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A silver fleur-de-lis on a blue background is the arms of the Barons Digby. [56] In English and Canadian heraldry the fleur-de-lis is the cadence mark of a sixth son. [57] A fleur-de-lis can also be seen on the flag of Monmouthshire, Wales: Per pale azure and sable three fleurs-de-lys or. [58]
Scout fleur-de-lis at the Hood Scout Reservation ... Slidell, LA Closed Operated as a Scout camp on Bayou Liberty between 1924 and 1983 on 106 acres.
The fleur-de-lys (or fleur-de-lis, plural: fleurs-de-lis; / ˌ f l ɜːr d ə ˈ l iː /, [ˌflœː(ʀ)dəˈlɪs] in Quebec French), translated from French as "lily flower") is a stylized design of either an iris or a lily that is now used purely decoratively as well as symbolically, or it may be "at one and the same time political, dynastic ...
Type Symbol Law Amphibian: Green tree frog [2] (Hyla cinerea) : LL 169.1, 1993 Beverage: Milk: LL 170, 1983 Bird: Brown pelican [1] (Pelecanus occidentalis) : LL 159, 1958 Butterfly: Gulf fritillary (Dione vanillae)
Fleur de lis, a flight maneuver performed by the Blue Angels; Fleur de Lys (restaurant), a fine-dining French cuisine restaurant in San Francisco, California and Las Vegas, Nevada. The Fascination of the Fleur de Lis, a 1915 silent film starring Lon Chaney, Sr. "Fleur De Lys", a song by Juliana Hatfield from the 1995 album Only Everything
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Fleurs-de-lis
The single fleur-de-lis of silver is taken from the arms of Soissons, where the regiment performed such distinguished service that it was cited by the French in Orders of the Army, shown by the pendant Croix de guerre. The regiment had its baptism of fire near Verdun, the arms of which have one fleur-de-lis crowned all gold. The crown on these ...
Shield: Per bend Or and Gules a fleur-de-lis in bend counterchanged. Crest: That for the regiments and separate battalions of the Army Reserve: On a wreath of the colors Or and Gules the Lexington Minute Man Proper. The statue of the Minute Man, Captain John Parker (H.H. Kitson, sculptor) stands on the Common in Lexington, Massachusetts.