Monday, June 27, 2016
Well, This Was New
Or at least, new to me.
I am familiar with many of the chiefs of affiliation to be found in Italian heraldry: the capo dell'Impero (the chief of the Holy Roman Empire, demonstrating affiliation with the Guelphs),
and the capo d'Angio (the chief of Anjou, showing affiliation with the Ghibellines) (the example of Aldonbrandi below has the chief of Anjou placed on arms which already contained a chief, on a chief or two grape leaves vert).
And another, more complex version of the capo d'Angio:
And, of course, some of the others, not quite so well known or common, such as the capo di Savoia (the chief of Savoy, a red chief with a white cross throughout), the capo di San Stefano (the chief of St. Stephen, below), and others.
But in going through some old Italian armorials looking for something else (as I noted before, camels), I came across a few examples of a chief of affiliation I had not run across before:
This chief of affiliation doesn't even show up in my copy of di Valfrei's Dizionario di Araldica, which lists a few other chiefs of affiliation I hadn't seen before. I can only think of this particular chief of affiliation (which is different from the capo di Firenze (the chief of Florence, a white chief charged with a fleur-de-lis florency gules) as a capo de'Medici, a chief of the Medici (the second example on the arms of Karafantoni, may be more specifically related to one of the Medici popes).
So how cool is all that?
I think the "capo" in the Gambacorti arms may in fact be "capo di Malta", used mostly by bailifs (rarely by commanders), or by so-called Grand Crosses in general.
ReplyDeleteThat is certainly a possibility, but the capo di Malta is generally shown with a plain argent cross throughout, and not the complex, non-throughout cross here in the arms of Gambacorti.
Delete