Talk:Lion (heraldry)

Latest comment: 1 month ago by SMcCandlish in topic "Continuation of Animalism"

No use? edit

Just wanted to say that there is no use for this article as we already have a heraldry article, which we could have just added some of this information to. In anycase, I would like to mention that unlike much of the rest of Western Europe, Germany does not associate itself with the lion much. The Tiger (under Nazi Germany) and leopard (before Nazi Germany and now) are/were the choice for some coat of arms in Germany. The eagle is by far the main animal that you will most often find in German heraldry, however. With this said, I took out the black panthers (leopards) that were mistaken for lions from the coat of arms of some German states and districts. I kept the coat of arms of Thuringia because it is a lion and I added other coat of arms from different nations and/or cities, states and districts just to make it a little more diverse. User:TheGoodSon

The only difference between lions and leopards in heraldry is their posture. —Tamfang 00:26, 2 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

True enough. Leopards are often depicted as stalking (as seen here Baden-Württemberg) or in upright positions, while lions are usually just standing or rampant. User: TheGoodSon

What do you mean by "upright"? Statant, sejant, salient ...? —Tamfang 22:10, 2 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

how many examples? edit

I removed the UK arms because England and Scotland are also displayed separately (and more visibly!). If there are images of the crests only, those might be added.

Thuringia could also be dropped, as it is obviously derived from Hesse.

We probably don't really need so many examples of "a shield with a lion, supported by two lions", particularly at this size. —Tamfang 19:08, 2 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

the German question edit

User:Thegoodson writes:

  • Baden Wurttemberg coat of arms is PANTHERS, not lions. ...

How do you tell the difference?

What's the German word for the monster (which cannot be mistaken for a lion) in the arms of Styria? In English it's a panther.

  • Remember, leopards are the unofficial animal symbol of germany.

Remember? I've lived 45 years without ever hearing it before. We learn something every day!

  • lions have no significance in germany, unlike much of western eur

And leopards have? How do you tell them apart? Anyway, so what? Mullets have (so far as I know) no special significance in Britain or France, where they appear most frequently in arms.

Not that I object to limiting the number of examples. —Tamfang 06:24, 3 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Tamfang, I am German and have known this for quite a long time. The leopard (especially the black panther) has been associated with Germany for a long time. In Nazi Germany, the tiger replaced the leopard (for obvious reasons...tigers are biggers, more powerful and more fierce and thus more suitable for the horrible regime). After 1945, the tiger was replaced back to the leopard, which is, a "softer" version of the tiger. Many coat of arms in Germany that depict leopards sometimes look like lions, but in fact they are not. The eagle is the main animal, followed by the leopard and than the lion (not saying that lions aren't used, but just that they aren't as important as leopards). Tigers have become taboo because of their nazi association. Do you read German? If you do, I can refer you to a book on all this. User:TheGoodSon
I ask again and again: what is the difference between a lion and a leopard (in heraldry) other than the name? (Sadly no, I have never learned to read German.) —Tamfang 22:07, 3 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
Tamfang, there is a difference between lions and leopards in heraldry and symbolism. Lions are associated with justice, freedom, family, courage, honor and security. Leopards symbolize military might, ferocity, resistence, and powerful independence. Germany as a nation simply sybolizes themself with the eagle first and foremost by far and than the leopard. Each nation has different national animal and eagle and leopard are Germany's. Don't ask me why they chose it (and formerly the tiger) over the lion...they just did. User:TheGoodSon
(sigh) And is there any way to tell by LOOKING AT IT whether a given heraldic beast represents "justice, freedom, family, courage, honor and security" or "military might, ferocity, resistence, and powerful independence"? In English and French heraldry the only difference is posture. —Tamfang 05:40, 4 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
There is a new article about leopards in heraldry, see Leopard (heraldry). - GilliamJF 00:26, 5 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
It merely repeats what I already know: that a lion passant gardant is sometimes called a leopard. Can't see why it's a separate article. —Tamfang 06:07, 12 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

I got out Neubecker's Deutsch und Französisch für Heraldiker, a bilingual glossary. It's the only bilingual wordbook I have that does not separate the two vocabularies, so these entries appear together:

