„Címerhatározó/OSZ/O/E/v” változatai közötti eltérés

Tartalom törölve Tartalom hozzáadva
Szegedi László (vitalap | szerkesztései)
Nincs szerkesztési összefoglaló
Szegedi László (vitalap | szerkesztései)
Nincs szerkesztési összefoglaló
205. sor:
I. What '''kind of a charge''' to be found in the (principal) '''field'''. <br>
II. Which one is '''the principal charge''' of the (principal) '''field'''.
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|colspan=2 align="center"|I. The (principal) charge of the (principal) field can be an '''ordinary''' (M), or a '''common charge''' (C)
212. sor:
*'''Ordinaries''' (M) are geometric shapes, made by lines of partition, and various tinctures, placed in the field (superstructures).
* ''Partitions'' are ordinaries in the traditional heraldic view. However, in our (classification, and determination) system they are substructures made by division of the field by one or more lines of partition, and two or more tinctures. They can be both fields (/v) (substructures), and ordinaries (/n) (superstructures), while the ordinaries in the narrower sense can only be superstructures, but no substructures (fields). (See step II.)
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*'''Common charges''' (C) are all possible objects taken from the nature or the human word/imagination (humans, objects, animals, natural objects and phenomenons, plants, and other common charges).
* In case, an ''ordinary'' (a fess, for example) being ''decorated'' by a common charge (or another ordinary; like roundlets, or a lion passant), the role of the principal charge still belongs to the ordinary, because the geometry of the fess is decisive to the attributes, i.e. position, size, and number of the subcharges (roundlets or lion pessant). So it is the geometry of the fess, which enables some attributes (size, number etc.) for roundlets, or the lion passant, and not vice versa. So, despite the fess was in the lower, while the charges of decoration (roundlets, lion passant) were in the upper position, the role of the main charge still belongs to the ordinary (i.e. fess), whose geometry always orders the attributes for the subcharges. See step V.)
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II. If there are '''more than one charges''' in the '''field''', the '''principal charge''' (to be used for the purpose of determination) of the field is always that one, which is:
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