign of Arms page (http://www.sca.org/heraldry/)
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Terms Commonly Misused in the SCA College of Arms
As Used By The College of Arms of the Society
for Creative Anachronism, Inc.
Revised: December 23, 2003
The purpose of this Glossary is not to define the many heraldic terms
which may be found in any basic or general heraldic text. For such terms, we
commend to you works such as J.P. Brooke-Little's An Heraldic Alphabet or
James Parker's A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry. Our purpose here is
to help define or explain some of the terms more or less specific to the Society
or terms which may differ somewhat from non-S.C.A. usage.
- Armiger.
- A person who has been awarded the right to arms. Arms in the Society can
only be given by the Crown of a kingdom, and come in three levels: Awards of
Arms, Grants of Arms, and Patents of Arms (or Letters Patent). A person with
registered personal armory who is not an armiger has a device, but only
armigers have arms.
- Armorial.
- (1) Adjective. Of or related to armory. (2) Noun. A list of armory
organized by the bearers' names. See also Ordinary.
- Armorial Element.
- A component of heraldic design. An armorial element may be a charge, a
line of division, a line of partition, a field treatment, a tincture, or other
component that may be used in designing armory. See the Rules for
Submissions, Part VII, for discussion of Compatible Armorial Elements.
- Armory.
- Any design that the College of Arms registers or protects, including
devices/arms and badges. This includes various important non-SCA armory from
the real world and may also include trademarks, logos, and other graphic
symbols that resemble heraldic bearings. See the Administrative
Handbook, Parts II and III, for a discussion of Registerable and Protected
Items.
- Arms.
- In the SCA, people who have been awarded arms by the Crown of a kingdom
may call their heraldic device "arms." The distinction between arms and a
device is not tracked by the College of Arms. See also Armiger,
Device.
- Arrangement.
- The placement of charges in a group relative to the other charges in the
group. For example, the arrangement three roundels two and one is
different than the arrangement three roundels in fess. Arrangement is
sometimes confused with location, and sometimes with orientation. See
also Location, Orientation.
- Augmentation of Arms.
- (Also, Augmentation) An honor added to a registered device. First, the
Crown of a kingdom must give the recipient of the augmentation the right to
add a charge or charges to a registered device as an honor, then the honor
must be registered with the College of Arms. An augmentation is not registered
as a change of armory; instead, both the underlying arms and the arms with
augmentation are protected. Therefore, the underlying armory can be changed
while keeping the augmentation the same (assuming no style problems result).
Augmentations are usually registered by the College of Arms in the form
"[Blazon of device], and as an augmentation, [blazon of augmentation]".
- Badge.
- A piece of armory used by an individual or group to identify possessions,
retainers, members, or other items. A badge is different from a device, which
is used solely by its owner (or the owner's herald). See also
Fieldless Armory.
- Balance.
- The state of having charges distributed evenly or in accordance with
period heraldic rules. Balance is not the same as symmetry. As a general rule,
if all the charges are on one side of the shield, the design is considered
unbalanced. However, period sensibilities for balance are not always obvious
to the modern eye, and period heraldic designs should be consulted before
making any categorical statements about balance. By looking at period designs,
we find that Azure, in chief three escallops Or is balanced, but
Azure, to dexter three escallops in pale Or is less balanced. Likewise,
we find that Quarterly gules and argent, in dexter chief a mullet
argent is balanced, but Quarterly gules and argent, in dexter base a
mullet argent is not balanced.
- Blazon.
- The verbal or written description of a piece of armory.
- Branch.
- An official chapter of the Society.
- Byname.
- The part of a personal name other than the given name. Byname is a broad
term that includes hereditary surnames, patronymics, locatives, occupational
descriptions and epithets. See also Given Name, Hereditary Surname,
Locative Byname, Matronymic, Occupational Byname, Patronymic.
- Cadency.
- The method of modifying armory to indicate a relationship with the owner
of the original armory. Changes that were made to distinguish one device from
another can be considered the smallest changes that were considered
significant enough to be noticed at the time they were used. These changes are
called cadency steps. Some changes to heraldry may not indicate cadency but
may still be blazonable. Such changes include artistic variants of charges
such as the tincture of a horse's mane, or the choice between a cross bottony
and a cross crosslet. Systems of cadency vary depending on the time and place.
- Change, Major.
- See Major Change.
- Change, Minor.
- See Minor Change.
- Charge.
- An item placed on a piece of armory. A charge may be directly on the
field, overall, or entirely on another charge. A charge may be a simple
geometric figure, such as a fess or a roundel, or a
representation of an animate or inanimate item, such as a lion or a
sword. See the Rules for Submissions, Part VII, for discussion
of Compatible Charges. See also Charge Group.
- Charge Group.
- A set of charges used together in a design as a single unit. The charges
in groups in heraldry usually fall into standard arrangements depending on
their number and what other items are involved in the design. A collection of
charges that are arranged in such a standard arrangement are considered a
single group, even if they are of different types and/or tinctures. For
example, Per fess argent and gules, two towers sable and a roundel
argent contains a single group of primary charges in the standard charge
arrangement of two and one. See also Peripheral Charge Group, Primary
Charge Group, Secondary Charge Group, Slot Machine Heraldry, and Tertiary
Charge Group.
- Charge Type.
- See Type, Charge.
- Coherent.
- Said of an armorial design in which all the elements work together to
produce a single effect. Usually, a field division or the primary charge
establishes a pattern of arranging items on the field. Coherence is diminished
by placing elements with no relation to each other, or ignoring the pattern
set in the design. Coherence is also diminished by using unlike charges in a
group.
- College of Arms.
- The Sovereign(s) of Arms, the warranted heralds on Laurel staff, the
Principal Herald of each kingdom, and such other persons as Laurel may deem to
be of assistance.
- College of Heralds.
