Line Of Partition
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The lines of partition used to divide and
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fields and charges in
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are by default straight, but may have many different shapes. Care must sometimes be taken to distinguish these types of lines from the extremely unusual and non-traditional use of lines as charges, and to distinguish these shapes from actual charges, such as "a mount
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in base," or, particularly in German heraldry, different kinds of embattled from castle walls. In Scotland, varied lines of partition are often used to modify a bordure (or sometimes another
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) to difference the arms of a
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from the chief of the house.


Indented and dancetty

An ordinary ''indented'' is bounded by small zigzags like a triangle wave or the teeth of a saw, with peaks on one side matching peaks on the other. An ordinary ''dancetty'' is similar, but with peaks matching troughs, so that the width is constant; it also typically has fewer points than ''indented''. In early armory these were not distinguished. In the arms of the
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of the United States Air Force the indented is "edged wider on the back angle (sinister) than on the face (dexter) of each angle". ''Dentilly'' is a modern invention, similar to ''indented'', but with one of the sides of the points perpendicular and the other angled, as in a sawtooth wave. ''Rayonné'' (also ''rayonne'', ''rayonny''; from French '' rayonner'') may be considered a variant of indented, but with wavy instead of straight lines, as in the conventional representation of rays of the sun. ''Rayonne palewise'' appears in the arms of the 172d Support Battalion of the United States Army. A chief enarched rayonné on a gold field appears in the arms of Sechelt, British Columbia, forming the appearance of a sun. The arms of the Worshipful Company of Security Professionals contain an example of ''indented acute,'' a form of indented with higher peaks. The number of peaks in indented is almost never specified, but an exception is the arms of Arthur D. Stairs: ''Per bend sinister indented of six steps Gules and Sable'', and Westville, Natal, South Africa bears ''Sable, issuant from behind a fence of spears in base Argent, a fig tree in leaf Or; on a chief indented of four points to base, also Or, three lion's faces Sable''. In South Africa there are a number of examples of ''dancetty inverted''. While the number of peaks in dancetty are three unless otherwise specified, the arms of Wagland show ''dancetty of two points'' and the arms of Baz Manning show a chief "dancetty of two full points upwards". The arms of the Matroosberg Transitional Representative Council in South Africa give an example of ''dancetty… in the shape of a letter W''. The arms of the French department of Côtes d'Armor show ''émanché,'' which would be equivalent to the English ''per fess dancetty of two full points upwards.'' The arms of
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are ''Paly of four Vert and Argent per fess enhanced indented of two points upwards each point double barbed throughout issuing in base a pile double barbed throughout all counterchanged''. The arms of Alaric John Martin Woodrow show an example of ''barry dancetty each point double barbed'', used to represent a line of fir trees as a play on the surname. The arms of the Free State in South Africa show "a chief dancetty, the peaks terminating in merlons", and so might be called a combination of dancetty and embattled; a similar hybrid can be seen in the arms of the Agricultural Gymnasium. Hoerskool Hangklip provide an example of ''dancetty with points flattened'', and Blouberg of ''dancetty the peaks couped.'' It is difficult to know whether to characterise the "wall-like extremity with five merlons and four embrasures" in the arms of the
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in Russia as a divided field or a charg

The arms of Ernest John Altobello show a chevron with the upper edge ''grady'' (this is identical in appearance to indented) "and ensigned of a tower Argent".


Wavy and nebuly

A line ''wavy'' (also called ''undy'') is a
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, often used to represent water; a line ''
nebuly In heraldry and architecture,
'' is similar but with more exaggerated meanders, representing clouds. There are confusing, ambiguous and non-standard uses of ''a wavy'' in the military heraldry of the United States to refer to irregularly wavy lines. The wavy chief in the arms of Lord Nelson was blazoned as ''undulated''. The field of the arms of the 40th Finance Battalion of the United States Army is blazoned ''per fess wavy (in the manner of a Taeguk)'' The chief in the arms of Professor S.W. Haines is ''wavy of one crest and depressed in the centre of one point''. In ''wavy crested'' the waves appear like pointed breakers. The arms of James Hill show an example of barrulets ''wavy crested to the sinister on the upper edge''. There are examples of even greater complexity and specificity in the ''wavy'' line, such as the arms of "Baron Nolan ...
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three 'bars wavy couped composed of two troughs and a wave invected of one point on the upper edge and engrailed of one point on the lower edge'". Specification of the number of "undulations" in nebuly can be seen by Jochen Wilke's roundel, with ten. (It is uncommon for lines of partition to modify a charge other than an ordinary.)


