Atenveldt Submissions (excerpted from the S.C.A. College of Arms' Letters of Acceptance and Return)
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The following submissions
have been registered by the S.C.A. College of Arms, July 2010:
Brandan Wanderer von Arnswold.
Household name House
of the Swallow.
Submitted
as House of the Laden
Swallow, no evidence
was presented nor could any be found for the use of an adjective such
as laden
in inn-sign names or similar constructions. Documented adjectives use
the everyday words for color, number, and rarely posture or
arrangement (with cross/crossed and spread, for displayed, the only
two examples of this pattern). Therefore, the adjective Laden
cannot be registered. The submitter said that he would accept African
Swallow or European
Swallow, but they have
the same problem.
The
suggested changes, to House
of the African Swallow
and House of the
European Swallow, make
clear the second problem with the submission. While we love Monty
Python too, the reference drags us mentally back to the modern era.
Therefore even if any of these names could be documented as a period
construction, that name would have to be returned for obtrusive
modernity.
Luckily
the change to House of
the Swallow creates a
name which is registerable. It follows documented patterns for
inn-sign names. Additionally, it is sufficiently generic to not be
obtrusively modern, while retaining the reference. While the
submitter does not allow major changes, he explicitly allowed this
change for registration.
Cecili O'Daly. Name
and device. Quarterly
azure and argent, a thistle proper and in canton a rabbit rampant
contourny argent.
The
submitter said that she would prefer the Gaelic byname Ó
Dálaigh.
Unfortunately, Gaelic bynames are quite literal, and Ó
Dálaigh means "male
descendant of." Therefore, it cannot be registered with a
feminine given name. The feminine version is inghean
Uí Dálaigh, and the
name would be registerable as Cecili
inghean Uí Dálaigh.
A fully Gaelic version of the name is Sisuile
inghean Uí Dálaigh.
However, neither is the change she requested, so we are registering
the name as submitted.
Eleanor Peregrine. Alternate
name Love Sweetlove.
Elsa Olavintytär. Name
and device. Per bend
azure and vert, in bend sinister three bees bendwise sinister Or
winged argent.
James Halsey. Name
(see RETURNS for device).
The
Letter of Intent reported difficulty in dating the spelling Halsey.
Edelweiss was able to provide several late sixteenth century English
citations of the name.
Máire Grame of Lewis. Device.
Per pale sable and
purpure, on a pale argent a vine vert flowered of three roses gules.
Melissa of Monster Hall. Name
change from holding name Melissa of Atenveldt.
This
submission was originally returned by Laurel in December 2009 for
lack of documentation of the byname. Precedent says: ...Rowel
supplied three examples of such compound placenames from Gray, Irvine
and J. E. Gethyn-Jones, editors, The Registers of the Church of
St. Mary's, Dymock, 1538-1790: Margery Wills of Gamage Hall
in 1570/1, Wyllyam Hill of Gamag Hall in 1586, and Edward
Hill de Gamag Halle in 1603. Given this, compound locative
English bynames of the form [place] + Hall are registerable. [Aldric
Elys of Kiddall Hall, March 2007, A-Atlantia] The client and
commenters have provided documentation for the submitted spelling of
the locative in an English context as a variant of Munster, in 1536.
Nest verch Rodri ap Madyn.
Household name House
of the Purple Cauldron
and badge. Argent, on a
cauldron purpure a mullet voided and interlaced within and conjoined
to an annulet argent.
Precedent
on the use of a mullet voided and interlaced within and conjoined to
an annulet as a tertiary charge was set on the April 2010 LoAR:
Precedent on items within annulets was set on the Cover Letter to the
March 2009 LoAR where it says "When both are present in a design
as part of a primary charge group, or where they would be expected to
be a secondary charge, the widget and annulet will both be considered
part of the same group." We are extending this to tertiary
charges: a mullet within an annulet, when placed entirely on another
charge, is considered a single group. Therefore, this device does not
violate our ban forbidding multiple tertiary charge groups on a
single underlying charge.