- The Principal Herald of a kingdom, the warranted heralds and pursuivants
of a kingdom, and such other persons as the Principal Herald may deem to be of
assistance.
- Color.
- In Society heraldry, the colors are azure, gules,
sable, purpure and vert. The furs that use colors as
underlying tinctures, such as counter‑ermine and pean, are
treated like colors for contrast. See also Metal, Tincture.
- Compatible.
- In keeping with the normal usages for the period and domain of the
Society. Guidelines on compatible names are given in Parts II and III, and
guidelines for compatible armory are given in Parts VII and VIII of the Rules
for Submissions. See also Domain of the Society, Period,
SCA-Compatible.
- Complexity Count.
- A measure of armorial simplicity described in Part VIII.1 of the Rules for
Submission. The Complexity Count is the sum of the number of types of charges
and the number of tinctures in an armorial design. Armory with an excessively
high complexity count may be returned. However, armorial designs which are
period in style may be registered even if they have a high Complexity Count.
- Conflict.
- A submission which is too similar to a protected item is said to be in
conflict. The Rules for Submission define name conflict in Part V and armory
conflict in Part X.
- Contrast.
- A level of visual distinction between different tinctures. The Rules for
Submissions Part VIII, Section 2.a. define good contrast.
- Default.
- Often used as an adjective meaning "standard, not needing to be blazoned,"
it may be applied to arrangement, orientation, or posture. See Table
4, Conventional SCA Default Postures for a list of established defaults.
See also Proper.
- Designator.
- The word used in a non-personal name to define the type of non-personal
name. Designators may be the types of official branches, such as
Barony, Shire, Kingdom, etc., or they may be other kinds
of designations such as Order, Guild, House,
Office, Pursuivant and so forth. Designators do not contribute
to difference between non-personal names.
- Device.
- A heraldic design that uniquely represents the person or group that owns
it. A person who has not been awarded arms may register personal armory as a
device. This device will become arms when the person receives an award, grant,
or patent of arms. The distinction between arms and a device is not tracked by
the College of Arms. See also Armiger, Arms.
- Difference, Clear.
- (Also known as a CD.) In armory, a difference of type, number, tincture,
arrangement, or posture that has been deemed equivalent in importance to a
cadency step. Clear difference in armory is more fully defined in Part X.4. of
the Rules for Submissions. See also Cadency, Conflict, Difference,
Significant.
- Difference, Significant.
- (1) In armory, a level of difference which would have been considered by
heralds in period to be a cadency step; in most cases, this is a sufficient
amount of difference to grant a clear difference. A significant difference is
a lesser level of difference of charge type from substantial difference. For
example, a pine tree is significantly different from an oak tree
(because they have widely differing shapes), but they are not substantially
different from each other (because they are both trees). In precedent, a
ruling that a change is a significant difference (or CD) should not
necessarily be taken to indicate that the change is not a substantial
difference. (2) In names, two name phrases are significantly different if they
are readily distinguishable both in sound and appearance. Significant
difference in names is more fully defined in Part V of the Rules for
Submissions, while significant difference in armory is more fully defined in
Part X of the Rules for Submissions. See also Cadency; Difference,
Clear; Difference, Substantial.
- Difference, Substantial.
- In armory, a level of difference which would have been considered by
heralds in period to be more than a cadency step; this is a sufficient amount
of difference to apply Rules for Submissions X.2, X.4.a.ii, or X.4.j.ii. For
example, a lion is substantially different from a sun. In
precedent, a ruling that a change is a Significant Difference (or CD) should
not necessarily be taken to indicate that the change is not a Substantial
Difference. See also Cadency; Difference, Significant.
- Diminutive.
- (1) In names, a name that is derived from another name as a shortened or
pet form. Belet, Bibby, Ibbe, Ibbet, Libbe,
and Tibota were all period diminutives of Isabel. Some
diminutives are actually longer than the original name. For example
Jobin is a period diminutive of Job and Josekyn a period
diminutive of Joss. (2) In armory, multiple and (usually) narrower
variants of an ordinary are said to be diminutives of it. For example, two
bars are diminutives of a fess, and two bendlets are
diminutives of a bend. SCA armory does not use single diminutives of
charges, as they were considered artistic variants of the single ordinary in
period.
- Documented.
- Found in a source that was created before 1600 A.D. More recent sources
that quote sources created before 1600 are acceptable as documentation unless
they are shown to be erroneous. See also Domain of the Society, Gray
Area, Period.
- Domain of the Society.
- Europe and areas that were in contact with Europe before 1600 A.D. See
also Documented, Gray Area, Period.
- Dynamic.
- A design arrangement which gives an impression of motion or activity. This
can happen by posing charges so that their apparent weight is not over their
bases, such as in a depiction of a running man who is leaning forward so that
his weight does not appear to be firmly supported by his feet. It can also
happen if charges are unevenly spaced to give an impression of motion from one
to the next. Dynamic is the opposite of static. In general, dynamic designs
are not typical of period heraldry. See also Static.
- Element.
- See Name Element, Armorial Element.
- Emblazon.
- The drawing or graphic depiction of a piece of armory.
- Epithet.
- A byname that describes physical or mental characteristics, personality
traits, or characteristic behavior. Little John, Ethelred the
Unready, and Richard Gotobedde are all examples of names with
epithets. The terms nickname and descriptive byname are also
sometimes used.
- Ermined Tinctures.
