Lampago
Mythical heraldic beast in the form of a "man-tiger or man-lion"
A lampago or lympago[2] is a mythical heraldic beast in the form of a "man-tiger or man-lion" with the body of a tiger or lion and the head of a man.[1] It should be distinguished from similar mythical heraldic beasts the manticore and the satyral.[3]
The best-known usage of the lampago in heraldry is in the arms of the ancient Radford family of the manor of Radford in the parish of Plymstock in Devon: Sable, three lampagoes passant in pale coward argent.[1]
See also
- Sphinx
References
- ^ a b c Sir William Pole (1791). Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.). Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon. London. p. 499.
Radford of Radford: Sable, 3 lampagoes, [man tygers, with lion's bodyes and men's faces] passant [in pale] cowarde argent
- ^ Arthur Charles Fox-Davies (1909). "A Complete Guide to Heraldry". Wikisource. p. 186. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
- ^ Dennys, Rodney (1975). The Heraldic Imagination. London: Barrie & Jenkins. p. 114.
- v
- t
- e
Heraldry
- Authorities
- Grant of arms
- History
- Law of arms
- Officers of arms
- King of Arms
- herald
- pursuivant
- private
- National
- dominion
- civic
- Ecclesiastical
- papal
- Burgher
- Women
- Attributed
- Armiger
- Augmentation
- abatement
- Ancient and modern
- Alliance
- courtesy
- Blazon
- Cadency
- distinction
- Canting
- Field
- Fraud
- Marshalling
- quartering
- impalement
- National traditions
- Societies
- Attitudes
- Erasure
- Fimbriation
- Lines
Ordinaries | |
---|---|
Beasts | |
Birds | |
Other |
|
Legendary |
|
Plants | |
Knots |
- Rule of tincture
- Tricking
- Hatching
Metals |
|
---|---|
Colours | |
Furs | |
Stains | |
Rare metals1 |
|
Rare colours1 |
|
Realistic |
|
- 1 Non-traditional, regional, or rarely used (sometimes considered unheraldic)
- List of oldest heraldry
- Heraldry portal
- resources
This heraldry-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a legendary creature is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e