Coats of arms of the Holy Roman Empire explained

Over its long history, the Holy Roman Empire used many different heraldic forms, representing its numerous internal divisions.

Imperial coat of arms

Coats of arms of Holy Roman Emperors

The Reichsadler ("Imperial Eagle") was the heraldic eagle, derived from the Roman eagle standard, used by the Holy Roman Emperors and in modern coats of arms of Germany, including those of the Second German Empire (1871–1918), the Weimar Republic (1919–1933) and the "Third Reich" (Nazi Germany, 1933–1945). The same design has remained in use by the Federal Republic of Germany since 1945, but under a different name, now called Bundesadler ("Union Eagle" or "Federal Eagle", from German "Bund", genitive form "Bundes" meaning 'Union' or 'Federation', and "Adler" meaning 'Eagle').

Quaternion Eagle

See main article: Quaternion Eagle. One rendition of the coat of the empire was the "Quaternion Eagle" (so named after the imperial quaternions) printed by David de Negker of Augsburg, after a 1510 woodcut by Hans Burgkmair. It showed a selection of 56 shields of various Imperial States in groups of four on the feathers of a double-headed eagle supporting, in place of a shield, Christ on the Cross. The top, larger shields, are those of the seven Prince Electors, the ecclesiastical: Trier, Cologne and Mainz as well as of the titular "Prefect of Rome" on the right wing; the secular: Bohemia, Electorate of the Palatinate, Saxony and Brandenburg on the left. The depiction also appeared on the Imperial Eagle beaker.

Holy Roman Emperors

Direct attestations of imperial coats of arms become available in the later 13th century. Past emperors are given attributed arms in 13th-century sources. Thus, Otto IV is given the first known depiction of a double-headed Reichsadler in the Chronica Majora . Henry VI is given a (single-headed) Reichsadler in the Codex Manesse .

Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (Emperor 1220–1250) did not use coats of arms in any of his seals. He did use the imperial eagle on some of his coins, but not displayed as a heraldic charge in a heraldic shield. Frederick's son and co-ruler Henry did have an equestrian seal with the Hohenstaufen coat of arms of three leopards, and this coat of arms is later attributed to Frederick II as well.

From the reign of Albert II (reigned 1438–39, was never crowned emperor), each Emperor bore the old Imperial arms (Or, an eagle displayed sable beaked and membered gules) with an inescutcheon of pretence of his personal family arms. This appears therefore as a black eagle with an escutcheon on his breast. Before 1438 the Emperors used separate personal and an imperial coat of arms. The arms of the High Offices of the Empire were borne as an augmentation to the office-holder's personal arms.

High offices (Reichserzämter)

ArmsOffice and Blazon
align=center Arch-Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Empire
align=center Arch-Steward of the Holy Roman Empire

Gules, an orb Or.

align=center Arch-Treasurer of the Holy Roman Empire

Gules, the imperial crown proper.

align=center Arch-Marshal of the Holy Roman Empire

Per fess sable and argent, two swords in saltire gules.

Prince-electors

See main article: Prince-elector. The seven Electors named in the Golden Bull of 1356 were: the Prince-Bishops of Cologne, Mainz and Trier, the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony and the Margrave of Brandenburg.

The Count Palatine was replaced by the Duke of Bavaria in 1623, as the Elector Palatine, Frederick V, came under the imperial ban after participating in the Bohemian Revolt. The Count Palatine was granted a new electorate in 1648. Saxony was held by a Protestant elector from 1525 (John), the Palatinate from 1541 (Otto Henry). In 1685, a Catholic branch of the Wittelsbach family inherited the Palatinate and a new Protestant electorate was created in 1692 for the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, who became known as the Elector of Hanover (officially confirmed by the Imperial Diet in 1708). The Elector of Saxony (Augustus II) converted to Catholicism in 1697 so that he could become King of Poland, but no additional Protestant electors were created, and the Electorate itself remained officially Protestant.

Spiritual Electors

ArmsElectorate/Blazon
Cologne

Argent a cross sable.[1]

MainzGules, a wheel with six spokes argent.[2]
TrierArgent a cross gules.