Ronan MacHugh de Gerin. Name
and device. Argent, a
saltire vert surmounted by a demi-eagle facing to sinister sable, in
base a crescent gules.
Submitted
as Rónán
MhicHughe
de Gérin,
the submitter requested authenticity for 14th century Ireland. As
submitted, this name mixes too many languages. The byname MhicHughe
mixes Gaelic and Anglicized forms in a single element, which we do
not allow. Additionally, the entire name mixes Gaelic, English, and
French, which creates two steps from period practice. Either would be
cause for return. The name must be modified slightly to make the
forms likely for a single time and place.
MacHugh
is the Anglicized form of the Gaelic mac
Aodha. The names Aodh
and Hugh
were perceived to be equivalent by Gaels, but Hugh
is not found in Gaelic. Therefore, it cannot be used with the Gaelic
mhic.
In addition, even in Gaelic, mhic
is used only for a grandparental generation when it is given after
the father's name, for example in the name Domhnall
mac Cathail mhic Aodha.
Therefore it would not be correct here. The Anglicized MacHugh
is closest to the submitted form.
Rónán
is a saint's name. He was venerated both in Ireland and in France. In
Gaelic his name may be written as Rónán
or Ronan;
in Anglicized contexts and French only the latter spelling is found.
While we do not know that this name was used in the 14th century, it
is registerable under the saint's name allowance.
Morlet's
Les Noms de personne
sur le territoire de l'ancienne Gaule du VIe au XIIe siècle
(s.n. Gidhari) dates the placename Gerin
to 1203. The spelling without accents is typical for c. 1400.
To
partially meet the submitter's request for authenticity, we have
changed the given name and patronymic to Anglicized Irish forms and
the placename to the dated form. In Anglicized Irish shortly before
1400, we can find names like Johannes
fil. Johannes de Balymore
and Ricardus McHenry
Vale (both from "Names
and Naming Practices in the Red Book of Ormond (Ireland 14th
Century)" by Tangwystyl verch Morgant Glasvryn). Thus, a
construction like this one is plausible, though we could find no
evidence of the use of French placenames nor of the name Ronan
at this time.
Seved Ribbing. Device.
Per fess azure and Or,
three linden leaves counterchanged.
Nice
device!
Sigridh Friedrich. Name
and device. Argent,
a wolf rampant gules between two bars gemel sable.
The
combination of Swedish and German is a step from period practice.
This
device is clear of the device of Rory Phalen, Argent,
a fox rampant gules between two flaunches sable.
There is a CD for changing the type of the secondary charges, from
flaunches to bars, and another for the change of number of the
secondary charges, from two to four. Some commenters asked if the
rules on forced moves also applies to forced changes of number, since
flaunches are only ever seen in pairs. Forced moves are just that:
moves. The only rule we have that does not grant a CD caused by other
changes to the design is the rule for changes of arrangement. This is
why there is not also a CD for the change of arrangement of the
secondary group in this design, from in
fess to in
pale. The rules only
withhold a CD for forced arrangement changes. Changes to type,
tincture, or number which may be considered forced by other changes
in the design are not limited by this rule.
Tabitha Whitewolf. Device
change. Gules, a wolf
rampant queue-forchy argent between three four-leafed clovers slipped
Or.
Her
previous device, Gules,
a wolf rampant queue-forchy argent between three sets of four hearts
each conjoined in saltire points to center Or,
is retained as a badge.
The following submissions
have been returned by the College of Arms for further work, July
2010:
James Halsey. Device.
Per bend argent and sable, a fox passant contourny gules.
This
device is returned for conflict against the badge of Sherry Foxwell,
(Fieldless) A fox
herissony to sinister gules.
There is a single CD for the change of field. Herissony is a
blazonable variant of statant, which is granted no difference from
passant.
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