Guccio Gucci; his eldest biological son,
Aldo Gucci; Aldo Gucci's sons, Giorgio Gucci,
Paolo Gucci, and Roberto Gucci; and grandson Uberto Gucci claimed the right to use an inherited, ancestral
coat of arms after the
Kingdom of Italy, which was ruled by the
House of Savoy, transitioned to the
Italian Republic in 1946. Guccio Gucci adapted, or incorporated, the Gucci coat-of-arms, as recorded in the Archives of
Florence, into the Gucci company's knight logo, which was trademarked by the Gucci company on 4 February 1955. The blazon recorded in the Florence Archives is as follows: "Azure, three red poles bordered argent (white); a chief or, loaded to the right (dexter) of a wheel of azure, and to the left (sinister) of a rose of red." ("D'azzurro, a tre pali di rosso bordati d'argento; e al capo d'oro caricato a destra di una ruota d'azzurro, e a sinistra di una rosa di rosso.") Translation: "Family of San Miniato; Giacinto Gucci and his brothers were admitted to the nobility of San Miniato in 1763 (on that occasion it is declared that the family had come from Cremona in 1224); Giuseppe di Gaetano Gucci, on the other hand, was admitted to the nobility of Fiesole in 1839. Francesco di Benedetto Gucci obtained Florentine citizenship in 1601, for the Golden Lion banner; Giovanni Battista by Giovan Piero Gucci obtained it in 1634, in the Scala banner." Court documents, records, and subsequent rulings indicate that, because the Gucci family trademarked the coat-of-arms in 1955, the trademark transferred with the sale of the Gucci company by
Maurizio Gucci to
Investcorp, and subsequent company owners, in 1993. However, Uberto Gucci (b. 1960), the son of Roberto Gucci, and the grandson of
Aldo Gucci, claims that the Gucci family still has the right to use the ancestral Gucci coat-of-arms. == See also ==