Field (heraldry)
In heraldry, the background of the shield is called the field. The field is usually composed of one or more tinctures (colours or metals) or furs.
Related Topics:
Heraldry - Shield - Tincture - Colour - Metal - Fur
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In extremely rare cases, the field is not a tincture, but may be a landscape. Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, in his Art of Heraldry, states that while there are many coats in British heraldry in which the charges make up a landscape, there is only one, the arms of Lopes, where the field itself is so described: "In a landscape field, a fountain, therefrom issuing a palm-tree all proper." However, Fox-Davies is incorrect, as in 1751 Robert Dinwiddie in Scotland was granted a coat of the following blazon: Party per Fesse two landskips the first (the uppermost) holding a wild Indian at full draught his bow bent, marking at a stag standing at full Gaze Regardant proper The Emblem of the Earth, And in base, the Emblem of water with a sloop under sail, within sight of and making towards a distant land Representing America.http://www.heraldry-scotland.co.uk/Homepage.htm There are some examples of more specificially described landscapes, such as in the arms of Höerskool Brandwag.http://www.geocities.com/wapenskild/Brandwag.html#English Landscape fields are regarded by many heralds as unheraldic and deprecated, as they cannot be consistently drawn from blazon.
Related Topics:
Landscape - Arthur Charles Fox-Davie - Lopes - 1751 - Robert Dinwiddie - Scotland - Blazon
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The arms of the Inveraray and District Community Council in Scotland have as a field In waves of the sea.
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For further detail on the field, see variations of the field.
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