  • Leopard – léopard; gelöwter L.: léopard lionné; natürlicher L.: panthère
  • léopard – Leopard; hersehender, schreitender Löwe
  • — lionné – gelöwter, (aufrechter) Leopard; hersehender (aufrechter) Löwe

Which implies that German blazon optionally follows French in calling a lion passant gardant a "leopard", though the analytic style as in English is also known. —Tamfang 06:07, 12 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Merge suggestion edit

Instead of adding a leopard section into lion article, I propose to rename it into Heraldic beast which would contain both (and more) with proper redirects, of course. ←Humus sapiens ну? 10:37, 29 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

'Disagree because 'heraldic beast' would be far too ambiguous; it could encompass wyverns and gryphons and all sorts. In British heraldry, at least, the lion is more commonly used. Mon Vier 23:06, 19 November 2006 (UTC)Reply
'Oppose Heraldic beasts will be far too long a list and the heraldic concepts about the lion and leopard are pretty old. We should keep the two articles. Valentinian (talk) / (contribs) 13:51, 11 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

That Bohemian fork-tailed lion edit

Is there a reference or source for the statement that the Bohemian two-tailed lion 'originally was an artist's flourish'?

I'm not contesting it - merely fascinated. I found a reference to the Santiago Dotor, 9 Sep 2002 which says:

"The oldest arms of the Kings of Bohemia showed in silver a black eagle, covered with golden tears (still used by the Italian region Trient). The silver double-tailed lion was introduced by King Ottokar_II_of_Bohemia in 1249. Ever since the double-tailed lion remained on the arms of Bohemia."

If it's that old, I'd assume that the only evidence for the Artistic Flourish Hypothesis would be particularly ancient images showing that flourish. Anybody have one?

Purely in the interest of science, you understand... --Cdavis999 (talk) 12:21, 16 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Surely you mean the appropriate evidence would be examples of the lion of Bohemia not showing the flourish? —Tamfang (talk) 05:57, 16 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Er, I meant showing the flourish as a flourish, rather than as a second fork. I note other heraldic lions with little flufts ((c) 1984 K. Louw) sticking out of the shaft of their tails, and I can see how this might have evolved. I'd just like to see specific examples - if they exist - of the one that supposedly led to the two-tailed Bohemian Beastie. Just curiosity, is all. --Cdavis999 (talk) 08:33, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Passant or guardant? edit

Shouldnt it be noted that Passant also means Guardant? Ive seen it both ways.♦Drachenfyre♦·Talk 06:13, 11 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

What do you mean by "seen it both ways"? Passant means walking; guardant means looking. The lions of England are passant and guardant, but there are examples of lions passant not guardant, and (fewer) of lions rampant guardant. —Tamfang (talk) 05:55, 16 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I see, would not the Welsh arms be passant and guardant as well then? The lions there are also facing the viewer. I have not seen any other entry for a guardant lion yet.♦Drachenfyre♦·Talk 04:05, 18 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes, the Welsh lions are likewise passant guardant. —Tamfang (talk) 07:12, 20 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Should we then not make another entry for the guardant and give examples? Because it may confuse, as it did me, the differences. ♦Drachenfyre♦·Talk 08:09, 20 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Lion diffamé edit

I've just come across this term, which appears to mean a lion depicted without the tail, a change in arms forced upon the bearer when he fell from grace with the crown… am I correct in my interpretation? (my main sources are a 19th-century French dictionary and a popular novel…) Thanks for any help. Physchim62 (talk) 18:35, 12 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

As a term of blazon it may be real, but abatements (alterations for disgrace) appear to be mythical. —Tamfang (talk) 09:04, 13 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

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What is a leopard? edit

I'm moving this discussion here from Talk:Attitude (heraldry) because I feel it has some bearing on this article as well, and may serve to further clarify the distinction of terms such as léopard lionné and lion léopardé. There is some disagreement among sources, so the issue is not as cut-and-dry as this article currently suggests, indeed, some directly contradict this article's unsourced statements on the matter. Of course other sources support them, thus, some discussion is in order. The copied discussion is marked with horizontal lines below. Wilhelm_meis (talk) 15:45, 15 April 2009 (UTC)Reply



Interestingly, French heralds have long held that any lion in a walking position must necessarily be a "leopard", though this practice is controversial.

