French heraldry The French system of heraldry greatly influenced the British and
Western European systems. Much of the terminology and classifications are taken from it. However, with the fall of the French monarchy (and later Empire) there is not currently a
Fons Honorum (power to dispense and control honors) to strictly enforce heraldic law. The French Republics that followed have either merely affirmed pre-existing titles and honors or vigorously opposed noble privilege. Coats of arms are considered an intellectual property of a family or municipal body. Assumed arms (arms invented and used by the holder rather than granted by an authority) are considered valid unless they can be proved in court to copy that of an earlier holder.
British heraldry In the heraldic traditions of
England and
Scotland, an individual, rather than a family, had a coat of arms. In those traditions coats of arms are legal property transmitted from father to son;
wives and daughters could also bear arms modified to indicate their relation to the current holder of the arms.
Undifferenced arms are used only by one person at any given time. Other descendants of the original bearer could bear the ancestral arms only with some
difference: usually a colour change or the addition of a distinguishing
charge. One such charge is the
label, which in British usage (outside the
Royal Family) is now always the mark of an
heir apparent or (in Scotland) an
heir presumptive. Because of their importance in identification, particularly in seals on legal documents, the use of arms was strictly regulated; few countries continue in this today. This has been carried out by
heralds and the study of coats of arms is therefore called "heraldry". In time, the use of arms spread from military entities to educational institutes, and other establishments.
Nordic heraldry In the
Nordic countries, provinces, regions, cities, and municipalities have coats of arms. These are posted at the borders and on buildings containing official offices, as well as used in official documents and on the uniforms of municipal officers. Arms may also be used on souvenirs or other effects, given that an application has been granted by the municipal council.
Other national traditions County in
Slovakia At a national level, "coats of arms" were generally retained by European states with constitutional continuity of more than a few centuries, including constitutional monarchies like
Denmark as well as old republics like
San Marino and
Switzerland. In
Italy the use of coats of arms was only loosely regulated by the states existing before the
unification of 1861. Since the
Consulta Araldica, the
college of arms of the
Kingdom of Italy, was abolished in 1948, personal coats of arms and titles of nobility, though not outlawed, are not recognised. In Africa, both the College of Arms of Kenya and the South African
Bureau of Heraldry grant arms. Coats of arms in
Spain were generally left up to the owner themselves, but the design was based on military service and the heritage of their grandparents. In
France, the coat of arms is based on the
Fleur-de-lys and the
Rule of Tinctures used in English heraldry as well.
North American Canada The
monarch of Canada's prerogative to grant armorial bearings has been delegated to the
Governor General of Canada. Canada has its own
Chief Herald and
Herald Chancellor. The
Canadian Heraldic Authority, the governmental agency which is responsible for creating arms and promoting Canadian heraldry, is situated at
Rideau Hall.
United States , which displays as its central design the heraldic device of the nation. The
Great Seal of the United States uses on the obverse as its central motif a heraldic achievement described as being the arms of the nation. The seal, and the armorial bearings, were adopted by the
Continental Congress on 20 June 1782, and is a shield divided palewise into thirteen pieces, with a blue chief, which is displayed upon the breast of an American bald eagle. The crest is thirteen stars breaking through a glory and clouds, displayed with no helm, torse, or mantling (unlike most European precedents at the time). Many of the American states have adopted
their own coats of arms, which usually designed as part of the
respective state's seal.
Vermont has both a
state seal and a
state coat of arms that are independent of one another (though both contain a pine tree, a cow and sheaves of grain); the seal is used to authenticate documents, whilst the heraldic device represents the state itself. == Ecclesiastic heraldry ==