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Image Details Birmingham, . Blazon not available. [1]Clifton, . No arms known. Shrewsbury, . Every Bishop of Shrewsbury has had the same coat of arms: An inverted leopard’s head with a fleur de lys from St Thomas Cantilupe, superimposed over the red cross of St Chad, mounted on a sword and shield.
Image Details York, recorded at unknown date . Escutcheon: Gules two keys in saltire Argent in chief a regal crown Or. [34] [35]Blackburn, granted 19 February 1927 . Escutcheon: Per fesse Gules and Or two keys in saltire wards downwards Argent in chief and a rose barbed and seeded Proper in base.
Image Details Dublin and Glendalough, confirmed 5 April 2016 . Escutcheon: Azure an episcopal staff Argent ensigned with a cross pattée fitchée at all points or surmounted by a pall of the second edged and fringed of the third charged with five crosses formée fitchée Sable the whole within a bordure also Gold.
12th-century seal of Stefan of Uppsala is enclosed in a vesica piscis. Seals in use outside the Church, such as this Knights Templar Seal, were circular.. Heraldry developed in medieval Europe from the late 11th century, originally as a system of personal badges of the warrior classes, which served, among other purposes, as identification on the battlefield.
Armorial of schools in the United Kingdom; Armorial of schools in England; Armorial of local councils in Scotland; Armorial of the Scottish Episcopal Church; Armorial of the speakers of the British House of Commons; Armorial of the speakers of the English House of Commons; Armorial of the House of Stuart
Image Details Bangor, recorded in 1512 . Escutcheon: Gules a bend Or guttee-de-poix between two pierced mullets Argent. [2]St Asaph, recorded in 1512 . Escutcheon: Sable two keys in saltire wards upwards Argent.
Arms of Innocent VIII (Giovanni Battista Cybo, 1484–1492) as shown in the contemporary Wernigerode Armorial.The coat of arms of the House of Cybo is here shown with the papal tiara and two keys argent in one of the earliest examples of these external ornaments of a papal coat of arms (Pope Nicholas V in 1447 was the first to adopt two silver keys as the charges of his adopted coat of arms).
Escutcheon: Azure in the porch of a church St. Nicholas in pontificals his right hand raised over three children in a cauldron surrounded by flames in the left hand a pastoral staff all Proper (Aberdeen) impaling Argent the figure of St. Magnus in royal robes crowned and sceptred Proper (Orkney). [1] Argyll and The Isles