In Rietstap, at least, a lion rampant guardant is a léopard lionné and a lion passant (not guardant) is a lion léopardé. This says to me that the head position is what counts. —Tamfang (talk) 20:58, 22 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

The above quoted passage (except the last phrase) is a close paraphrasing of Fox-Davies, pp. 172-3, as indicated in the footnote. The last bit was a quick summing up to state that there was an argument against this practice without getting into the argument. We can discuss this issue in as much length as the author, but I didn't find it necessary. I just summed up what he had to say about it as succinctly as possible. If you've got something to add to it, find a source and add it. Wilhelm_meis (talk) 14:44, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Léopard lionné. Nom héraldique d'un lion rampant qui a la tête posée de front. ¶ Lion léopardé. Nom héraldique du lion passant qui a la tête posée de profil. Souvent on emploie le seul nom de lion passant. —Rietstap, Armorial Général (1884), p.xxv.
"LÉOPARD-LIONNÉ—A lion rampant-gardant. ¶ LION-LÉOPARDÉ—A lion passant." —Woodward & Burnett, A Treatise on Heraldry (1896/1969), p.735.
"... In French blazon, however, the old distinction is still observed. The French lion is our lion rampant, the French leopard is our lion passant guardant, whilst they term our lion passant a léopard-lionné, and our lion rampant guardant is their lion-léopardé." —Fox-Davies, The Art of Heraldry (1904), p.122.
Woodward and Rietstap agree against Fox-Davies. —Tamfang (talk) 19:50, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
So, what I'm getting from the above is that Rietstap and Woodward suggest that while the French "leopard" is passant-guardant, it is the guardant, rather than passant, that is the defining point of the leopard. Thus, a beast which is rampant-guardant is a leopard (guardant) posing as a lion (rampant), while a beast passant in profile is a lion (in profile) posing as a leopard (passant). So they suggest it is the beast guardant, not the beast passant, that defines a leopard. Is that right? Do they say that outright elsewhere? Honestly, all I "know" about it is that the French call the lion passant guardant a leopard, but I don't know why without researching it specifically, so I'm relying on Fox-Davies here because he has more to say on the subject than the other authors in my collection. There does seem to be some disagreement here, do you have any other sources on the subject? Wilhelm_meis (talk) 06:24, 24 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Looking again at Woodward: the text itself is contradictory.
"As the necessity for varying the attitude of either animal arose out of the multiplication of coats, the terms came into use of lion léopardé for what we call a lion rampant-gardant, and léopard lionné for a lion passant. Now, when a lion came to be repeated more than once in a coat of arms, and space did not admit of its being placed in the rampant attitude, it was very apt to assume the position of a leopard lionné, or even of a leopard simply. The earliest trace which we have of the arms of any member of the English royal hosue is on the shield of King JOHN as prince, on whose seal are two lions passant, or léopards-lionnés." (pp. 209–210)
"In French blazon the old distinction between the lion and the leopard is still preserved. The lion is our lion rampant. The léopard is the same beast but passant-gardant; while the names lion-léopardé and léopard-lionné are respectively given to our lion passant, and rampant-gardant." (pp.210–211)
Neubecker's bilingual glossary has:
léopard lionné — gelöwter, (aufrechter) Leopard; hersehender (aufrechter) Löwe
which seems (I don't read German) to agree with Rietstap; but no entry for lion léopardé.
I don't think I have any other place to look. —Tamfang (talk) 07:10, 25 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

A trip to the library yielded these further results:

