enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Enchanted Arms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enchanted_Arms

    The protagonist of the game is Atsuma (アツマ), a student who is able to draw ether and enchantment power from others through his right arm to fight golems.Assisting him in his journey are Karin (カリン), a native of London City, a fighter who can use her legs to fight enemies and a member of a resistance movement; and Raigar (ライガ, Raiga), Karin's bodyguard and another member of ...

  3. Arms and Equipment Guide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arms_and_Equipment_Guide

    The d20 system, 3rd edition version of the Arms and Equipment Guide was printed in 2003 and was designed by Eric Cagle, Jesse Decker, Jeff Quick, and James Wyatt.Cover art was by Eric Peterson, with interior art by Dennis Cramer, David Day, David Martin, Scott Roller, and Sam Wood.

  4. Law of heraldic arms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_heraldic_arms

    Illustration from a manuscript grant of arms by Philip II of Spain to Alonso de Mesa and Hernando de Mesa, signed 25 November 1566. Digitally restored. According to the usual description of the law of arms, coats of arms, armorial badges, flags and standards and other similar emblems of honour may only be borne by virtue of ancestral right, or of a grant made to the user under due authority.

  5. Division of the field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_of_the_field

    In many cases of marriage, the shield is impaled with the husband's entire coat of arms placed on the dexter side and the wife's entire coat placed on the sinister side; if the wife is an heiress, however, her arms are placed in escutcheon over her husband's (such usage is almost entirely English, Scots marshalling being impaling like any other ...

  6. Dimidiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimidiation

    In heraldry, dimidiation is a method of marshalling (heraldically combining) two coats of arms.. For a time, dimidiation preceded the method known as impalement.Whereas impalement involves placing the whole of both coats of arms side by side in the same shield, dimidiation involves placing the dexter half of one coat of arms alongside the sinister half of the other.

  7. Attributed arms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attributed_arms

    Attributed arms are Western European coats of arms given retrospectively to persons real or fictitious who died before the start of the age of heraldry in the latter half of the 12th century. Once coats of arms were the established fashion of the ruling class, society expected a king to be armigerous. [1]

  8. Pas d'armes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pas_d'armes

    The pas d'armes (French pronunciation: [pa daʁm]) or passage of arms was a type of chivalric hastilude (martial game) that evolved in the late 14th century and remained popular through the 15th century.

  9. Achievement (heraldry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achievement_(heraldry)

    An achievement comprises not only the arms displayed on the escutcheon, the central element, but also the following elements surrounding it (from top to bottom): Slogan or war-cry; Mantle and pavilion; Crest placed atop a: Torse (or cap of maintenance as a special honour) Mantling