- These are heraldic furs. There are many possible varieties of these, all
based on the design of strewn ermine spots (abstract designs
representing ermine tails). The most common are ermine (argent with
sable ermine spots), counter-ermine (sable with argent ermine spots;
also known as ermines, a term that is not used in the SCA due to the
possibility of typographic errors), erminois (Or with sable ermine
spots) and pean (sable with Or ermine spots). Other combinations do not
have unique names and must be explicitly blazoned as <tincture> ermined
<tincture>, e.g., gules ermined argent (gules strewn with argent
ermine spots). Unlike other designs featuring strewn charges, the ermine
variants are furs and are classed as separate tinctures in their own right,
rather than as charged fields. However the ermine spots have the same
constraints as charges for purposes of contrast under RfS VIII.2, in that they
must have good contrast with the tincture on which they are placed. Azure
ermined gules does not have acceptable contrast. For contrast purposes,
these furs are classed either as colors or metals according to their
underlying tincture (so ermine is classed as a metal, and pean
is classed as a color). Ermine spots can also be used as normal charges; if
not in a strewn arrangement they are treated no differently from any other
charges. See also Field Treatment, Furs, Semy, Tincture.
- Field Primary Armory.
- Armory that has no charges, or an uncharged peripheral ordinary. RfS
X.4.a.ii defines special conflict rules for this type of armory. See
also Charge, Peripheral Charge Group.
- Field Treatment.
- A repeating pattern drawn in a tincture with good contrast over the field
or a charge. Field treatments leave more of the underlying tincture showing
than they cover. They are considered a part of the field or charge tincture.
The term field treatment is not a standard real-world heraldic description for
a class of armorial designs, but is the SCA catch-all term for the few period
heraldic designs meeting this description. Field treatments include
masoned and the forms of papellony and scaly which are
drawn as voided scales. Field treatments do not include the ermined furs,
fretty or strewn charges. See also Ermined Tinctures, Semy.
- Fieldless Armory.
- A badge with no specified field tincture; such badges may be displayed on
any appropriate background. Badges without fields should be designed as a
single unit, with the charges all connected in some way as if they were cast
out of metal in a mold. Devices may not be fieldless. See also: Badge.
- Fimbriation.
- Outlining a charge in a contrasting tincture. In general, a simple
geometric charge such as a pale, roundel, or heart may be
fimbriated, while a charge with a more complex outline such as a lion
cannot. Fimbriation is only allowed for charges in the center of the field.
See also Voidable Charge.
- Furs.
- In Society heraldry, the furs include ermine, counter-ermine, erminois,
pean, vair, potent, and their variants. The furs also include the variants
of scaly and papellony which consist of solid-tinctured scales
of two alternating tinctures. Furs composed equally of a metal and a color
(e.g. vair) are considered neutral for contrast purposes. Furs that use a
metal as the underlying tincture (e.g. ermine) are treated as metals for
contrast. Furs that use a color as the underlying tincture (e.g. pean) are
treated as colors for contrast purposes. See also Ermined Tinctures,
Tincture.
- Given Name.
- The name given to a person at birth or in a naming ceremony such as
baptism. In the English naming tradition, the given name is usually a person's
first name, so Francis Drake's given name is Francis. See also
Byname.
- Grandfather Clause.
- The popular name given to the guarantee in Corpora that, once registered,
a name or piece of armory remains registered unless the owner requests its
release, regardless of changes in the Rules for Submissions and standards
applied to submissions after that time. The term Grandfather Clause is also
sometimes applied to the provisions that allow a submitter to use elements
that they have previously registered in new name or armory submissions, even
if those elements are no longer acceptable under the current Rules for
Submissions. On a case by case basis, this allowance has been extended to the
submitter's immediate legal family. These provisions are stated in Rules for
Submissions II.5. and VII.8; a sample letter documenting the right to extend
the Grandfather Clause can be found in the Cover Letter for the October 2002
LoAR.
- Gray Area.
- For the purposes of documenting names and armory, anything that can be
documented as late as 1650 may be considered acceptable, even though the
official cut-off date of the SCA's domain as defined in Corpora is 1600. The
period from 1601 to 1650 is known as the "gray area," and exists because it is
logical to assume that something current in the period 1601-1650 may also have
been current in the last years of the 16th Century, so long as there is no
specific evidence to the contrary. Gray area documentation should only be used
as a last resort. See also Documented, Domain of the Society, Period.
- Group.
- A collection of people, not necessarily an official branch. Households,
orders, and branches are all referred to as groups in the Rules for
Submissions.
- Group, Charge.
- See Charge Group.
- Half.
-
Many of the Rules for Submission concerning armorial difference discuss
change to half a charge group. For the purposes of counting armorial
difference, half is usually defined in the mathematical sense. However, in
certain circumstances, half may be defined differently, as indicated by
precedent. Some of these circumstances are:
-
The bottommost of three charges arranged two and one, either alone on the
field or surrounding a central ordinary such as a fess or chevron, is
defined as half of that charge group. However, no more than one difference
may be obtained by making changes to that bottommost charge.
-
The two portions of a field divided per chevron or per chevron
inverted are each considered half for determining difference of the
field.
- Hardship Clause.
- It sometimes happens that a submission is delayed so long by circumstances
outside the submitter's control that changes in the Rules for Submissions or
their interpretation make it unregisterable. Depending on the exact
circumstances, and on a case-by-case basis, the submission may be judged
according to the older Rules for Submissions and interpretations; this policy
is popularly known as the Hardship Clause.
- Herald.
- When used with a capital H, Herald is a title referring to a person
at a particular level in the College of Arms. Used with a small h, a herald is
a person who works regularly on some aspect of heraldry.
- Hereditary Surname.
- A byname passed to all the offspring in a family, and therefore also
called a family name. Modern English surnames usually come last, so
Francis Drake's surname is Drake. Other cultures may place their
hereditary surnames in other positions in the name. The alternate term
"Inherited Surname" is also used to refer to this type of byname. Hereditary
surnames are often called simply surnames, but this usage is ambiguous
and should be avoided. See also Byname.
- Important Non-SCA Names and Armory.
- Real-world names and armory that Laurel has designated important enough to
protect. The standards for what is sufficiently important are found in the
Administrative Handbook, Parts III.A&B. See also Protected
Armory.
- Laurel.