Hugh Clark, An Introduction to Heraldry, 18th ed., (1892) revised by J. R. Planché (pp. 155-6):
"Leopard. This well-known animal is rarely seen entire as a charge in ancient coats, and its name is given to the lion in certain attitudes. See Lion. Plate XXXI, n. 30 [which depicts a natural leopard (spotted, without mane)] presents us with a modern example. Sable, three leopards rampant argent, spotted sable; name, LYNCH. It is, however, probably, from the name, that the Lynx was the animal originally represented in this coat.
"Leopard Lioné. See Lion Leopardé."
"Lion. The true heraldic lion, according to French authors, is always to be represented in profile, or, as the ancient heralds say, showing but one eye and one ear. His attitude, also, should always be rampant or ravaging. When passant and full-faced, they blazoned him a leopard, vide Lion Leopardé: in England, however, the lions in the royal and other achievements have always been blazoned as lions, however depicted since the time of Henry III, in whose reign they were called "Leopards".
Lion of England. This term is used when speaking of a canton, or augmentation of arms. In such case, instead of saying on a canton gules, a lion passant gardant or, as an augmentation, you say, he bears on a canton a lion of England, which hath the same signification.
Lion Leopardé. This is a French term for what the English call a Lion passant gardant. The word leopard is always made use of by the French heralds to express in their language, a lion full-faced, or gardant. Thus, when a lion is placed on an escutcheon in that attitude which we call rampant gardant, the French blazon it a Lion Leopardé. When he is passant only, they call him leopard lioné.

Thus, Clark's position is that the term leopard is essentially French for a lion gardant (and is also generally presumed to be passant), but that a lion passant is a leopard lioné, while a lion rampant gardant is a lion leopardé. While the attachment of the term leopard to the guardant rather than the passant position is at odds with Fox-Davies, the designations of leopard lioné and lion leopardé are in agreement with Fox-Davies and at odds with Woodward. This seems inconsistent and utterly confusing.

As for Neubecker's bilingual glossary entry quoted above (since I do speak German), this would translate as:

léopard lionné — gelöwter, (aufrechter) Leopard; hersehender (aufrechter) Löwe
léopard lionné — as a lion, (upright) Leopard; guardant (upright) lion

So Neubecker is saying a leopard lioné is is a leopard (which apparently is necessarily guardant) that is upright like a lion. This is totally at odds with Fox-Davies, but also lacks Clark's apparent inconsistency. Another source that I came across today, Boutell's Heraldry (revised, 1978 ed.), on p. 65, had the following to say on the matter:

The early heralds considered a lion walking and looking about him to be behaving like a leopard, and they consequently blazoned him as a lion-leopardé, or merely as a leopard, though they always drew him as a stylized lion without spots or other leopard-like characteristics. So it is that the lions of England were sometimes blazoned as leopards. They are now termed lions passant guardant.

This is unfortunately of little use to us, but to suggest that the origin of the term is very much like what I earlier hypothesized. So in summary, it seems there is little known and little agreed upon among authors regarding the exact definition of a leopard etc. Wilhelm_meis (talk) 09:46, 25 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I suggest, deciphering all of the above - especially the older references - that the correct position is this: the French use the simple term "léopard" for a lion that is passant AND guardant. Likewise, the French refer to a lion that is rampant AND in profile simply as a "lion". If you like, these are the two "standard depictions". If the "léopard" is then changed to being in profile, rather than guardant, it becomes a "léopard lionné" - i.e. it is still primarily leopard, because it is passant, but has now been partly "lionized", by having its head put in profile. Likewise, if a "lion" is changed to be guardant, it becomes a "lion leopardé" - it is still a lion, but it has now been partly "leopardized", by being turned guardant. The Wikipedia page for the greater Belgian coat of arms -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Greater_Coat_of_Arms_of_Belgium.svg - supports this. There is an original government decree of 1837 (in French) cited on that page which describes the supporting lions on that coat of arms (which are rampant guardant) as "deux lions leopardé". All the others lions shown on that coat of arms are rampant and in profile, and are therefore just described as "lions". (Johnr72 (talk) 20:28, 22 January 2012 (UTC))Reply


The interesting question is why the lion is so stylized as to violate the anatomy of a lion. The disproportionate limbs, the odd tufts of fur, the two tails, mishapen legs, knotted claws, etc. The discussion of lion or leopard is distracting -as odd as the figures are, the main of hair on the head and the tuft of hair on the tail is unique to lions. What we learn is that some places call lions "leopards". Having said that - I see the two-tailed lion displayed a lot in Germany. A shame that someone removed those images and references because they choose to call them leopards. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Turbine valves (talkcontribs) 19:59, 30 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Lion vs. leopard and English vs. French edit

