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Emblem of the Kingdom of England
Historical Notice: Τhe emblem of the Kingdom of England. It is remarkable that it stiil bears only the English symbols ("three lions passant guardant"), instead of being quartered with the French fleurs-de-lis, a variation adopted c. 1340 (to emphasize the claim to the Frech throne).
Contributors
- Leonidas Kallivretakis
- Institute of Neohellenic Research/ National Hellenic Research Foundation
Subject
- Heraldry
- Coat of arms
- Emblem
- Heraldic Monument
- Heraldry
- Breast badge
- Monument
- Frankish rule
- Heraldry
- Monuments
- Historic monuments
- Greece
Type of item
- Heraldic monument
- Heraldic motif
Contributors
- Leonidas Kallivretakis
- Institute of Neohellenic Research/ National Hellenic Research Foundation
Subject
- Heraldry
- Coat of arms
- Emblem
- Heraldic Monument
- Heraldry
- Breast badge
- Monument
- Frankish rule
- Heraldry
- Monuments
- Historic monuments
- Greece
Type of item
- Heraldic monument
- Heraldic motif
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Temporal
- 1346 - 1353
- 1346/1353
- Late Byzantine Period
- Latinocracy
Places
- Rodos (city)
- Church of Agia Triada (St Trinity)
Identifier
- https://www.searchculture.gr/aggregator/edm/pandektis_eraldika/000081-10442_163627
- 81400301,030803
- http://pandektis.ekt.gr/pandektis/handle/10442/163627
- http://hdl.handle.net/10442/01/163627
Providing country
- Greece
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2019-01-25T08:32:00.713Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2020-01-30T09:28:01.342Z