Secular Electors

Other states

See also: List of states in the Holy Roman Empire, List of Free Imperial Cities and List of Imperial abbeys. Entries are listed by Imperial Circle (introduced 1500, 1512) even for territories that ceased to exist prior to 1500.

Austrian Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Archduchy of Austria

Gules a fess Argent.

align=center Duchy of Carinthia

Or three lions passant Sable armed and langued Gules impaling Gules a fess Argent.

align=center Duchy of Carniola

Argent an eagle displayed Azure, crowned of the Imperial Crown Proper, armed, beaked, and langued Gules, charged with a crescent chequy Gules and Or.

align=center Patria del Friuli

Azure an eagle displayed Or, armed, langued and beaked Gules, the wings charged with a trefoil Gules.

align=center Duchy of Styria

Vert, a panther rampant Argent incensed proper.

align=center County of Tyrol

Argent an eagle displayed Gules, armed, beaked, and langued Or, the wings charged with a trefoil Or.

Burgundian Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center County of Burgundy
  • Before 1280: Gules an eagle displayed argent.
  • After 1280: Azure billetty Or a lion rampant crowned Or, armed and langued Gules.
align=center
Brabant
  • Before 1288: Sable a lion rampant Or, armed and langued Gules.
  • From 1288 to 1406: Quarterly, I and IV Sable a lion rampant Or, armed and langued Gules; II and III Argent a lion rampant Gules, queue fourchée, armed and langued Or.
  • From 1406 to 1430: Quarterly, I and IV Azure three fleur-de-lis Or, a bordure compony Argent and Gules; II Sable a lion rampant Or, armed and langued Gules; III Argent a lion rampant Gules, queue fourchée, armed and langued Or.
align=center Flanders

Or a lion rampant Sable, armed and langued Gules.

align=center
Guelders
  • Before 1236: Or three cinquefoils Gules.
  • From 1236 to 1276: Azure billetty Or a lion rampant Or.
  • From 1276 to 1378: Azure a lion rampant Or, queue fourchée, armed and langued Gules, crowned Or.
  • After 1378: Azure a lion sinister rampant Or, queue fourchée, armed and langued Gules, crowned Or, impaling Or a lion rampant sable, armed and langued gules.
align=center
County of Hainaut
  • Before 1299: Chevronny Or and Sable.
  • From 1299 to 1254: Quarterly, I and IV Or a lion rampant Sable, armed and langued Gules; II and III Or a lion rampant Gules, armed and langued Azure.
  • From 1254 to 1433: Quarterly, I and IV fusilly bendwise Argent and Azure; II and III grand-quarterly I and IV Or a lion rampant Sable, armed and langued Gules; II and III Or a lion rampant Gules, armed and langued Azure.
align=center Holland

Or a lion rampant gules, armed and langued azure.

align=center Duchy of Limburg
  • Before 1214: Argent a lion rampant Gules, armed and langued Or.
  • After 1214: Argent a lion rampant Gules, queue fourchée, armed, langued, and crowned Or.
align=center

County of Loon (County of Chiny)
  • Counts of Loon: Barry of ten, Or and Gules.
  • Counts of Chiny: Gules crusily fitchy, two barbels haurient addorsed Or.
  • Counts of Loon and Chiny: Barry of ten Or and Gules, impaling Gules crusily fitchy, two barbels haurient addorsed Or.
  • Counts of Loon and Chiny of the Heinsberg dynasty: Quarterly, I and IV Gules a lion rampant Argent, queue fourchée crossed in saltire; II and III barry of ten Or and Gules impaling Gules crusily fitchy two barbels haurient addorsed Or.
  • Counts of Loon and Chiny of the Montferrat-Oreye dynasty: Quarterly, I and IV Argent a lion rampant sable; II and III barry of ten Or and Gules impaling Gules crusily fitchy two barbels haurient addorsed Or.
align=center Duchy of Luxembourg
  • Until 1282 and after 1288: Barry of ten Argent and Azure, a lion rampant Gules, armed, langued, and crowned Or.
  • From 1282 to 1288: Barry of ten Argent and Azure, a lion rampant queue fourchée crossed in saltire gules, armed, langued, and crowned Or.