The text under "lion vs. leopard" on the main page is ambiguous, and even contradictory in places. As a user with native command of French and very good command of English with an interest in heraldry, here is what I gather from the French Wikipedia articles about heraldry, chiefly the very well-written fr:Lion (héraldique), which begins by a comparison of the two beasts; and the collection fr:Armorial au lion where you'll see lions of all kinds, to your heart's content or maybe even ad nauseam. I'll write the French names in bold below, and the English ones in italics to make clear which is which, leaving aside the question of whether or not a leopard should be thought of as a bastard creature as a possible leftover of the Hundred Years' War and of little relevance today, except maybe in the minds of people still rancuniers de toutes les traîtrises britanniques d'Azincourt à Waterloo, sans parler du Brexit (holding grudges for all British treacheries from Agincourt to Waterloo, not to mention the Brexit), people, that is, who still think of England and France as hereditary enemies forever, more than 200 years after Napoleon's demise.

(BTW, even French heralds know that un lion and un léopard are in heraldry terms essentially the same animal, differentiated only by head position and preferred stance.)

  • un lion always has the head in profile and a full mane
    • his normal attitude is rampant which need not be blazoned
    • any other attitude must be
    • if passant he is usually said léopardé, thus un lion léopardé is equivalent to a lion passant (but not guardant).
  • un léopard is always seen full face, as if looking at you
    • his normal attitude is passant which need not be blazoned
    • any other attitude must be
    • if rampant he is usually said lionné (spelt with -nn- in French), thus un léopard lionné is equivalent to a lion (rampant) guardant
  • which gives the following equivalence table:
FrenchEnglish
un liona lion (rampant)
un lion léopardéa lion passant
un léopard lionnéa lion (rampant) guardant
un léoparda lion passant guardant
  • Other attitudes known in French heraldry which I haven't noticed here (but maybe I paid too little attention):
    • un lion issant (usually "de la partition" in a shield coupé or "de l'écu" when used as a crest) is quite frequent: it means a lion (rampant by default) with his hind half (and hind legs) hidden, so he is seen "coming out of" the partition or the shield respectively;
    • un lion saltant ("jumping") is rarer, IIUC this means with three legs in the air, one hind leg lowered, as if just leaving some ground by jumping
    • I haven't seen a lion sejant mentioned in French heraldry yet, but I suppose the contemporary French-heraldry word might be séant which is old-fashioned for "assis" (sitting). (Of course, heraldry talk is always old-fashioned, on both sides of la Manche).

-- Oh, and BTW, about the bottom-most remark (from 2009) just above the present subsection: why are lions so stylized? Why, most heraldic charges are stylized, and a lion with e.g. all the "calligraphic" flourishes in his tail is no exception; if you wanted to have a lion painted on your coat-of-arms as a recognizable portrait from a zoo, you might have to blazon that lion as un lion couché, au naturel or whatever is the English equivalent. ;-) A lion couchant proper maybe, if proper is indeed the English term for au naturel.

Tonymec (talk) 04:33, 11 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

armenia edit

why is it included twice? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sumirp (talkcontribs) 15:37, 30 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Spirit or Dead lions edit

Is there such a thing as a Lion Revenant? I was under the impression that was what you called a spirit lion like the following: File:Norwich City.svg That is clearly deriving things from the Norwich Coat of Arms, but the lion is extremely stylised. I googled Lion Revenant and found that most references were to a Revenant Lion character in the game Ultima Online. I realise in French Lion Revenant just means 'Returning Lion'. Also, this is presumably an example of a Lion Passant. But I am sure I have seen it elsewhere and would appreciate anyone with more experience in this kind of thing to elucidate. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 188.223.101.84 (talk) 07:44, 26 April 2011 (UTC)Reply

I would blazon the lion on that Norwich City Football Club coat of arms as just a lion passant guardant. Of course he is extremely stylized but I would attribute that to the draughtsman's freedom and not needing "special" blazoning. So let's guess: vert, a canary or resting on a football the same, in chief dexter a tower also or windowed sable over a lion passant guardant also or. Note that the tower and the lion passant guardant are taken (with a change of colours) from the arms of the city of Norwich (which has a castle with three towers instead of what we see here). — Tonymec (talk) 01:20, 24 April 2022 (UTC)Reply

