Product Code Database
Example Keywords: hat -ring $16
   » » Wiki: Alerion
Tag Wiki 'Alerion'.
Tag

Alerion
 (

Rank: 100%
Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Blackstar

(1225) with the coat of arms of the lords of Montmorency, or a cross gules, quarterly four alerions azureA. Maquet, Les seigneurs de Marly, recherches historiques et archéologiques sur la ville et seigneurie de Marly-le-Roi avec notes, armoiries et sceaux... préface de Victorien Sardou. Paris, Imprimerie et librairie universelle, 1882. : or à la croix de gueules cantonnée de quatre alérions d'azur, Bouchard II de Marly: d'or à la croix de gueules frettée d'argent cantonnée de quatre alérions d'azur. The does not indicate the fretty variation.]]

Alerion (sometimes known as Avalerion) is a term for a heraldic bird. Historically, it referred to the regular . Later, heralds used the term alerion to refer to "baby eagles" or "eaglets". To differentiate them from mature eagles, alerions were shown as an eagle displayed inverted without a beak or claws ( disarmed). To differentiate it from a decapitate (headless) eagle, the alerion has a bulb-shaped head with an eye staring towards the dexter (left-hand side) of the field. This was later simplified in modern heraldry as an abstract winged oval.

An example is the arms of the Duchy of Lorraine (or, on a bend , 3 alerions abaisé argent). It supposedly had been inspired by the assumed arms of crusader Geoffrey de Bouillon, according to a tale that he killed three white eaglets with a bow and arrow when out hunting.Rothery, Guy Cadogan. Concise Encyclopedia of Heraldry. pp.50 It is far more likely to be canting arms that are a pun based on Lorraine / Erne. ( alerion is a partial of Lorraine).

Medieval use alerion for a mythological bird described as somewhat larger than an eagle of which only a single pair was said to live at any time. A pair of eggs was laid every 60 years; after hatching, the parents drowned themselves. The term avalerion is used on the near the and the , possibly based on a description by Pliny.

The word's ultimate origin is unclear, possibly adapted from the German or ("eagle"). It is found in 12th-century French as alérion and in as alariōnem (a large eagle-like bird).


See also

Notes
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time