Atenveldt Submissions (excerpted from the S.C.A. College of Arms' Letters of Acceptance and Return)
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- The
following submissions were registered June 2017 by the SCA College
of Arms:
-
Adelaide Duval.
Name and device. Per
bend sinister argent and vert, three roses purpure and a dagger
bendwise sinister inverted argent.
Nice
16th century French name! Aed
Mac Eochagáin.
Name. Submitted
as Aed Mac Eochagaín,
this spelling placed the diacritical marking on the wrong letter. We
have corrected the name to Aed
Mac Eochagáin
for registration. Although the standardized Gaelic form of the
byname would be mac
Eochagáin,
capitalization in the Irish Annals is extremely variable. Therefore,
we are leaving that portion of the name as submitted and not
changing mac
to lower case. This name does not conflict with the registered
Aedh mac Eoghain.
Although Mac Eochagáin
can be pronounced with either one or two syllables, depending on
dialect, there are sufficient differences in the sound and
appearance of the two bynames to bring them clear of conflict. Mac
Eochagáin is
pronounced roughly like "Mac Coghegan" or "Mac
Coogan," whereas Mac
Eoghain is pronounced
more like "Mac Owen." Apollonia
Kautz. Name
and device. Gules,
a polypus argent, on a point pointed Or three apples one and two
gules. The
Letter of Intent asserted that Kautz
is the submitter's legal surname. However, this fact was not
properly attested according to the standards set out in the June
2015 Cover Letter: Where photocopies cannot easily be made,
heralds may attest that they have seen the identification. Such
attestation must include the following: the type of identification,
the complete name exactly as it appears on the identification (for
example noting that the name is rendered completely in capital
letters), the names and titles of two heralds who have seen the
identification (herald/pursuivant at large is a title), and the
signature or initials of those heralds. If signatures cannot be
obtained, the herald may confirm that he or she has seen the
documentation in commentary (internal or external - in the case of
internal commentary the Letter of Intent should note that it was
confirmed). At a local event where only a single herald is
available, another officer (seneschal, for example) can serve as a
second witness. Fortunately, Kautz
is also a documented German surname, dated to 1598 in the
FamilySearch Historical Records, making this a nice late 16th
century German name! Aurora
Rothais. Name and
device. Azure,
a rose argent, issuant from base a demi-sun Or, a chief Or mullety
sable. Aurora
is the submitter's legal given name. Although Aurora
has been documented to the gray period in English, the submitter
nevertheless must rely on the Legal Name Allowance because the
attested instance of Aurora
is more than 500 years later than the attested date for her
byname. Artist's note: Please draw the rose larger to help
identify it as a primary charge. Beth
Drache. Name change
from Beth of Granite Mountain. The Letter of Intent asserted
that Drache
is the registered surname of the submitter's spouse. However, this
fact was not properly attested. To use her spouse's surname under
PN1B2g of SENA, the submitter needed to include proof of the legal
relationship, either in the form of a photocopy of the marriage
license (or similar document) or a signed attestation of the
relationship from her husband. Fortunately, Drache
is also an attested English surname, found in Reaney & Wilson
s.n. Drake dated to 1066. The submitter's previous name, Beth
of Granite Mountain,
is released. Brando
Coradini. Name and
device. Per pale azure
and argent, two wolves combattant counterchanged, on a chief
triangular sable a sheaf of rapiers inverted proper.
Canaan
Falconer. Name and
device. Or, a stag's
head cabossed proper within a torc sable. Nice
late 16th century English name! Cora
Boyle. Name
and device. Per
chevron throughout ployé azure and Or, two Celtic crosses and a
sheaf of arrows counterchanged.
At the Pelican decision meeting, Jeanne Marie Noir Licorne found
the byname Boyle
in the FamilySearch Historical Records for England, dated to 1585,
within 14 years of the attested instance of the given name. Nice
16th century English name! Darius
of Sundragon.
Holding name and
device (see RETURNS for name). Vert,
a wolf's head erased contourny argent and a point pointed Or.
Artist's note:
Please draw the wolf's head much larger to fill the available space
on the field. Submitted under the name Darius
al-Gaf{u-}r. Dominic
de Grae. Name
(see RETURNS for device). Donwenna
Dwn. Device change.
Per chevron gules and sable, three walnuts and a Catherine wheel Or.
Artist's
note: Please draw the walnuts larger, as they were on the old
device. The submitter's old device, Per
chevron gules and sable, three walnuts Or and a triskelion arrondi
argent, is released. Eirikr
Stjarna. Name (see
RETURNS for device). Eoghan
MacIver. Name
change from William MacIver. The byname MacIver
was already registered to the submitter and thus did not need to be
re-documented under PN1B2g of SENA. The submitter's previous
name, William MacIver,
is released. Evelyn
of Windale. Name.