Image gallery edit

The lions couchant image gallery currently contains only one image, which does little to exemplify lions couchant. I think a few additions could better display the range of variation among these. To that end, I propose the following candidates for addition to the image gallery, under the subheading lions couchant. Please consider each individually and comment on each. Wilhelm Meis (☎ Diskuss | ✍ Beiträge) 18:36, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

  File:Escudo de Arahal (Sevilla).svg - Civic arms of a municipality in Spain, showing a lion couchant proper

  File:Blason ville be Denderleeuw (ancien).svg - Civic arms of a municipality in Belgium, showing a lion couchant guardant proper

  File:New Coat of arms of Belgorod Oblast.svg - Civic arms of an oblast in Russia, showing a more classically heraldic depiction of a lion couchant

  File:Wappen Burgdorf (Region Hannover).png - Civic arms of a district in Hannover, showing a lion couchant guardant

  Hi, i am not against any of your canditates, but why not firstly my czech lion, it is for all country, yours are just for regions and it is one of the oldest coat of arms in Europe. Let's add them all.Jirka.h23 (talk) 19:55, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
Due to an enormous multitude of drive-by additions of random lions to the gallery here and random eagles and double-headed eagles to galleries at those articles, it has become necessary to limit the image galleries to a few exemplary images and require editors to establish consensus on the talk pages before adding more images to these galleries. Otherwise, these quickly become WP:INDISCRIMINATE collections of images. I don't have any particular problem with the arms of the Czech Republic, but consensus to add it needs to be established first, so thank you for coming here to do that. At least it does show an example of a lion with a forked tail, which this gallery otherwise lacks. Wilhelm Meis (☎ Diskuss | ✍ Beiträge) 02:47, 10 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

Lion Contourné edit

I would like to suggest adding the Lion Contourné pose to the graphic examples given in the article. I was looking up information on the historic region of Courland in Wikipedia, and the article showed the File:Coat of arms of Kurzeme.svg in the header, which features a Lion Contourné (it says so in the description). However, I could not find a good explanation in Wikipedia of what precisely Contourné means - I had to do a search outside of Wikipedia to inform me of its precise meaning. I feel that, if Wikipedia is going to use a specific heraldic term in one or more of its articles, its description or definition ought to be included somewhere within Wikipedia. Not being very fluent in SVG graphics, I managed to convert the Lion Rampant image created by user Sodacan, flipping it to face to the right (sinister). However, my clumsy attempts are only an initial proof, not a final edit, I am sure. Here is what I created, and it can be used or altered freely: File:Lion Contourné.svg

This Contourné heraldic device is actually very important in certain historic references for various uses. For example, the Coat of Arms of Finland at one time originally was a Lion Contourné, indicating that it served as the part of the Swedish Kingdom that faced the threat from the East (i.e., Russia). When Russia annexed Finland, the Lion Contourné in the Finnish Coat of Arms was reversed to be a Lion Rampant, indicating that now Finland faced the threat to Russia from the West. It is also used in other coats of arms and flags, with similar meanings attached.

Please, someone, could you place an example of a Lion Contourné in the article? I am afraid it is beyond my own skills to do so. Thank you. --Saukkomies talk 14:18, 12 June 2016 (UTC)Reply

Afaics, the lion contourné is is simply a mirrored lion, facing to the (heraldic) left. It may be enough to mention this in the text. Not sure if the "rampant" is implied, or if your example is properly a "lion rampant contourné". --dab (𒁳) 16:05, 18 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
Indeed, in French heraldry "contourné" always means mirrored, i.e. facing senestre rather than the usual dextre. A lion contourné often is created when arms are united in a party shield ("un écu parti") as a result of a marriage between two people, both of whose coats of arms feature lions: then the dextre partition will be mirrored so that both lions face each other. For a single lion contourné see e.g. the coat of arms of Balsièges (France) which is blazoned in French as de sinople au pont en dos d'âne d'une arche et deux demies d'argent maçonné de sable, mouvant des flancs, posé sur une rivière aussi d'argent, surmonté d'un lion couché contourné du même, accompagné, en chef à dextre, d'un roc d'échiquier aussi d'argent et, à senestre, d'un écusson cousu d'azur au chêne arraché d'or, de quatre branches passées en double sautoir, sommé, à dextre, d'une mitre du même et, à senestre, d'une tête de crosse épiscopale contournée aussi d'or.Tonymec (talk) 04:37, 11 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

