coat of arms Although the Polish heraldic system evolved under the influence of German heraldry, there are many notable differences. The most striking peculiarity of the system is that a coat of arms does not belong to a single family. A number of unrelated families (sometimes hundreds of them), usually with a number of different family names, may use the same,
undifferenced coat of arms, and each coat of arms has its own name. The total number of coats of arms in this system was relatively low – ca. 160 (Piekosiński) in the late Middle Ages. The same can be also seen in Western Europe when families of different surnames but sharing clan origin would use similar coats-of-arms, the fleur-de-lis of the many Capetian families being perhaps the best-known example. One side-effect of this unique arrangement was that it became customary to refer to noblemen by both their family name and their coat of arms name (or
clan name). For example,
Jan Zamoyski herbu Jelita means "Jan Zamoyski of the Jelita coat of arms" (though it is often translated as "of the clan Jelita" or
herbu is Latinized
de armis). From the 15th to 17th centuries, the formula seems to have been to copy the ancient
Roman naming convention:
praenomen (or given name),
nomen gentile (or
Gens/Clan name) and
cognomen (surname), following the Renaissance fashion. So we have
Jan Jelita Zamoyski, forming a
double-barrelled name (
nazwisko złożone, literally "compound name"). Later, the double-barrelled name began to be joined with a hyphen:
Jan Jelita-Zamoyski. (See
Polish names). The Polish émigrés of the 19th century sometimes used adaptations of their names according to the Western European (mainly French) style, becoming e.g. Balthasar Klossowski de
Rola (
Balthus), Jean de Bloch (
Jan Gotlib Bloch), or
Tamara de Lempicka. Some would also keep the Latin forms of their surnames, as Latin was the official language of the Kingdom of Poland, hence the popularity of Late-Medieval or Early-Modern forms such as "de Zamosc Zamoyski". A single coat of arms could appear in slightly different versions, typically in different colours, depending on the custom of the family using it. Such variations (
odmiany) are still considered as representing the same coat of arms. There are also many purely geometrical shapes for which a separate set of heraldic terms was invented. It has been suggested that originally all Polish coats of arms were based on such abstract geometrical shapes, but most were gradually "rationalized" into horseshoes, arrows and so on. If this hypothesis is correct, it suggests in turn that Polish heraldry, also unlike western European heraldry, may be at least partly derived from the
Tamgas, marks used by
Eurasian nomads such as the
Sarmatians, A Polish coat of arms consists of
shield,
crest,
helm, and
crown.
Mantling became fashionable during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Supporters,
mottos, and
compartments normally do not appear, although certain individuals used them, especially in the final stages of the system's development, partly in response to French and German influence. Preserved medieval evidence shows Polish coats-of-arms with
mantling and
supporters.
Shield Polish coats of arms are divided in the same way as their
western counterparts. However, Polish coats of arms is applied on clans rather than to separate families and new families where adopted to the Clan, using same CoA. Thus Polish
escutcheons are rarely parted, there are however a lot of preserved quartered coats-of-arms. These would most often show the arms of the four grandparents of the bearer. Or also the paternal-paternal great-grandmother in the 5th field if the male-line coat-of-arms goes in the heart field. The tradition of differentiating between the
coat of arms proper and a
lozenge granted to women did not develop in Poland. By the 17th century, usually, men and women inherited a coat of arms from their father or mother or even both (or a member of a clan who had adopted them). But also men or women could permanently adopt the arms of their wives or husbands and transmit them to their children, even after remarriages. The
brisure was rarely used. All children would inherit the coat(s) of arms of their parent(s) and transmit them to their children. This partly accounts for the relatively large proportion of Polish families who had adopted a coat of arms by the 18th century. Another factor was the trend of the nobly titled marrying "commoners" and passing on their title to their spouse and children, forbidden in the Middle Ages. An illegitimate child could adopt her/his noble mother's surname and title with the consent of the mother's father but was often adopted and raised by the natural father's family, thereby acquiring the father's surname and title. Heart-shaped shields were mostly used in representations of the coats of arms of royalty. Following the
union between Poland and Lithuania, and the creation of the elective monarchy, it became customary to place the coats of Poland and
Lithuania diagonally, with the coat of arms of the specific
monarch placed centrally on top. Research continues to find out what a "heart-shaped" shield is. Most likely, the coat of Poland was placed on the left-right diagonal (I & IV) and Lithuania on the right-left diagonal (II & III) as evidenced in the shield at the top of this page. The specific monarch crest then being placed in the "heart" position.
Tinctures In addition to these seven basic
tinctures, which were standard in western Europe, many more tinctures were used in Poland and (after the union with Poland) Lithuania. ==See also==