Châtellerault: Difference between revisions

From Heraldry of the World
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Text replacement - "{{fr1}}↵{{media}}" to "{{fr1}} {{media1}}")
m (Text replacement - "|'''English''' ↵| {{blazon wanted}}" to "|'''English''' | blazon wanted")
Line 14: Line 14:
|-
|-
|'''English'''  
|'''English'''  
| {{blazon wanted}}
| blazon wanted
|}
|}



Revision as of 07:53, 7 April 2023


CHÂTELLERAULT

Département : Vienne

Blason de Châtellerault/Arms (crest) of Châtellerault
Official blazon
French D'argent au lion de gueules; à la bordure de sable chargée de huit besants d'or.
English blazon wanted

Origin/meaning

These arms were borne by Richard (1209-72), earl of Cornwall, count of Poitou, second son of King John of England.The original house of Poitou merged with the Plantagenets before the beginnings of heraldry. The last few counts of Poitou (Richard LionHeart, Otto IV of Brunswick and Richard of Cornwall) all used a lion. It may well be that Richard combined the arms of his father as count of Poitou and the arms of Cornwall (the bordure). Curiously, although Richard never actually held Poitou, the present-day arms of the city of Poitiers and those of Chatellerault are both derived from those of Richard

Literature: J.J. Armorial Général des communes de France, Paris, 1995; info from François Velde <velde@mcs.net>.

Template:Fr1 Template:Media1