- The Laurel Sovereign of Arms, who is the principal heraldic officer of the
Society and the head of the College of Arms. Laurel is ultimately responsible
for seeing that the duties of the heralds, as defined in Corpora, are
fulfilled.
- Legal Name.
- This term is used to distinguish the formal name a person has outside the
Society from his or her Society name.
- Legal Name Allowance.
- The popular name given to the rule that allows submitters to use elements
of their legal names in appropriate locations in a Society name. The details
are given in Section II.4 of the Rules for Submission.
- Letter of Acceptances and Returns.
- A monthly letter in which the Laurel Sovereign of Arms publicizes
decisions on recent submissions. This is usually abbreviated LoAR. The LoARs
are available by subscription from the Laurel office as well as online.
- Letter of Comment.
- A letter written by a member of the College of Arms to discuss current
submissions and advise the Sovereign(s) of Arms on the acceptability of the
names and armory that are being considered. This is usually abbreviated LoC.
In kingdoms which have an internal submissions process using internal Letters
of Intent, the Letter of Comment written at the Society level for the College
of Arms is often termed an External Letter of Comment (abbreviated ELoC
or XLoC) and the Letter of Comment written for use within the Kingdom is
termed an Internal Letter of Comment (abbreviated ILoC).
- Letter of Intent.
- A letter written by a Principal Herald or a designated deputy to describe
the submissions from their kingdom that they would like to have registered.
This is usually abbreviated LoI. A Letter of Intent to Protector a
Letter of Intent to Unprotect is a letter written by a member of the
College of Arms describing names or armory which the author believes should
receive (or should lose) protection as important non-SCA names or armory.
These letters are subject to the same administrative processes as standard
Letters of Intent. These are usually abbreviated LoItP and LoItU respectively.
In kingdoms that have an internal submissions process using Letters of Intent,
the Letter of Intent written at the Society level for the College of Arms is
often termed an External Letter of Intent (abbreviated ELoI or XLoI)
and the Letter of Intent written for use within the Kingdom is termed an
Internal Letter of Intent (abbreviated ILoI).
- Letter of Pends and Discussion.
- A letter written by the Sovereign(s) of Arms to identify submissions which
have been pended and issues which require discussion by the College of Arms.
This is usually abbreviated LoPaD. See also Pended.
- Letter of Response.
- A letter written by a member of the College of Arms for purposes of
responding to commentary written in Letters of Comment. This is usually
abbreviated LoR.
- Location.
- The placement of a charge or group of charges on the field. For example,
three roundels in fess are in a different location than three
roundels in chief, although their arrangement remains the same. Also
termed Placement and Position. See also Arrangement.
- Locative Byname.
- (Also known as Locative.) A byname referring to a geographical location.
The reference may be by name, as in of York and Shropshire, or
by description, as in atte Ford and Hill. See also
Byname, Placename.
- Maintained Charges.
- Small objects that are held by an animate charge are said to be
maintained, such as a lion rampant maintaining a sword. Maintained
charges are considered too small to count towards difference. See
also Sustained Charges.
- Major Change.
- Used in the name registration process to describe a degree of change which
the submitter may allow, or refuse to allow, to be made to the name in order
to allow it to be registered. Major changes include dropping an element or
phrase, changing the order of the name elements, and changing the language of
an element. See also Minor Change.
- Matronymic.
- A byname given to offspring to indicate the name of the mother. The
daughter of a Yorkshirewoman named Rose might take the matronymic
Rosedoghter. Sometimes spelled "metronymic". See also Byname,
Patronymic.
- Metal.
- In Society heraldry, the metals are argent and Or. Furs that
use metals as underlying tinctures, such as ermine and erminois,
are treated as metals for contrast. See also Color, Furs, Tinctures.
- Minor Change.
- Used in the name registration process to describe a degree of change which
the submitter may allow, or refuse to allow, to be made to the name in order
to allow it to be registered. Minor changes include accents, punctuation,
hyphenation, addition or deletion of a letter, upper-lower case changes, etc.
See also Major Change.
- Modern.
- For Society purposes, "modern" is anything after 1600 A.D. See
also Period, Gray Area.
- Modest Proposal.
- The name given to the proposal, implemented in 1996, that the College of
Arms restrict calling conflict of submitted armory to national arms, national
flags, and a limited subset of other non-SCA armory. Such non-SCA armory which
is still protected is added to and listed in the Armorial and Ordinary of the
College of Arms. See also Letter of Intent.
- Mon.
- Japanese armorial insignia. The SCA allows mon-like designs only if they
can be blazoned in European heraldic terms.
- Monster.
- An heraldic monster is any creature used in heraldry that does not exist
outside the imagination. Monsters may either be clearly invented, such as the
griffin, or a confused interpretation of a genuine animal, such as the
heraldic tyger.
- Mundane Name Allowance.
- See Legal Name Allowance.
- Name, Alternate.
- Any name a participant in the Society registers with the College of Arms
other than the primary name. See also Name, Primary.
- Name Element.
- A part of a name. A name element is usually a single word, such as a given
name or an adjective in a descriptive byname. Part II of the Rules for
Submissions describes compatible name elements. A name phrase is made up of
name elements; while these terms are sometimes used interchangeably, they help
to distinguish issues involving the construction of words from issues of the
construction of appropriate grammatical phrases. For example, in the name
Richard of Sheepford, Sheepford is a name element, while the
byname of Sheepford is a name phrase. See also Name Phrase.
- Name, Legal.
- See Legal Name.
- Name Phrase.
- A name phrase is a component of a name, such as a given name or a byname.
It can be a single word, such as a given name or byname, or a collection of
words that are grammatically linked and together serve as a byname, like an
article and its noun such as the Smith, a preposition and its object
such as of York, or an adjective and the noun it modifies such as
White Horse. A name phrase is made up of name elements; while these
terms are sometimes used interchangeably, they help to distinguish issues
involving the construction of words from issues of the construction of
appropriate grammatical phrases. For example, in the name Richard of
Sheepford, Sheepford is a name element, while the byname of
Sheepford is a name phrase. The required designator in household and
Society order names is a name phrase. See also Name Element.
