Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Own work (Original text: self-made, with shield taken from PD image File:Coat of arms of Archenland (Narnia).svg and cross adapted from PD image File:Cross-Flory-Heraldry.svg) This vector image includes elements that have been taken or adapted from this file:
English: Basic minimal (equilateral triangular) version of the "Shield of the Trinity" or "Scutum Fidei" diagram of traditional Christian symbolism, with translated English-language captions (in place of original Latin). See article Shield of the Trinity for further information on the diagram. Text was converted to paths for improved display.
Description: norca;. Based on Image:US 66 (AZ Old).svg.: Date: 24 December 2006: Source: Own work: Author: User:TwinsMetsFan: Permission (Reusing this file)Outline is derived from the original US Highway shield as shown in the various editions of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices
A shield-shaped version of the diagram placed on a red shield (heraldic "gules") was attributed as the arms of God (and of the Trinity) by heralds in 15th-century England and France. The "banner of the Trinity" which Jean Le Fevre , Seigneur of St. Remy, and Jehan de Wavrin attest that Henry V of England displayed at Agincourt would have been ...
The iconic and imposing coat of arms of El Salvador has Medieval Gothic and Greco-Roman influences, [2] as well as masonic, geographical, biblical, and American Indian symbolic representations, all of which come together in a distinctive, stylized heraldry crest emblem shield design.
600 mm by 600 mm (24 in by 24 in) Future Interstate shield, made to the specifications of the 2004 edition of Standard Highway Signs (sign M1-1). Uses the Roadgeek 2005 fonts . (United States law does not permit the copyrighting of typeface designs, and the fonts are meant to be copies of a U.S. Government-produced work anyway.)
Mexico City Municipality shield of colonial origin, in use from 1523 until its demise in 1929, is the first version of current Mexican arms. Depiction of founding myth from the post-Conquest Mendoza Codex. Teocalli of the Sacred War sculpted in 1325
The coat of arms is a silver stylized double-headed eagle on a red shield with a crown above the shield. The eagle's heads are bordered with nine feathers each and face the outer sides of the shield. The beaks of the double-headed eagle are golden in color and gape wide. The feathers on the eagle's neck are arranged in four rows of seven feathers.