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The latter part of the lede edit

"The lion also carries Judeo-Christian symbolism. The Lion of Judah stands in the coat of arms of Jerusalem. Similar-looking lions can be found elsewhere, such as in the coat of arms of the Swedish royal House of Bjelbo, from there in turn derived into the coat of arms of Finland, formerly belonging to Sweden."

I would remove all mention of Sweden and Finland from the lede, this is about the heraldic device, not specific uses of it. And if that part is true, certainly the article on the Coat of Arms of Finland should make it clear, as currently that is not spelled out there. In fact, mention of the coa of Jerusalem is probably unneccessary too, just mention the lion of Judah, if even that has enough relevance to be mentioned in this particular article. -- Cimon Avaro; on a pogostick. (talk) 23:07, 11 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

"Continuation of Animalism" edit

First sentence or so of the History section claims that heraldic symbols are a direct continuation from specifically Viking Animalism. It's 'sourced' with a pop-history/art book. The claim is substantial and doesn't seem in line with academic consensus. New, better and more legitimate sources are needed to substantiate such a claim or it should be removed. 86.5.160.43 (talk) 21:41, 12 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Same issue in thread below, trying to use a paragraph from a tertiary-source art book to credit Scythians with inventing Viking animal art (and by obvious extension the very closely related Celtic animal art of nearly the same style).  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  09:53, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

"Scythianism" fringe stuff edit

There's a bunch of mostly unsourced claims (I see someone added one citation, but it's to a tertiary work, which does not appear to even support the claims made), particularly crediting the Scythians with having basically invented Viking art with interwined animal figures (which is actually closely related to insular medieval Celtic art of this sort, itself a blend of a longer artistic traditions in Celtic material culture from Ireland through Eastern Europe, mixed with general European art styles which scribal monks would have been steeped in, in turn with influences from all across the Classical Eurasian world, but not overwhelmingly from Scythia in particular (and much of the Scythian style and motifs are traceable back much ealier to Urartu, Assyria, etc.).

There is no doubt that Scythians along with Persians and others in the Near East to Pontic region had their share of influences on European art motifs in general, and eastern Vikings even had extensive trade into the Middle East, but this cannot be WP:ORed into a claim of Scythian origin of animals in Viking art, and a particular style of rendering them that isn't even similar to Scythian works in the first place (not any more similar than it is to Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Arabic, Persian, etc.; it is more similar to all of western Eurasian art, of course, than it is to far Eastern Art, just as all the other categories of w. Eurasian art are more similar to each other than to E. Asian art, and all sorts of E. Asian are are more similar to each other than to any of w. Eurasian art).

This "Scythianism" is part of a quasi-academic, ahistorical, and pseudo-scientific "credit the Scythians and especially the Sarmatians with everything interesting in Northwest European tradition" putsch, including trying to equate various pre-Christian religio-mythological traditions with Sarmatian/Scythian ones, and even trying to pin virtually everything in the Arthurian legends on such an origin instead of on Welsh/British native culture commingled with Western and Central European romance traditions (which did have external influences, but not heavily Scythian ones). None of this appears to be taken very seriously by mainstream scholars, and is at very best an extremely minority viewpoint among academics. Ultimately, it is tied deeply to "British Israelitism" and other nonsense that (since the Early Medieval period) has been desperately trying to connect British and sometimes Scandinavian figures and themes of importance to Holy Land lineages and Biblical events. There's just no plausible evidentiary basis for this crap.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  09:47, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

I have removed this material [1] as unsourced (and unsourceable) generally, and in a specific instance improperly sourced. If someone wants to restore material like this, see WP:BURDEN, WP:EXCEPTIONAL, WP:FRINGE, and WP:DUE. This material is challenged, controversial, and an exceptional claim that requires exceptional sourcing.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  09:52, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply