Page:A Complete Guide to Heraldry.djvu/458

 resembling lizards or dragons. (See the seal of, 1295.—, ii. 74.)

"The seal of John, Duke of Normandy, eldest son of the King of, before 1316 bears his arms (, a bordure gules) between two lions rampant away from the shield, and an eagle with expanded wings standing above it. The secretum of Isabelle de (c. 1308) has her shield placed between three lions, each charged with a bend (Vrée, Gen. Com. Flanr., Plates XLIII., XLIV., XCII.). In 1332  places his arms (, with a label) between a winged lion in chief and a lion without wings at either side. Later, on the seal of , a lion's head between wings became the crest of . In 1332  bears  on a lozenge between in chief two eagles, in base two lions. (, Nos. 61, 64; and , tome i. No. 130.) In Scotland the shield of  in 1292 is placed between two dogs, and surmounted by a fox; in the same year the paly shield of , Earl of , appears between two lions in chief and as many griffins in flanks.—, i. 210, 761.

"The seal of, Dauphin de Viennois in 1349, is an excellent example of the fashion. The shield of is in the centre of a quatrefoil. Two savages mounted on griffins support its flanks; on the upper edge an armed knight sits on a couchant lion, and the space in base is filled by a human face between two wingless dragons. The spaces are sometimes filled with the Evangelistic symbols, as on the seal of , Countess of Bar (c. 1340). The seal of , Dame de , in 1376 bears her arms en bannière a quatrefoil supported by two kneeling angels, a demi-angel in chief, and a lion couchant guardant in base."

Corporate and other seals afford countless examples of the interstices in the design being filled with the figures similar to those from which in later days the supporters of a family have been deduced. But I am myself convinced that the argument can be carried further. Fanciful ornamentation or meaningless devices may have first been made use of by seal engravers, but it is very soon found that the badge is in regular use for this purpose, and we find both animate and inanimate badges employed. Then where this is possible the badge, if animate, is made to support the helmet and crest, and, later on, the shield, and there can be no doubt the badge was in fact acting as a supporter long before the science of armory recognised that existence of supporters.

Before passing to supporters proper, it may be well to briefly allude to various figures which are to be found in a position analogous to that of supporters. The single human figure entire, or in the form