Joseph John Rice: Difference between revisions

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The Bishop's arms are a version of the arms of the old Welsh clan of Ap Rhys, from whom various Pryces and Rices descend, with a personal "brisure": the wavy blue fesse may here be taken as suggestive of water, as the escallop shell, when not definitely attributed to St. James or St. Michael, may suggest simply pilgrimage.
The Bishop's arms are a version of the arms of the old Welsh clan of Ap Rhys, from whom various Pryces and Rices descend, with a personal "brisure": the wavy blue fesse may here be taken as suggestive of water, as the escallop shell, when not definitely attributed to St. James or St. Michael, may suggest simply pilgrimage.


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[[Literature]] : Brassard, 1956
[[Literature]] : Brassard, 1956


[[Category:Roman Catholic bishops|Rice]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic bishops|Rice]]

Revision as of 12:52, 26 December 2022


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JOSEPH JOHN RICE

Born : December 6, 1871
Deceased : April 1, 1938

Bishop of Burlington, 1910-1938

Arms of Joseph John Rice

Official blazon

Impaled: Dexter, vert, a stag's head caboshed between the attires a cross fleur-de-lis or, a chief dancettée of the same; Sinister: Gules, a Zion rampant reguardant or, debruised of a fesse wavy azure, thereon an escallop of the second.

Motto: Omnia omnibus

Origin/meaning

As common in US episcopal heraldry, the arms show the arms of the diocese impaled with the personal arms of the bishop.

The Bishop's arms are a version of the arms of the old Welsh clan of Ap Rhys, from whom various Pryces and Rices descend, with a personal "brisure": the wavy blue fesse may here be taken as suggestive of water, as the escallop shell, when not definitely attributed to St. James or St. Michael, may suggest simply pilgrimage.



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Literature : Brassard, 1956