O Oriens 2024
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O Oriens, splendor lucis aeternae, et sol justitiae: veni, et illumina
sedentes in tenebris, et umbra mortis. O Morning Star, splendor of eternal
light and...
9 hours ago
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Arms of Sweet Briar College. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |
Banner of arms of Sweet Briar College. Rendered by Chad Krouse, 2024. |
It is worth noting that there seems to be some discrepancy in the "arrow" found in the Fletcher arms. The College received significant funding from the estate of Mrs. Indiana Fletcher Williams (1828-1900). The arrow appears inside the bezant or roundel in the Fletcher arms. By looking at these arms used in England, a pheon or arrowhead, fills the bezants rather than a full arrow. The College uses the full arrow but I have opted for the pheons. The surname Fletcher refers to one who made arrows and so this charge is a pun upon the name. The Fletcher blazon given previously comes from the arms of Sir Henry-Aubrey Fletcher, 4th Baronet (1835-1910) as found in Armorial Families: A Complete Peerage, Baronetage, and Knightage...edited by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies in 1895. Fox-Davies notes these arms were used without authority from the College of Arms. Debrett's, as seen below, gives a different blazon for the same armiger, using the pheons. Click on the photo to enlarge.The seal consists of the Fletcher and Amherst arms quartered with three Tudor roses above. The arms of Lord Amherst are three tilting spears, gold with silver tops on a red field. The Fletcher arms, which used to hang in Sweet Briar House, were a silver cross on a black field with four bezants each charged with an arrow.It was customary when a family married into another either to divide the shied in half, thus dividing the two coats of arms and placing them side by side; or to quarter the arms, with those of the more important family appearing on the right. As Lord Amherst, from whom the county takes its name, was Governor-General of the British forces in North America, and for some years the Governor of Virginia, it seems appropriate that his arms should be quartered on the shield.The Tudor roses symbolize Sweet Briar, though not the color of the Sweet Briar rose, for pink is not a proper heraldic tint. The roses on the shield are red in a gold field.As a background to the super-imposed shield, is twined a rise vine, which supports the scroll bearing the motto... The motto is an adoption of the motto of Lord Nelson, "Parmour qui meruit fert." In its present form, "Rosam quae meruit ferat," it signifies that those who wear the Sweet Briar rose must be mindful of the obligation, and be worthy to bear it." (The alumnae news publication, Dec. 1938)
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