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- Newsgroups: rec.heraldry
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!darwin.sura.net!jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu!velde2
- From: velde2@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu (Francois Velde)
- Subject: Balkanic Heraldry
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.234416.1413@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>
- Organization: HAC - Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 23:44:16 GMT
- Lines: 94
-
-
- All this talk of Serbia and Byzantium, as well as the question on the
- current flag of Bosnia, got me searching the various national arms
- of the area. I have limited myself to the former Yugoslavia for the
- moment. Sources are mainly old Encyclopaedias (back when people cared
- about coats of arms :-( such as Nouvelle Encyclopedie Larousse (in
- French), old editions of the Britannica, Meyer's Lexicon of 1840,
- Brockhaus Enkyklopaedia (both in German). Additional help from
- Neubecker's Heraldry and the odd history book.
- Don't trust me too much on the history, I write from short-term memory.
-
- Very rough historical outline: first, there was the Byzantine empire,
- whose arms we discussed (Gules, a double-headed eagle displayed Or).
- A number of slav tribes had settled in the Balkans in the High Middle
- Ages, and slowly moved out of the direct domination of the Byzantines.
- Thus emerged Valachia (to become Rumania), Serbia, Croatia, etc. When
- the Turks started invading Europe in the 14th century, these small
- fiefs and kingdoms lost their independance one after the other. With
- the end of the Ottoman Empire starting in the early 19th century, they
- re-emerged one after the other, except Slovenia and Croatia still under
- Austrian rule. After 1918, Yugoslavia was created as a kingdom, uniting
- all Southern Slavs. It became "sort of communist" after 1945. We all
- know the current state of affairs.
-
- Yugoslavia: As a kindgom (1918-1945), ruled I think by the Serbian royal
- family, it had its arms. Namely: Gules, a double-headed eagle Argent,
- beaked, membered and tongued Or, bearing an escutcheon: tierced per
- pairle inversed, Serbia, Croatia, and Azure, a crescent Argent below
- three stars Or per fesse.
-
- Serbia: it emerged in 1817 as an autonomous province of the Ottoman Empire
- and became a full-fledged kingdom in 1882. I have seen variants of the
- same arms. Gules, two fleur-de-lys Or below a double-headed eagle Argent,
- beaked, membered and tongued Or, bearing an escutcheon: Gules, a Cross
- Argent between 4 B's (or firesteels) Or.
- The variant is on the escutcheon: in some cases, the horizontal arms
- of the cross bear the dates 1389 and 1817, and there is a sword Or per
- pale on the cross. 1389 is the battle of Kosovo, when the Serbs lost their
- independence. 1817 is the date they regained their autonomy. In the arms
- of Yugoslavia above, "Serbia" refers to the simple version of the escutcheon
- with cross and 4 B's.
- These arms were used from 1882 to 1918. I suspect the cross with 4 Bs are
- now being used again, if only informally.
-
- Croatia: checquy Argent and Gules. That seems to date to the early 16th
- century. Croatia itself united with Hungary very early, as soon as the
- 12th century, and followed Hungary into the Habsburg dominions all the
- way until 1918. In the arms of Yugoslavia above, "Croatia" refers to
- these arms. They were used on the flag of the puppet regime in 1941-45,
- but (interestingly) they also appeared on the seal of the republic of
- Croatia after 1946. So there is nothing new about these arms, and their
- current use on the tri-color flag of Croatia is not historically shocking.
-
- Slovenia: it never really existed as a distinct entity, it seems. It was
- early on incorporated into the Habsburg's possessions. Modern Slovenia is
- made up of parts of Crain (now Krajina), Steiermark (in Austria), and
- Istria. The first two had the following arms: Crain, Argent an eagle
- displayed Azure, crowned Or, langued and armed Gules, with a crescent
- checquy Or and Gules on its breast. Steiermark, Vert, a goat clymant
- Argent, armed and tongued Gules.
-
- Montenegro: existed as a seperate entity in the Middle Ages, resurrected
- in 1908 as a kingdom. From 1908 to 1918 it had the following arms:
- Gules, a double-headed eagle Argent (do you see a pattern?), beaked,
- membered and tongued Or, bearing an escutcheon: Azure, a lion passant
- Or on a champagne Vert.
-
- Bosnia: that one is intriguing. It existed as a semi-independent fief
- (occasionally dominated by the Serbs) until the early 16th century. One
- ruler was given the title of Duke of the Holy Roman Empire, and part
- of his lands became known as "ducatus Sancti Abbas" (duchy of Saint Abbas),
- or Herzogtum in German, and Hercegovina in Serbo-Croat. The kings of the
- time (end 14th century) seemed to have the arms: Gules, a crescent Argent
- beneath an 8-pointed star of the same. The crown was an Eastern crown,
- i.e. with "spikes". That was also the arms in most encyclopaedias of
- the 19th century, but the German encyclopaedias, Woodward's treatise
- follow the Austrian practice, where the arms of Esclavonia or Bosnia are:
- Or, issuing from the sinister flank an arm embowed proper, vested Gules,
- holding a sabre Argent. Bosnia-Hercegovina was annexed by Austria from
- Turkey in 1908.
-
- A clear conclusion: the Byzantine double-headed eagle was a heavy favorite,
- albeit with a "mark of cadence" (the eagle is Argent instead of Or). I
- already discussed Albania in another posting, where the double-headed
- eagle ended up Sable on a Field Gules (ugh).
-
- Other conclusion: I have no idea where the bend and 6 fleur-de-lys Argent
- on a field Azure of the current Bosnian flag come from. I checked the arms
- of Sarajevo, which have nothing to do (a bridge, a mountain and other stuff).
- Still a mystery to me.
- --
-
- Francois Velde
-
-