Engrailed and invected

These lines consist of a series of circular arcs curving in the same direction, meeting at angles, forming points outward (''engrailed'') or inward (''invected''). When these terms are applied to a partition rather than to an ordinary, the first part of the field is the "interior". The arms of Liverpool Hope University include ''a Cross engrailed of one point on each limb''. The
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is ''Argent a cross engrailed sable between four Cornish choughs proper''. The arms of the Pretoria Philatelic Society show a ''chief engrailed and couped'', having the appearance of the edge of a
perforated A perforation is a small hole in a thin material or web. There is usually more than one perforation in an organized fashion, where all of the holes collectively are called a ''perforation''. The process of creating perforations is called perfor ...
postage stamp. The arms of Kutlwanong Dorp in South Africa provide an example both of the specification of the number of lobes in invected, and those lobes being ''trefly.''


Embattled and variants

A line ''embattled'' is a
square wave A square wave is a non-sinusoidal periodic waveform in which the amplitude alternates at a steady frequency between fixed minimum and maximum values, with the same duration at minimum and maximum. In an ideal square wave, the transitions b ...
, representing the battlements of a castle. When a fess is embattled, only the topmost edge is altered (as in the arms of
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). If both edges are to be embattled, the term ''embattled-counter-embattled'' (or ''counter-embattled,'' as in the arms of Sir Cecil Denniston Burney) is used. In this case the lines are parallel. If gaps face gaps, the term ''bretessé'' is used. There is at least one emblazonment suggesting that the orle is only embattled on its outer edge. Italian armory has a variant, Ghibelline battlement, with notched merlons. In a line ''raguly'' the extensions are oblique rather than orthogonal, like the stumps of limbs protruding from a tree-trunk. '' Dovetailed'' is as in carpentry. Unlike embattled, gaps face gaps. ''Potenty'' may be considered a variant in which the points are extended to ''T''-shapes ("potent" means a crutch). A line ''embattled grady'' or ''battled embattled'' consists of series of two or three steps, as if each merlon has a smaller merlon atop it. Parker's glossary says that ''double-embattled'' may be the same as this. The arms of Schellenberg in Liechtenstein provide an example of embattled "with three battlements". The bordure in the arms of
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, in
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, France, has nine battlements (the bordure is also masoned and contains door-like openings). A very unusual occurrence of embattled occurs in the arms of the 136th Military Police Battalion of the United States Army: ''Sable, a fesse enhanced and embattled Or, overall a magnifying glass palewise rim Argent (Silver Gray), the glass surmounting and enlarging the middle crenel between two merlons, the handle Gules edged of the second bearing a mullet Argent.'' The arms of
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show two chevronels ''round embattled'' (the merlons are rounded rather than squares). There are also examples of ''embattled pointed'' and ''embattled in the form of mine dumps''. James Parker cites the arms of Christopher Draisfield: "Gules, a chevron raguly of two bastons couped at the top argent." The arms of Zodwa Special School for Severely Mentally Handicapped Children show ''a chevron dovetailed, the peak ensigned with a potent issuant''. Some examples also exist of ''urdy,'' where the line is in the shapes of the upside-down and rightside-up "shields" of vair (this is to be distinguished from ''couped urdy'', in which the couping takes a pointed form). The arms of Winfried Paul Reinhold Steinhagen are ''Per chevron, the peak in the form of a merlon round urdy of four, Gules and Or, in chief a horse forcene and a goat clymant respecting one another, Argent, and in base a bull's head Sable armed Argent; a chief per fess in the form of a wall with three watchtowers, Azure and Argent, the latter charged with a strand of barbed wire throughout, Sable''. The "unusual, if not unique" arms of Lourens Du Toit are ''Per fess of three pallets urdy Sable and Or''. The arms of the
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have a bordure emblazoned "dentate", although this appears to be quite similar to dovetailed.