See main article: Coat of arms of Luxembourg.

align=center County of Namur

Or, a lion rampant Sable, armed and langued Gules, a bend overall of the same.

Lower Rhenish-Westphalian Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Duchy of Cleves
  • Cleves dynasty: Gules, an escutcheon Argent, overall an escarbuncle Or.
  • Mark dynasty: Quarterly, I and IV gules an escutcheon Argent, overall an escarbuncle Or; II and III Or a fess chequy Argent and Gules.
align=center Berg

Argent a lion rampant Gules, queue fourchée crossed in saltire, armed, langued, and crowned Or.

align=center Duchy of Jülich

Or a lion rampant sable, armed and langued gules.

align=center Prince-Bishopric of Liège

Quarterly: I: gules a fess argent; II: Argent, three lions rampant Vert, crowned Or, armed and langued Gules; III: Barry Gules and Or; IV: Or, three hunting horns Gules, hooped and belted Argent. Overall an inescutcheon Gules, a perron, supported by three lions, surmounted by a pineapple and a cross pattée, with the letters L to the dexter and G to the sinister, all Or.

align=center County of Mark
  • Counts of Mark: Or a fess chequy Gules and Argent.
  • Counts of Cleves and Mark: Quarterly, I and IV Gules an escutcheon Argent, overall an escarbuncle Or; II and III Or a fess chequy Gules and Argent.
align=center County of Ravensberg

Argent three chevrons Gules.

Upper Rhenish Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Landgraviate of Hesse

Azure a lion rampant barry Argent and Gules, armed and crowned Or.

align=center
Lorraine
  • Before 1430: Or a bend Gules, three alerions bendwise displayed Argent.
  • From 1430 to 1473: Quarterly of six, I barry of eight Gules and Argent (for Hungary); II Azure semy-de-lis Or a label Gules (for Naples); III Argent a cross potent between four crosslets Or (for Jerusalem); IV Azure semy-de-lis Or a bordure Gules (for the House of Valois-Anjou); V Azure crusilly fitchy, two barbels haurient addorsed Or (for Bar); VI Or a bend Gules, three alerions bendwise displayed Argent (for Lorraine); overall an inescutcheon Or four pallets Gules (for Aragon).
  • From 1473 to 1508: Quarterly: I barry of eight Gules and Argent impaling Azure semy-de-lis Or a label Gules; II Argent a cross potent between four crosslets Or impaling Or four pallets Gules; III Azure semy-de-lis Or a bordure Gules; IV Azure crusilly fitchy, two barbels haurient addorsed Or; overall an inescutcheon Or a bend Gules three alerions bendwise displayed Argent.
  • From 1538 to 1737: Quarterly: I barry of eight Gules and Argent impaling Azure semy-de-lis Or a label Gules; II Argent a cross potent between four crosslets Or impaling Or four pallets Gules; III Azure semy-de-lis Or a bordure Gules impaling azure a lion sinister rampant Or, armed, langued, and crowned Gules (for Guelders); IV Or a lion rampant Sable, armed and langued Gules (for Jülich) impaling azure crusilly fitchy, two barbels haurient addorsed Or; overall an inescutcheon Or a bend Gules, three alerions bendwise displayed Argent.
align=center Duchy of Savoy

Gules a cross argent.

align=center
Vaudémont
  • Before 1346: Barry of ten, Argent and Sable.
  • From 1346 to 1386: Azure three broyes fesswise Or linked Argent, in chief Argent a lion issuant Gules.
  • From 1386 to 1473: Or, on a bend Gules, three alerions bendwise displayed Argent; overall a label azure.

Lower Saxon Circle

ArmsLocation
align=center Holstein

Gules, a nettle leaf Argent.

Upper Saxon Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Margraviate of Brandenburg

Argent an eagle displayed Gules crowned with an electoral hat Proper, armed and beaked Or, langued Gules, the wings charged with a trefoil Or, in his dexter claw grasping a sceptre Or tipped Gules thereupon an eagle displayed Argent, armed, langued, beaked and crowned Or, on his chest a torteux Gules, in his dexter claw grasping a sceptre and orb Or and in his sinister claw grasping a sword Or; and in his sinister claw graping a sword Argent hilted Or; overall and on his chest an inescutcheon Azure, a sceptre finished with a fleur-de-lys Or.

align=center Duchy of Pomerania

Quarterly of nine; I Azure a griffin segreant sinister Gules armed and beaked Or (for Pomerania-Stettin); II Argent a griffin segreant Gules armed and beaked Or (for Pomerania); III Or a griffin segreant Sable armed, langued and beaked Gules (for Cassubia); IV Argent a griffin segreant sinister bendy Vert and Gules (for Wenden); V Or a demi-lion Sable, crowned, langued and armed Gules issuant from a wall of bricks throughout Azure therein a chevron of bricks Gules (for Rügen); VI Gules a sea-griffin segreant Argent, armed, beaked and langued Or (for Usedom); VII Gules a griffin segreant sinister Sable, armed, langued and beaked Gules, under his wings, feathers of Argent (for Pomerania-Barth); VIII Or two batons in saltire Gules between four roses Gules barbed and seeded Or; IX a demi-griffin segreant Argent, armed, langued and beaked Or issuant from a wall of bricks alternately Azure and Or (for Pomerania-Wolgast.)

align=center Duchy of Saxony

Barry Sable and Or, overall a crancelin Vert.

Swabian Circle

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Augsburg

Party per pale Gules and Argent, a chapiter Or thereupon a cedar cone Vert.

align=center Baden

Or a bend Gules.

Lands of the Bohemian Crown

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Kingdom of Bohemia

Argent, a lion rampant queue forchée, armed, langued and crowned Or.

align=center Margraviate of Moravia

Azure an eagle displayed chequy Argent and Gules, armed, langued, beaked and crowned Or.

align=center Görlitz

Party per fess, chief gules a lion rampant Argent, armed, langued, and crowned Or; base Argent.

align=center Lusatia
  • Lower Lusatia: Argent, a bull passant reguardant Gules, horned and hooved Or.
  • Upper Lusatia: Per fess embattled, Azure and Or.
align=center Silesia
  • Upper Silesia: Azure, an eagle displayed Or.
  • Lower Silesia: Or, an eagle displayed Sable, armed and beaked Or and langued Gules, crowned with a Princely hat Proper charged on the breast with a crescent terminating issuing from the centrepoint a cross patée argent.

Other

ArmsLocation/Blazon
align=center Geneva (before 1401)

Or a cross quarter-pierced Azure.

align=center Nice (as part of the Duchy of Savoy from 1046)

Argent, in base wavy of Azure and Argent issuing therefrom three rocks Vert thereupon an eagle displayed crowned Gules.

align=center Provence (before 1481)
  • Before 1245: Or four pallets gules.
  • After 1245: Azure semy-de-lis Or, a label gules.
align=center Prussia (after 1701)

Argent, an eagle displayed sable crowned with the Royal Crown Proper, the wings charged with a trefoil Or, in his dexter claw grasping a sceptre Or tipped Gules thereupon an eagle displayed Argent, armed, langued, beaked and crowned Or, on his chest a torteux Gules, in his dexter claw grasping a sceptre Or and in his sinister claw grasping a sword Or on his chest an R Or.

See main article: Coat of arms of Prussia.

align=center Teutonic Knights (1224 - 1525)

Argent, on a cross Sable a cross floretty Or and overall on an inescutcheon Or an eagle displayed sable, armed, langued and beaked Gules, the wings charged with a trefoil Gules.

align=center Viennois (before 1349)

Or, a dolphin haurient azure finned Gules.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bernhard Peter Monographien: Wappen der Bistümer. 2007-11-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20071123080841/http://www.dr-bernhard-peter.de/Heraldik/bistuemer.htm. 2007-11-23. dead.
  2. Web site: Die Wappen der Landkreise. https://web.archive.org/web/20071117064752/http://www.landkreis-aschaffenburg.de/Landkreis16010/Wappen_der_Gemeinden16968/. 2007-11-17. dead. 2007-11-14.
  3. Web site: Königreich Böhmen. 2007-11-14.
  4. Web site: Kultur und Geschichte. Friedelsheim in der Pfalz. 2007-11-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20070929221548/http://www.friedelsheim.de/kultur.htm. 2007-09-29. dead.