Evelyn
is the submitter's legal given name. However, she need not rely on
the Legal Name Allowance because Evelyn
is also an attested English name dated to 1598 in the FamilySearch
Historical Records. Windale
is the registered name of an SCA branch. Ezekiel
Crow. Device. Gules,
on a triangle within and conjoined to an annulet argent a crow
regardant sable.
-
Fíne ingen Uí Chellaig.
Name and device.
Vert, two swords in
saltire and on a chief argent three wooden harps proper.
Submitted as Fíne
Ingen
Ui Cheallaigh,
the name combined the pre-1200 Ingen
Ui with the post-1200
Cheallaigh.
As set out in the examples to PN1B1, the combination of pre-1200 and
post-1200 Gaelic orthography in the same name phrase is not allowed.
With the submitter's permission, we have changed the name to Fíne
ingen
Uí
Chellaig_ to use
entirely pre-1200 orthography, consistent markings, and the standard
capitalization. The submitter requested authenticity for Irish
Gaelic. Both Fíne
and Cellach
(the nominative form of the father's name) are found in the early
9th century. Cellach
continued in use for several centuries thereafter. However, Clan
Affiliation bynames, such as ingen
Uí Chellaig did not
come into use until the 10th and 11th centuries. Thus, while the
name is registerable, it is not authentic for the early 9th
century. Finna
Ívarsdóttir. Name.
Nice 9th-10th century Icelandic name! Friedrich
Swartzen Hut. Device
change. Lozengy argent
and azure, a sugar-loaf hat sable. This
style of hat is also known as a capotain
or copotain hat.
It dates to the late 16th Century in England and northwestern
Europe. The submitter's previous device, Quarterly
gules and sable, a quadrant and in chief a pair of shackles
conjoined by a chain fesswise Or,
is retained as a badge. Galen
Peter Gilmore. Name.
Peter
was not adequately documented in the Letter of Intent. Fortunately,
Peter
is easily found in "Late Sixteenth Century English Given Names"
by Talan Gwynek
(http://heraldry.sca.org/names/eng16/eng16mfreq.html). Ginevra
of Sofia. Name and
device. Per pale gules
and azure ermined argent, a lion Or and an orle argent.
The byname of
Sofia uses the lingua
Anglica form of the city that is the present capital of Bulgaria,
which appears on Gerard Mercator's 1595 map as Sofya.
Even though of Sofia
uses the lingua Anglica form, it is still considered a Bulgarian
name element. Italian and South Slavic (Bulgarian) is an acceptable
lingual mix under Appendix C. Artist's note: Please draw fewer,
larger ermine spots. Grimald
the Faithful. Name
and device. Per pale
Or and sable, two badgers rampant addorsed counterchanged marked
argent. The only
evidence for Grimald
provided in the Letter of Intent was a user-submitted genealogy from
FamilySearch Historical Records. This was not adequate
documentation. Heralds and submitters should keep in mind that
amateur family trees and genealogies generally are not reliable,
even when published through FamilySearch. Fortunately, the
Latinized Grimaldus
is attested to 977 C.E. in France in Morlet, Les
Noms de Personnes,
Vol. I, p. 115, s.n. Grimoaldus/Grimaldus. The expected vernacular
form is Grimald.
The byname the
Faithful is a
reasonable lingua Anglica form of the Middle English surname le
Fykes, meaning "the
faithful," dated to 1221 in Reaney & Wilson s.n.
Figgess. The combination of a French given name and an English
surname dated within 300 years of each other is acceptable lingual
mix under Appendix C. Hallbi{o,}rn
of Ered Sûl. Holding
name and device (see RETURNS for name). Vert, three drinking horns
fretted in triangle and on a chief Or four Algiz runes vert.
Submitted under the name Hallbi{o,}rn
Freysgoði. Hannah
Milligan. Name.
Submitted as Hannah
Millican,
the surname spelling is an entirely modern form. With the
submitter's permission, we have changed the surname to Milligan,
a variant of Mylligan,
a surname found in the FamilySearch Historical Records for Norfolk,
England, dated to 1597. As the given name Hannah
is also found in the FamilySearch Historical Records for Norfolk,
England, in a christening record dated to 1597, this is an excellent
late 16th century English name! Hildegard
Reinhart. Name and
device. Per fess vert
and argent, a crescent argent and a domestic cat's face sable.