Embowed, nowy and variants

A line ''embowed'' consists of a single arch. A line ''nowy'' contains a semicircular protuberance in the middle. A line with an angular protuberance in the middle, like a battlement, is called ''escartelly''. The arms of Laerskool Bosveld in South Africa have a field ''Per chevron embowed trefly, Azure and Argent''. The arms of Léopold-Henri Amyo

show "per fess ogivy"; this is based on the ogive or pointed arch. Chiefs, fesses and palar dividing lines are sometimes seen ''arched'' and ''double-arched'' (and there is an example of triple-arched), though there is some debate as to whether or not these are lines of partition. That arched can be combined with partition lines can be seen from th
arms
of
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in Scotland. Arched can also be ''reversed''.


Rarer lines and recent inventions

The rare line ''bevilled'' modifies the bendlets in the arms of Thomas Roy Barnes and the pairle in the arms of Rovaniemi, Finland. This lightning-bolt type of line with one zigzag is to be distinguished from ''angled'', in which the line takes a pair of 90° turns before continuing parallel to and in the same direction as the old line. There is a South African example of ''bevilled to sinister'', and a bend ''double bevilled'' can be seen in the arms of Philip Kushlick School. A line ''trefly'' shows protuberances in the form of trefoils. The arms of St. Paul's Cathedral in Regina, Saskatchewan contain a bordure ''its inner line looping in foils of poplar of the field within the bordure at each angle and at regular intervals between''. The arms of Carmichael show a fess "wreathy", which may or may not be strictly speaking a line of partition, but does modify the fess; the coat is not blazoned as a "wreath in fess". James Parker calls this "tortilly". The 20th century saw some innovations in lines of partition. ''Erablé'', a series of alternating upright and inverted maple leaves, is a typically Canadian line of partition, though the College of Arms in London has used it in a few grants (but compare the cross ''nowy erablé'' in the arms of Katherina Fahlman Selinger Schaaf. A Finnish line of partition, invented by Kaj Cajander and called , which is called ''fir-tree topped'' in Britain, and which the Canadian Heraldic Authority coined the term ''sapiné'' to blazon, resembles fir trees; in the arms of
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this is called ''sapinage''. A line resembling fir twigs, and so called in British blazon, is called ''sapinagy'' in Canada (though there is no example of it in the online Canadian Public Register), and in Finland. Other 20th-century examples of lines, or things akin to lines, include the 1990 grant to Albersdorf-Prebuch in Austria, in which the upper line of the fess takes the form of fruit, the bottom of vine-leaves. (It is debatable what the distinction is between such lines, and examples such as the arms of
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, a town in
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, in which three pears grow from a
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.) The South African Bureau of Heraldry has developed the line of partition ''serpentine'' (which has also been called "''ondoyant''"), which is rather like wavy, but with only one "wave", one complete cycle of a sine wave; the serpentine in the arms of the Mtubatuba Primary School is defined as "dexter to chief and sinister to base". (Similar is the German "" (snake-wise).) It has also developed the uniquely South-African lines of division (which can also form the ends of a charge) ''nowy of a Cape Town gable'' (now called just ''nowy gabled''), and ''nowy of an Indian cupola''. Similarly, the fess line in the arms of the Council for Social and Associated Workers is ''nowy of a trimount inverted'', the fess in the arms of Mossel Bay is ''nowy of two Karoo gable houses'', the chief in the arms of the Lenasia South-East Management Committee is ''nowy of an Indian cupola'', the chief in the arms of the Genealogical Society of South Africa is ''double nowy gably'' and that of Frederick Brownell is ''gably of three''. The arms of the Reyneke Bond (i.e. Reyneke Family Association) are ''Per fess, in each flank double nowy fitchy to base, Azure and Or, a lion rampant per fess of the second and Gules, a chief Or''. The plain chief identifies these as the arms of a family association. The arms of Itsokolele, South Africa include ''a chief double fitchy inverted''. ''Broad fitchy couped'' is a line of South-African origin similar in appearance to a mine-dump or escartelly with sloping sides. Chevrons can be topped with a fleur-de-lys, and ordinaries with non-straight edges (particularly if they are dancetty or engrailed) can have the points topped with demi fleurs-de-lys. It has sometimes been said that in some reference works flory-counter-flory (and flory) is treated like a line of partition, even though strictly speaking it is not – though it has been used for centuries that way in the royal arms of Scotland blazoning the double tressure (Public Register of Arms, Lyon Court, Edinburgh) and used by the College of arms in blazoning coats like that of Sutherland of Dunstanburgh Castle (Gules, a chevron flory-counterflory between in chief three mullets and in base a lymphad all or) and is used by the South African Bureau of Heraldry blazoning the coat of Huis Tankotie of the University of Pretoria (Per fess, flory counter-flory, Argent and Azure, in base within the flower an annulet Sable; a bordure counterchanged) and Emmanuel-Opleidingsentrum in the South African Bureau of Heraldry's online database. (Flory is sometimes varied with other shapes than the fleur-de-lys, when it is blazoned as ''flory of''.) A vague and unhelpful blazon of the 27th Air Division of the United States Air Force provides for a "bordure of distinctive outline".


