A horse is a horse, of course of course, and a rose is a rose is a rose, but in heraldry some common charges must be described with different terms.
Difficulty Level: easy Time Required: 10 minutes
Here's How:
- Ordinaries are wide strips that follow common field partitions in shape. They take the name of their orientation and position; so a wide vertical stripe would be simply a Pale.
- An ordinary that follows the shape of the shield in a border is a Bordure; one that follows the shield shape but is somewhat inset is an Orle.
- Disks are Roundels. Some have names dependent on their tincture: A Bezant is or, a Plate is argent, a Torteau is gules, a Heurt is azure, a Pellet is sable, a Pomme is vert, a Golpe is purpure.
- A circle (a disk outline) is an Annulet.
- A star is a Mullet; if it has a hole in the center, it's a Mullet pierced; if it has six points, it's a Mullet of six points; if it has additional rays streaming from it, it's a Mullet irradiated.
- A rectangle is a Billet; if its corners are rounded, it is a Cartouche.
- A square is a Delf; if it is in the corner of the shield, it is a Canton.
- A diamond is a Lozenge; if it appears in outline, it is a Mascle.
- A small cross is a crosslet. If a cross of any size appears diagonally, it is a saltorel.
- An arrow head is a Pheon.
- A flower with five petals is a Cinquefoil.
- A sheaf of wheat is a Garb.
- A fish is more commonly called a Pike or a Luce.
- When a small charge is repeated in a pattern of staggered rows, it is referred to as Semy or Powdered.
- Just like partitions, ordinaries that are created with something other than straight lines have distinctive terms, including nebully and indented.
- Use an illustrated heraldic dictionary or glossary to help you identify the more unusual charges.
Related Features:
- How to Understand Field Partitions
- How to Identify Heraldic Tinctures
- How to Blazon a Shield
- Heraldry