Submitted as
Hildegard Reinharet,
no documentation could be found for the submitted surname. With the
submitter's permission, we have changed the surname to Reinhart,
which was found in the FamilySearch Historical Records for Baden,
Germany, dated to 1567. As the given name Hildegard
was documented in the Letter of Intent from Baden, Germany, dated to
1577, this is an excellent 16th century German name! Hürrem
bint Osman al-Urduni. Name
change from Layla bint Suleiman al-Urduni and device change.
Purpure, a pall
inverted raguly between two lotus flowers in profile and a squirrel
argent. The
element al-Urduni
was already registered to the submitter and thus did not need to be
re-documented pursuant to PN1B2g of SENA. The submitter's
previous name, Layla
bint Suleiman al-Urduni,
is released. The submitter's old device, Purpure,
a pall inverted raguly between two lotus flowers in profile and a
peacock in his pride argent,
is released. Iðunn
of the Citadel of the Southern Pass. Name
and device. Vert,
two bones in saltire within a wingless wyvern in annulo argent.
The byname of the
Citadel of the Southern Pass
uses the name of a registered SCA branch. Isabella
Cara. Name change
from Ceara inghean Chárthaigh. The submitter's previous name,
Ceara inghean
Chárthaigh, is
retained as an alternate name. James
Shinner. Name and
device. Vert, a
compass rose Or, on a chief argent three oak leaves vert. This
precise name is found in the FamilySearch Historical Records, in a
1589 marriage record from Devon, England. Excellent English
name! Joseph
Grünewald of York. Alternate
name Iosif Syl'vestrov. Julian
Faith McCabe. Device
change. Per saltire
sable and argent, two unicorn's heads erased respectant sable.
The submitter's old device, Per
saltire azure and vert, two unicorn's heads erased respectant Or,
is released. Kathryn
De Feuer. Name (see
RETURNS for device). The
submitter requested authenticity for "English and Flemish
languages/cultures." Mixed language names generally are not
authentic. However, the combination of an English given name and a
Flemish byname is registerable under Appendix C. Marcus
de Grae. Name.
Occadai
Dogshin. Name and
device. Per bend
sinister azure and purpure, in bend two dogs sejant erect addorsed
Or. Owain
Sayer. Name and
device. Per fess
dovetailed vert and argent, a mortar and pestle argent and three
flames azure. Rebekah
bat Mikael. Name.
Runa
Gigja. Device.
Per chevron azure and
sable, two unicorns combattant argent and a lit Arabian lamp Or.
There is a step
from period practice for the use of an Arabian lamp. Ryan
Thorne. Name and
device. Per bend wavy
Or semy of reremice sable and gules, a compass star Or. Nice
English name for the 1590s! There is a step from period practice
for use of a compass star. Swetiua
de Torleton. Name and
device. Or, two elephants statant respectant sable maintaining in
their raised trunks a heart gules. Submitted as Swetiue
de Torleton',
two minor changes are necessary to make the name registerable.
First, Swetiue
is not the nominative (base) form of the given name; it appears to
be a genitive (possessive) form, which cannot be used as a given
name. We have changed the given name to Swetiua
to use the nominative form. Second, the terminal apostrophe in de
Torleton'
is a scribal abbreviation, which we do not register. Watts s.n.
Tarlton dates the spelling Torleton
to 1204. Therefore, we changed the byname to de
Torleton_ to remove
the scribal abbreviation. The submitter requested authenticity
for 13th century England. In the registered form, the name meets
that request. Uilliam
ua Briain. Name and
device. Quarterly
sable and argent, a cross gules between four serpents nowed
counterchanged. Nice
Gaelic name from the 14th century onwards! Artist's note: Please
center the serpents in their respective quarters. Yvonnet
le Bouer. Name and
device. Azure,
a lit candle and a quill pen in saltire, on a chief triangular Or a
three-footed pot sable. This
name combines a French given name with an English byname, an
acceptable lingual mix under Appendix C.
The following have been returned by the College of
Arms for further work, June 2017:
-
Darius al-Gaf{u-}r. Name.
This name must be returned because there is too great a temporal
gap between the name elements. The given name Darius
was documented in the Letter of Intent as Greek. The byname
al-Gaf{u-}r
was documented in Arabic. Because these name elements are not in the
same language group under Appendix C, they must be attested within
300 years of each other. The byname al-Gaf{u-}r
is dated to the 12th century. We were unable to find any evidence of
Darius
or Dareios
in Greek later than the 2nd century C.E. Even giving the submitter
the benefit of the doubt on the attested dates, there are more than
300 years between the elements and the name cannot be registered. On
resubmission, the submitter should be aware that al-Gaf{u-}r
is likely a transcription error for al-Ghaf{u-}r.
