Montfort-l'Amaury: Difference between revisions
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[[Civic Heraldry Literature - France|'''Literature''']]: Image taken from [http://www.gaso.fr La banque du blason] (with permission); background from Rune Kramer, Denmark. | [[Civic Heraldry Literature - France|'''Literature''']]: Image taken from [http://www.gaso.fr La banque du blason] (with permission); background from Rune Kramer, Denmark. |
Revision as of 13:01, 26 December 2022
French heraldry portal
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MONTFORT L'AMAURY
Département : Yvelines
French |
De gueules au lion d'argent à la queue fourchue; au chef d'hermine. |
English | No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation |
Origin/meaning
The white lion on a red field is the coat-of-arms of the Montfort family. An old noble family whose root extented well into the middle ages.
The chief of Ermine is a reference to the fact that Jean V, Count of Montfort became undisputed Duke of Brittany after winning the Breton War of Succession of 1341-64. (A part of the early Hundred Years War between France and England.)
The ermine coat-of-arms of the Dukes of Bretagne was borne as arms of dominion in place of own arms by whatever family that held the duchy.
The arms in a 16th century manuscript |
The arms in Traversier (1842) |
The arms in 1845 |
Literature: Image taken from La banque du blason (with permission); background from Rune Kramer, Denmark.