- Name, Primary.
- The name under which College of Arms records, including armory
registrations, are kept. Also known as Society Name. See also Name,
Alternate.
- Name, Society.
- See Name, Primary.
- Neutral Tincture.
- A term used to refer to fields or charges equally divided of a color and a
metal. Elements that are neutral are generally considered to have good
contrast with colors and metals so long as they do not share any tincture. For
example, a field per pale sable and argent has good contrast with a
bordure gules, but not with a bordure sable. See also
Color, Fur, Metal, Tincture.
- Occupational Byname.
- A byname indicating the bearer's occupation, such as Smith and
Fleshewer (for a butcher). See also Byname.
- Onomastic.
- Of or related to the study of names.
- One-Half.
- See Half.
- Or.
- In blazon the tincture yellow or gold. By convention, the tincture Or is
capitalized in SCA blazons.
- Ordinary.
- (1) A simple geometric charge. Although different lists of ordinaries may
be found in heraldic texts, in SCA heraldry the term denotes those simple
geometric figures that pass through the center of the field and terminate at
the edge of the field (the pale, fess, bend, bend sinister, chevron, cross,
saltire, pall, and pile), their diminutives, and the simple geometric
additions to the edges of the field (such as the chief and bordure). (2) A
list of pieces of armory, organized by charge types. See also
Armorial.
- Orientation.
- The direction a charge faces and the direction its axis runs.
Swords, by default, have a palewise orientation, with point to chief
and the length of the sword vertical on the shield. Other orientations include
bendwise, fesswise, inverted, reversed, or contourny. Orientation is sometimes
confused with arrangement. Orientation is an aspect of posture and is
controlled by the same rule for difference: X.4.h. See also
Arrangement, Posture.
- Overall Charge.
- A charge that crosses over both edges of another charge to lie on the
field on either side. For instance, Or, a lion rampant purpure and overall
a fess sable has the fess starting on the field on one side, crossing over
the center of the lion, and lying on the field on the other side. An overall
charge is considered to lie directly on the field, and must have good contrast
with it. An overall charge can never be the primary charge; in addition, there
can only be a single group of overall charges.
- Partition.
- A division of the field into pieces that have different tinctures. Some
partitions follow and are named after ordinaries, like per pale, per
fess, per bend, and per saltire; others have their own
names, like checky, lozengy, and quarterly.
- Patronymic.
- A byname given to offspring to indicate the name of the father. The son of
an Irishman named Brian might use the patronymic mac Briain.
This term is used generally in the Rules for Submissions to mean both
patronymic and matronymic. See also Byname, Matronymic.
- Pelican.
- The Pelican Sovereign of Arms, who is a principal heraldic officer of the
Society after the Laurel Principal Sovereign of Arms.
- Pended.
- A submission is pended when the College of Arms has not been provided with
sufficient information to provide adequate commentary. This can be either
because the Letter of Intent has an error, or because an issue was raised in
commentary which must be resolved before the pended submission may be
considered. When a Letter of Intent is in error, submissions will only be
pended if the error can be described succinctly in text; an omitted or
misleading emblazon is grounds for return. See also Letter of Pends
and Discussion.
- Period.
- A term used to refer to the culture the Society attempts to recreate,
specifically "pre‑Seventeenth Century Western European culture". See
also Domain of the Society, Gray Area.
- Period of the Society.
- The time before 1600 A.D.
- Peripheral Charge Group.
- A charge or group of charges that are placed on the field near the edge of
a piece of armory without affecting the rest of the design. Peripheral charges
include (but are not limited to): the chief, the bordure, the base (including
the point pointed), the quarter, the canton, the gyron, the orle, the double
tressure, and flaunches. Gores and gussets are not peripheral charges
(because they extend so far into the center of the field). Peripheral charges
are never primary charges, even if they are the only charges on the field.
Peripheral Charge Groups are a type of secondary charge group. See
also Field Primary Armory, Ordinary, Primary Charge Group, Secondary
Charge Group, Semy, Tertiary Charge Group.
- Permission to Conflict.
- The owner of any registered item may allow the registration of a specific
submission that would otherwise conflict by writing a letter of permission to
conflict, or may direct Laurel to reduce the level of protection of that item
with a blanket letter of permission to conflict. Permission to conflict can be
granted for either name or armory submissions. Provisions for permission to
conflict are detailed in the Administrative Handbook, parts III.C.3 & 4 of
the Administrative Handbook, and a sample letter of permission to conflict can
be found in Appendix D of the Administrative Handbook. See also
Permission to Presume.
- Permission to Presume.
- The owner of any registered item may allow the registration of a specific
submission that would otherwise presume a relationship by writing a letter of
permission to presume. This allows a person to claim a close relationship to
someone whose name is already registered. Provisions for permission to presume
for names are discussed in RfS VI.3. Permission to presume may be required for
armory under RfS I.3. For example, an armory submission including a chief
charged with the phrase "Cariadoc of the Bow" would need permission to
presume from Cariadoc of the Bow in order to avoid a claim to a relationship
that does not exist. See also Permission to Conflict.
- Persona Story.
- As used in the College of Arms, the term refers to an attempt to justify a
name combining elements from disparate cultures by reference to the persona's
fictional biography. It is College policy to ignore persona stories.
- Petition of Support.
- A document signed by a majority of the populace and officers, or the
seneschal and three-quarters of the officers of a Society branch, stating
their support of the name and/or arms submitted to Laurel for registration. A
branch with ruling nobles must include a statement of support from the ruling
nobles in the petition. A valid petition must include a clear description of
the item submitted; either the blazon or emblazon is sufficient for a petition
regarding branch arms, though both are preferable. Special rules may apply to
submissions by Kingdoms and Principalities. These rules are described in the
Administrative Handbook, Part IV.C.5.
