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- Mantling abstract "For the rockclimbing move, see Mantel (climbing)In heraldry, mantling or lambrequin is drapery tied to the helmet above the shield. It forms a backdrop for the shield. In paper heraldry it is a depiction of the protective cloth covering (often of linen) worn by knights from their helmets to stave off the elements, and, secondarily, to decrease the effects of sword-blows against the helmet in battle, from which it is usually shown tattered or cut to shreds; less often it is shown as an intact drape, principally in those cases where clergy use a helmet and mantling (to symbolise that, despite the perhaps contradictory presence of the helmet, they have not been involved in combat), although this is usually the artist's discretion and done for decorative rather than symbolic reasons.Generally, mantling is blazoned mantled x, doubled [lined] y; the cloth has two sides, one of a heraldic colour (the five principal colours being red, blue, green, black, or purple—there are other very rare colours as well) and the other of a heraldic metal (white or yellow). (See tincture (heraldry) for more on these tinctures.) The mantling is usually in the main colours of the shield, or else in the livery colours that symbolize the entity bearing the arms, though there are exceptions, with occasional tinctures differing from these, or occasional examples in which the outside of the mantling is per pale of two colours.[1] or both the inside and outside are per pale,[2] and even rarer examples of other divisions, and there is a perhaps unique example in which the lining of the mantling is per pale of the two metals or of the entire mantling being of a single tincture. The mantling of the Black Loyalist Heritage Society is a unique example in which the mantling is of two furs (ermines, lined ermine). The Coat of Arms of Canada is mantled white and red, or argent doubled gules; furthermore, the current standard rendering of the Canadian arms has mantling in the shape of maple leaves. The arms of sovereigns are a common exception. The arms of the United Kingdom and those of Emperor Akihito of Japan are both or, lined ermine, such a mantling often being held to be limited to sovereigns.In the early days of the development of the crest, before the torse (wreath), crest coronets and chapeaux were developed, the crest often "continued into the mantling" if this was feasible (the clothes worn by a demi- human figure, or the fur of the animal, for instance, allowing or encouraging this). It still holds true frequently in Germany.There are rare examples where the mantling is blazoned to complement the armiger's coat of arms, mimicking the ordinaries and charges on the escutcheon. When charges occur, they are usually displayed as a semy, [3].".
- Mantling wikiPageExternalLink onkormanyzat-ocsod_en.shtml.
- Mantling wikiPageExternalLink Slide%20149.gif.
- Mantling wikiPageExternalLink Slide%20158.gif.
- Mantling wikiPageID "204717".
- Mantling wikiPageLength "4078".
- Mantling wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Mantling wikiPageRevisionID "656908613".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Akihito.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Arms_of_Canada.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Category:Heraldry.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Chapeau.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Coat_of_Arms_of_Canada.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Ermines.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Glossary_of_climbing_terms.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Helmet.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Heraldry.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Knight.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Linen.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Livery.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Mantel_(climbing).
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Maple_leaf.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Royal_coat_of_arms_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Semy.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Stoat.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Tincture_(heraldry).
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Torse.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLink Variation_of_the_field.
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mantle".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mantled".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mantling".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "Papal mantling".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "lambrequin".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "lambrequins".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "manteaux".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "mantle".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "mantled".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "mantling".
- Mantling wikiPageWikiLinkText "royal pavilion".
- Mantling hasPhotoCollection Mantling.
- Mantling wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:COA_elements.
- Mantling wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Heraldry.
- Mantling wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mantling subject Category:Heraldry.
- Mantling hypernym Drapery.
- Mantling comment "For the rockclimbing move, see Mantel (climbing)In heraldry, mantling or lambrequin is drapery tied to the helmet above the shield. It forms a backdrop for the shield.".
- Mantling label "Mantling".
- Mantling sameAs Category:Heraldic_lambrequins.
- Mantling sameAs Přikryvadla.
- Mantling sameAs Hjelmklæde.
- Mantling sameAs Helmdecke.
- Mantling sameAs Lambrekino.
- Mantling sameAs Lambrequín.
- Mantling sameAs Lambrequin.
- Mantling sameAs מעטה_(הרלדיקה).
- Mantling sameAs Sisaktakaró.
- Mantling sameAs Svolazzi.
- Mantling sameAs マント_(紋章学).
- Mantling sameAs Skraistė_(heraldika).
- Mantling sameAs Мантија_(хералдика).
- Mantling sameAs Dekkleed.
- Mantling sameAs Hjelmklede.
- Mantling sameAs Labry_(heraldyka).
- Mantling sameAs Paquife.
- Mantling sameAs m.01d1qf.
- Mantling sameAs Намёт_(геральдика).
- Mantling sameAs Плашт_(хералдички).
- Mantling sameAs Hjälmtäcke.
- Mantling sameAs พู่ประดับ_(มุทราศาสตร์).
- Mantling sameAs Намет_(геральдика).
- Mantling sameAs Q1289089.
- Mantling sameAs Q1289089.
- Mantling wasDerivedFrom Mantling?oldid=656908613.
- Mantling isPrimaryTopicOf Mantling.