-
Crancelin (or "crown of rue") is a
charge in heraldry,
usually seen in the bend on a shield. It
depicts a band of a
stylized trefoil leaves, representing...
- Saxony. The
order takes its name from the
green floral crown of rue (
crancelin)
found in the coat of arms of Saxony. It
occupies the
highest rank in...
- a
green (vert)
crancelin (a
stylized common rue)
running from the viewer's top-left to bottom-right (in bend).
Although the
crancelin is
sometimes shown...
- Bernhard's
shield and thus
creating the
Saxonian crancelin vert ("Barry of ten
sable and or, a
crancelin vert"). A more
likely explanation is that it probably...
- coat-of-arms
shows the
Ascanian barry of ten, in
sable and or,
covered by a
crancelin of
rhombs bendwise in vert. "Insurekcja Kościuszkowska -
ostatnia próba...
- or and sable,
covered by a
crancelin of
rhombs (they are not
shown in this
undetailed copy)
bendwise in vert (the
crancelin symbolises the
Saxon ducal...
-
introduced their Ascanian family colours and
emblem ()
added by a
bendwise crancelin,
symbolising the
Saxon ducal crown, as new coat-of-arms of
Saxony ()....
-
Saxony their family colours, a
barry of ten, in
sable and or,
covered by a
crancelin of
rhombs bendwise in vert,
symbolising the
Saxon dukedom. In 1269, 1272...
- (Belgium), on the
shoulder an
escutcheon barry of ten
sable and or, a
crancelin vert (Wettin), with two
crossed sceptres (a hand of
justice and a lion)...
- (Belgium), on the
shoulder an
escutcheon barry of ten
sable and or, a
crancelin vert (Wettin),
overall a
label of
three points gules, the
centre point...