In addition, Juliana Siren advises that the reference to this
element in her article "Arabic Names from al-Andalus: Masculine
Bynames Found in al- Andalus" is based on a single citation to
the name of a 12th century man elsewhere identified as Ibn
`Abd al-Ghaf{u-}r and
Ibn al-Ghaf{u-}r.
It is unclear, therefore, whether al-Ghaf{u-}r
is actually a byname. His device is registered under the holding
name Darius of
Sundragon. Dominic
de Grae. Device. Vert,
an owl striking argent, on a chief wavy Or a moon in her plenitude
azure between two mullets vert. This
device is returned for use of two tertiary charge groups on the same
charge. In this design, the mullets on either side of the moon are
substantially smaller, making them appear to be subordinate to the
moon in size and importance. If the tertairy charges were equivalent
in size, they would be part of a single tertiary charge group and
this device would be registerable. Upon resubmission, we
encourage the submitter to make the mullets the same size as the
moon, ideally by modifying the frequency of the waves that form the
chief so that each charge has its own undulation in which to
appear. Eirikr
Stjarna. Device.
Argent, three empty
embroiderer's quills in pall inverted gules "lipped"
sable. This device is
returned for violation of SENA A1D, which states that emblazons
which cannot be reliably blazoned must be returned for redraw. Were
these quills depicted with a gules center and sable ends, they would
be reproducible using "quills sable threaded gules" with a
note to make the threaded portion thicker. However, the proposed
blazon term of "lipped" does not adequately describe the
portion of the charge that is sable. Upon resubmission, we encourage
the submitter to either stick with a single tincture, or otherwise
to have the quill one solid tincture and the yarn another. Geraint
de Grey. Device.
Azure, a chevron Or between two mullets of eight points argent and a
demi-sun issuant from base Or. This
device must be returned for conflict with Godric Linch, Azure,
a chevron Or between two quatrefoils argent and a lion dormant Or.
There is one DC for changing the type of all of the secondary
charges. Additionally, this device is returned for violation of
SENA A3D1, the "sword and dagger" rule, which disallows
the use of visually similar but blazonably different charges.
Mullets of eight points and suns do not have a DC between them, and
cannot be used on the same device; the use of demi-suns and mullets
of eight points is just as visually confusing. Hallbi{o,}rn
Freysgoði. Name. This
name must be returned because it makes a presumptuous claim of rank.
SENA PN4B1 states: "Names may not contain an element or
group of elements that create the appearance of a claim to have a
specific protected rank or title that the submitter does not possess
within the Society, even if that name element or elements are
attested. Those titles which are so protected can be found in the
List of Alternate Titles. Bynames which are identical to titles used
in the Society are generally not allowed for individuals who do not
have that rank." Although
the byname Freysgoði
is attested, it is nevertheless presumptuous. "The word goði
is best translated as "chieftain," not "priest."
As of the August 2016 Cover Letter, goði
is now officially a reserved Alternate Title in the Society for
"Baron" for Viking Age Iceland." [Sigfúss
Hlíðmannagodi, 12/2016 LoAR, R-Avacal]. Thus, the byname Freysgoði
is essentially a presumptuous claim to be a Baron of a group of
people or a place named after Frey. If
the submitter holds the permanent rank of Baron in the Society, he
may register the byname goði.
As no evidence of rank was submitted with this name, we must return
it. His device is registered under the holding name Hallbi{o,}rn
of Ered Sûl. Kathryn
De Feuer. Device. Vert,
in pale a rose within a stag's antler conjoined to itself in annulo
and a goblet argent. This
device is returned for blurring the distinction between co-primary
charges and primary/secondary charges. The attire crosses the fess
line, pushing the goblet to base, but they have similar visual
weight. The rose, in contrast, is much, much smaller, visually the
size of a tertiary charge. However, given its arrangement, it is
considered to be co-primary. This device is also returned for having
three different charges in the same charge group. If drawn so that
all three charges have more or less equal weight and are co-primary,
this device would have three different charges in the primary charge
group, which is grounds for return. Kidala
Boskov. Name. PN1A1 of
SENA states that "[a]ll personal name submissions are required
to have a given name." Both name elements of this name were
documented as bynames. We were unable to find any evidence of Kidala
as a given name. Therefore, this name must be returned. Mariette
Dominique du Beau. Device.
Azure, a bat-winged
mermaid erect to sinister between flaunches argent. This
device is returned for lack of recognizability. This depiction of
bat wings does not match any depiction known to the College of Arms,
and appears to be closer to a cape than any structured sort of wing.
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