Gallery of different lines of partition

Each shield is ''Per fess _______ argent and gules'', but some of these lines have no common English name. Nyhäkoro.svg, ''invected'' Nirhakoro.svg, ''engrailed'' Sakarakoro.svg, ''embattled'' Aaltokoro.svg, ''wavy'' or ''undy'' Pilvikoro.svg, ''nebuly'' Kuusikoro.svg, ''fir-tree topped'', a recent Finnish innovation (also known as ''Sapiné'' in Canada) Havukoro.svg, ''fir-twigged'', a recent Finnish innovation (also known as ''Sapinagé'' in Canada) Sahakoro.svg, ''indented'' as it is commonly shown Hammaskoro.svg, ''dancetty'' Sudenhammaskoro.svg, ''indented'' very much deeper than is usual Kaarikoro.svg, ''enarched'' Polvikoro.svg, ''per chevron'' Apilakoro.svg, ''trefly-counter-trefly'' Ristikoro.svg, ''embattled in crosses'', Finnish heraldry Kahvakoro.svg, ''potenty'' Hakulikoro.svg, ''palissado'', Finnish heraldry Vallikoro.svg, ''bastionné'', Finnish heraldry Lehmuskoro.svg, ''spaded'' Liljakoro.svg, ''lilyous'', Finnish heraldry Kuulakärkikoro.svg, ''indented pommetty'' Kynsikoro.svg, ''rayonny'' Kaksoissakarakoro.svg, ''embattled grady'' Liekkikoro.svg, ''rayonny'' (variant) Lohenpyrstökoro.svg, ''dovetailed'' Salamakoro.svg, ''bevilled'' Okakoro.svg, ''thorny'', Finnish heraldry Oksakoro.svg, ''raguly'' Painanteinen pilvikoro.svg, ''nebuly'' Sädekoro.svg, ''rayonné'' Turkiskoro.svg, ''urdy'' Kulmakoro.svg, ''angled'' File:Thorny Line of Partition.png, ''épiné'' (''acacia thorned''), also known as ''dovetailed indented'' File:Érablé.svg, ''Érablé'', Canadian heraldry


See also

*
Variations of ordinaries Ordinaries in heraldry are sometimes embellished with stripes of colour alongside them, have lumps added to them, shown with their edges arciform instead of straight, have their peaks and tops chopped off, pushed up and down out of the usual posi ...


Notes


References

* ''Burke's Peerage and Baronetage'', 105th edition.


External links

* {{heraldry Heraldry