- Phrase.
- See Name Phrase.
- Place Name.
- The name for a geographic area, such as the name of a town or region. In
the Society, place names are the names of shires, baronies, principalities,
kingdoms, and other official branches. SCA and real-world place names can be
used to create locative bynames. See also Locative Bynames.
- Placement.
- See Location.
- Position.
- See Location.
- Posture.
- The pose in which a beast or other animate charge is placed, such as
rampant, passant, etc. Orientation is an aspect of posture and
is controlled by the same rule for difference: X.4.h. See also
Arrangement, Orientation.
- Precedent.
- A decision by Laurel regarding a submission that may be applied to other
similar submissions. Only expressly stated Laurel decisions should be
considered precedents; registrations without comment do not necessarily set
precedent. The accumulated precedents of the Laurel office, filed by topic,
are available to the public both through Free Trumpet Press and through the
Laurel web site.
- Presumptuous.
- Claiming more importance for oneself than one is due. A person who
pretends to be entitled to special treatment or recognition because of status,
rank, or abilities that the person does not hold or has not earned is
presumptuous.
- Pretentious.
- See Presumptuous.
- Primary Charge Group.
- The most important group of charges in a piece of armory. In blazons, the
primary charge group is usually mentioned immediately after the field (though
a strewn charge group is not primary when it is blazoned before a central
charge group). If there is a central ordinary lying entirely on the field, it
is the primary charge. If there is no such central ordinary, then the primary
charge group is the set of charges of the same size that lie in the center of
the design and directly on the field. An overall charge can never be the
primary charge. In any piece of armory with charges there will always be a
primary charge group, unless the only charges are peripheral. There cannot be
more than one primary charge group in any given design. In Gules, a pale
between two mullets argent, the pale is the primary charge. In Or, a
maunche between three roundels azure the maunche is the primary charge. In
Per chevron argent and sable, two roses and a fleur-de-lys counterchanged
and on a chief purpure three hearts argent, the roses and fleur-de-lys are
the primary charge group, because they are all of about the same size and in a
standard arrangement. In Azure semy of mullets and a chief argent the
strewn mullets are the primary charge group; in Azure semy of mullets, an
eagle and a chief argent the eagle is the primary charge. In Sable, a
lion Or, overall a bend argent, the lion is the primary charge. In
Azure, a chief Or there is no primary charge group. See also
Overall Charge Group, Peripheral Charge Group, Secondary Charge Group, Semy,
Tertiary Charge Group.
- Primary Name.
- See Name, Primary.
- Principal Herald.
- The chief heraldic officer of a kingdom, and a Great Officer of State in
that kingdom. The Principal Herald is in charge of all heraldic activities
within the kingdom.
- Proper.
- (1) Specifying that a charge appears in its natural hues. A zebra
proper has the zebra's characteristic pattern of black and white stripes;
a tree proper has a brown trunk and green leaves. Proper should not be
used to indicate colorings that can be easily described in terms of the usual
heraldic tinctures: a raven proper is better blazoned as a raven
sable. It should also be used only if a competent artist will be able to
draw the animal correctly without extensive research. (2) Indicates a standard
set of tinctures for a standard heraldic charge, such as a sword
proper, which has an argent blade and Or hilt and quillons, or a rose
proper, which is a rose gules, barbed vert and seeded Or.
See Table 3, Conventional Proper Colorings for a listing of proper
tinctures defined in precedent.
- Protected Armory.
- Armory with which new Society armory may not conflict. This includes
armory that has been registered in the Society, as well as armory from outside
the Society which is deemed important enough to protect. All protected armory
is published in the Society Armorial and Ordinary, but is protected as soon it
is so identified, and does not wait until the next publication of the Society
Armorial and Ordinary to be protected. The Armorial and Ordinary is available
from Free Trumpet Press West and, unofficially, via various web sites linked
from the Laurel web page. The list of protected armory from outside the
Society may be modified to add or remove entries as further research directs.
Protected armory is described in the Administrative Handbook, part III.B.
See also Armorial, Important Non-SCA Armory, Letter of Intent,
Ordinary.
- Regional Style.
- Regional style refers to heraldry or naming practices of a particular time
and place. A submission must be entirely consistent with a single regional
style in order to be considered under the regional style sections of the
armory rules on documented exceptions which are found in part VIII.6.b of the
Rules for Submissions.
- Registration.
- Acceptance by the Sovereign(s) of Arms of a piece of armory or name for
future protection. The College of Arms will only register items it believes
are compatible with period names and armory, are not offensive or
presumptuous, and do not conflict with items already protected. Registered
items are protected from conflict with other proposed names and armory to the
best ability of the College of Arms.
- Required Charges.
- Branch arms are required to incorporate certain charges in the design.
These required charges are for branch arms only, not badges. The requirements
are listed in the Administrative Handbook Part II.D.2. See also
Reserved Charges, Restricted Charges.
- Reserved Charges.
- Some charges are specifically reserved in the Society for use by
particular groups or individuals, for instance the coronet with strawberry
leaves reserved to Dukes and Duchesses, the circle of chain reserved to
Knights, or the Laurel wreath reserved to Society branches. These charges are
listed in Table 1: Reserved Charges.
- Restricted Charges.
- Some charges are so closely associated with royal families or specific
honors outside the Society that they may not be used in Society armory at all.
Examples of these include Azure semy‑de‑lys Or used by France, a
Chinese Dragon with five toes used only by Chinese Emperors, or a Tudor Rose.
Others have acquired such negative connotations that their registration may
cause offense to a significant portion of the population. An example of such
is the swastika, because of its association with the Nazis. Such charges are
listed in Table 2: Restricted Charges.
- SCA-Compatible.
