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Heraldic courtesy

Type of mirroring in heraldry From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heraldic courtesy
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Heraldic courtesy or courtoisie (French) is a practice typical of the heraldry of Germany (or more generally the former Holy Roman Empire), in which coats of arms are mirrored if necessary so that animate charges, such as lions, face the center of a composition. This may be done in arms of alliance (displaying the two shields of a married couple),[1][2] as in the first illustration here; or within a single shield, such as that of the dukes of Guelders and Jülich in which the gold lion of Guelders turns to face the black lion of Jülich.

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Arms of alliance; the husband's lion, which would normally face dexter, instead faces sinister toward the wife's shield
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Arms of the dukes of Guelders and Jülich
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