Rădăcinile religioase ale crinilor heraldici din stema personală a lui Ştefan cel Mare

  • Subiect: The religious roots of the heraldic lilies from Stephen's the Great coat of arms can be found out in the medieval history of Europe, and in the Old Testament, as well. Looking back to the medieval history of Europe, from the heraldry point of view, it is easy to notice that the Anjou Royal family of France had lilies on the heraldic shield. A cadette branch of the French Anjou family managed to achieve the royal status in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (Naples, later on), kingdom in which they used the parental heraldic charges. Later on, medieval Hungary and Poland were ruled by the Angevins, relatives of the already mentioned French and South Italian rulers. Due to the system of vassalage, the heraldic flowers were accepted in the Romanian heraldry, I mean in the dynastic coat of arms of the Moldavian rulers, more precisely for our study, in Stephen's the Great. In the Old Testament, lilies are to be found in Canticum Canticorum - Shir Hashirim or Shir ha-Shirim in original - a poem of love, of a pure love in its spiritual, religious, mystical sense.
  • Limba de redactare: română, engleză
  • Secţiunea: Studii şi articole - Istoria Evului Mediu şi istorie modernă
  • Vezi publicația: Sargetia. Acta Musei Devensis
  • Editura: Astra
  • Loc publicare: Deva
  • Anul publicaţiei: 1999-2000
  • Referinţă bibliografică pentru nr. revistă: XXVIII-XXIX-1; anul 1999-2000; subtitlu: Acta Musei Devensis
  • Paginaţia: 279-285
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