- This term is applied to elements of submissions (whether name or armorial)
that, to the best of our knowledge, were not used in period but which have
been declared registerable on the basis of their great popularity, such as
Rhiannon and compass stars. The use of an SCA-compatible element is a
weirdness. See also Weirdnesses, Rule of Two.
- Secondary Charge Group.
- A group of charges on the field around the primary charge group. A design
may have more than one secondary charge group. Each group may confer
difference independently. In Gules, a pale between two mullets argent,
the mullets are the secondary charge group. The secondary charges in Or, a
maunche between three roundels azure are the roundels. In Sable, a
chevron cotised argent between three millrinds Or there are two secondary
charge groups, the cotises and the millrinds. In Per chevron argent and
sable, two roses and a fleur-de-lys counterchanged and on a chief purpure
three hearts argent, the chief is the secondary charge group. A peripheral
charge group is a type of secondary charge group. See also Charge
Group, Peripheral Charge Group, Primary Charge Group, Semy, Tertiary Charge
Group.
- Semy.
- An adjective meaning that something is strewn with identical charges. (It
is from the French semé, the past participle of the verb semer
'to strew'.) A field Azure semy-de-lys Or is blue with a pattern of
gold fleurs-de-lys on it. A bordure vert semy of rowels argent is green
and is charged with several (at least five and usually eight) white rowels
evenly spaced around it. The charges so used are called strewn charges. When
placed directly on the field, strewn charges are considered a separate charge
group from any other charges. Strewn charges may be considered the primary
charge group if there are no other charge groups present or if the only other
charge groups present are peripheral charge groups. When placed on another
charge, strewn charges are considered a tertiary charge group. Strewn charges
are not considered a field treatment. Ermine spots in an ermined tincture are
not considered strewn charges; they are considered part of a separate
tincture. See also Ermined Tinctures, Field Treatment, Peripheral
Charge Group, Primary Charge Group, Tertiary Charge Group.
- Slot Machine Heraldry.
- The popular name given to the part of Rule for Submissions VIII.1.a.,
which states that "three or more types of charges should not be used in the
same [charge] group." In Argent, in fess a cherry gules, a bell sable, and
a lime vert, there are three types of charges (cherry, bell, and lime) in
the primary charge group; in Argent, two lions combattant and a sword and
axe crossed in saltire, there are also three types of charges (lion,
sword, and axe) in the primary charge group.
- Society.
- The Society for Creative Anachronism, Inc.
- Society Name.
- See Name, Primary.
- Static.
- In a design context, this means all the elements appear fixed and
unmoving. Heraldic postures usually appear to place the weight of any beast
firmly on its feet and the body posed unnaturally in a stiff position. Designs
are balanced around the center of the shield so that the design looks rigid.
Static designs are typical of period heraldry. The opposite of static is
dynamic. See also Dynamic.
- Strewn Charges.
- See Semy.
- Style.
- The way elements are combined to form a complete name or armory
submission.
- Submission.
- A name or piece of armory that is presented to the College of Arms for
registration.
- Submitter.
- The person who presents a submission to the College of Arms for
registration.
- Supported Charges.
- See Sustained Charges.
- Surname.
- See Hereditary Surname.
- Sustained Charges.
- Large objects that are held by an animate charge are often said to be
sustained, such as a lion rampant sustaining a polearm. A charge is
said to be sustained if it is large enough to count towards difference. The
rule of thumb is whether, if the charge and the charge sustained were
separated, the two charges would be so nearly equivalent in size that they
could reasonably be blazoned as a single group of two equally important
charges. Another term for sustained charges is supported charges, such as a
lion rampant supporting a polearm. See also Maintained Charges.
- Sword and Dagger rule.
- The popular name given to rulings which disallow the use of similar but
non-identical charges together on the field or in the same charge group. In
Gules, a dragon and a wyvern combattant argent the dragon and the
wyvern are both on the field, and are similar but not identical; therefore
this design violates the rule. Closely related are the rulings which disallow
the use of the same charge in a primary and secondary group. In Gules, a
mullet and in chief three mullets Or, both groups of mullets are on the
field; therefore this design violates the rule. Conversely, in Gules, a
mullet and on a chief Or three mullets gules the rule is not violated, as
the two groups of mullets are not both on the field.
- Tertiary Charge Group.
- Any group of charges placed entirely on other charges. Tertiary charges in
a group may be together, such as three charges on a chief, or may each be on
members of the same charge group. Per chevron argent and sable, two roses
and a fleur-de-lys counterchanged and on a chief purpure three hearts
argent has one group of tertiary charges on the chief. Gules, a chevron
between three roses Or, each charged with a cross fitchy sable has one
group of tertiary charges, the crosses. Or, on a fess gules an escallop
between two millrinds Or, all within a bordure vert charged with eight
roundels argent has two groups of tertiary charges, one group with the
escallop and millrinds and the other with the roundels. Each tertiary group
contributes to difference independently. See also Peripheral Charge
Group, Primary Charge Group, Semy.
- Tincture.
- One of the seven standard hues used in Society armory, or a fur. The
tinctures are the colors azure, gules, purpure,
sable, and vert and the metals argent and Or. Furs
include the ermined furs and vair, potent, scaly,
papelonny, and their variations. See also Color, Ermined
Tinctures, Fur, Metal.
- Title.
- (1) A form of address that indicates the rank of the person using it. The
Society has formally reserved the titles found in Appendix C of the
Administrative Handbook and their translations into languages other than
English. These titles may only be used as authorized in Corpora. (2) A
heraldic title is the name of a heraldic office (such as Pelican and Wreath)
and is unrelated to rank. See also Herald, Laurel, Pelican, Wreath.
- "Toyota", Rule of.
- An informal term referring to the idea that the submitter may register
armory that is not the best style or taste so long as it does not violate the
Rules for Submissions. This is based on the advertising slogan "You Asked for
It, You Got It!"
- Type, Charge.
- The kind of a charge in a piece of armory. Gules, a chevron between two
candles and a lantern Or has three types of charges: chevrons, candles,
and lanterns. Argent, on a pale purpure between two lions combattant gules
three lions passant Or has two types of charges: pales, and lions in two
different postures. See also Peripheral Charge Group, Primary Charge
Group, Secondary Charge Group, Tertiary Charge Group.
- Variants, Linguistic.
- Different spellings or pronunciations of the same word. Spelling was not
fixed during the period studied by the Society, and often changed over time,
so a single word may have several variant forms. To be registered, variants
must be documented as plausible following the guidelines in the Rules for
Submission Part II.
- Voidable Charge.
- A charge which can be voided, that is, have the middle cut out, allowing
the field or other tincture to show through. The cutout portion should both be
of the same shape as the charge and follow along the outline of the charge. In
general, a simple geometric charge such as a pale, roundel, or a
heart is voidable, while a charge with a more complex outline such as a
lion is not. Charges in the center of the field are considered voidable
and charges elsewhere on the field are not. This does not, of course, affect
charges that are voided as part of their nature, such as mascles and annulets.
See also Fimbriation.
- Weirdness.
- See Weirdnesses, Rule of Two.
- Weirdnesses, Rule of Two.
- An informal term referring to the idea that the College can usually accept
a name or armorial design that has one break with the usual period style
provided that it is not overly obtrusive. A name or device that has two
violations of period style, or two weirdnesses, is less likely to be
registered. These weirdnesses are defined in precedents. See also
SCA-compatible.
- Wreath.
- The Wreath Sovereign of Arms, who is a principal heraldic officer of the
Society after the Laurel Principal Sovereign of Arms.
Appendix 1
Terms Commonly Misused in the SCA College of
Arms
- Above.
- An ambiguous term which should be avoided in blazon. Generally, two
charges one of which is "above" the other on the field can be blazoned as
in pale or an X and in chief a Y. See also Atop.
- Atop.
- Said of a charge which is conjoined to another charge to base, e.g. a
falcon perched atop a gauntleted cubit arm fesswise is in pale a falcon
conjoined at the feet to a gauntleted cubit arm fesswise. See also
Above, Upon.
- Bendwise sinister.
- Lying diagonally across the field from sinister chief to dexter base.
Frequently misblazoned as "bend sinisterwise", bendwise indicates the
angular orientation, and sinister modifies that orientation.
- Contourny.
- Often used to describe an animate charge facing to sinister, so that a
lion rampant contourny is a lion rampant to sinister. There is no
"e" in contourny (the French usage is contourné(e), depending on
the gender of the noun being modified). See also Reversed.
- Cross.
- The plural of cross crosslet is crosses crosslet.
- Dancetty.
- Applies only to a two-sided ordinary (such as a pale or fess) which
zig-zags or "dances" across the field. Indeed, a fess dancetty may be
blazoned simply as a dance. Modern non-SCA heraldic treatises define
dancetty as a larger version of indented, but period blazons do not make this
distinction. See also Indented.
- Enflamed.
- A charge which has small gouts of flame issuing from it. See also
On a flame.
- Feather.
- The feather of a bird. See also Quill pen, Quill.
- Fleur-de-lys.
- The plural of fleur-de-lys is fleurs-de-lys.
- Formy.
- Term applied to certain crosses with splayed limbs, used in preference to
the more ambiguous term paty. See also Paty.
- Indented.
- Applies to a line of division which zig-zags across the field, e.g.,
per fess indented, a chief indented. Victorian and modern
non-SCA heraldic treatises define indented as a smaller version of dancetty,
but period blazons do not make this distinction. See also Dancetty.
- On.
- Said of a charge or group of charges which is placed entirely on other
charges (tertiary charges); e.g., on a pale argent a sword gules; on
a chief sable three escallops argent. See also Upon.
- On a flame.
- A charge completely surrounded by a flame is said to be on a flame. See
also Enflamed.
- Paty.
- Term sometimes used which describes an entire family of crosses with
splayed limbs, not used in SCA blazon. See also Formy.
- Plurals.
- The plural of [a charge name plus modifier] is always [charges plus
modifier] (e.g., lion rampant/lions rampant; cross fleury/crosses fleury).
See also Cross, Fleur-de-lys.
- Principal.
- "Most important; chief" (Webster's II New Riverside Dictionary). The
principal herald of a kingdom is the Great Officer of State in charge of
heraldry and the College of Heralds of that kingdom.
- Principle.
- "A rule or code of behavior" (Webster's II New Riverside Dictionary). The
College of Arms expects the principal heralds to be of high principles.
- Quill.
- An heraldic term for a spool about which yarn or thread is wound. Also
called Embroiderer's quill, Quill of yarn. See also Quill Pen, Feather.
- Quill Pen.
- A feather, the lower end of the quill of which has been cut into a nib.
See also Quill, Feather.
- Reversed.
- Often used to describe an inanimate charge oriented the opposite of its
default orientation along a horizontal axis; e.g., a sword fesswise
reversed is a sword fesswise point to sinister; an arrow
fesswise reversed is an arrow fesswise, point to dexter. (Non-SCA
blazon uses reversed to describe what SCA blazon terms inverted; i.e., a
charge turned upside down along the vertical axis of the shield.) See
also Contourny.
- Semy.
- Semy is not a field treatment, but is a group of charges strewn across the
entire field or portion of a divided field. It is not a noun: the correct
usage is semy of [charges], not a semy of [charges].
- Torteau/Torteaux.
- Torteau is the singular, torteaux is the plural, for a roundel or roundels
gules.
- Upon.
- An ambiguous term which should be avoided in blazon. See also On,
Atop.
- Wreath.
- A wreath is a circular charge, with its chiefmost ends nearly touching.
Two sprigs (straight branches) crossed to form a "V" is not a wreath. See the
illustration below for a depiction of a laurel wreath.
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