Tyler A. Carter: Difference between revisions

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====Official English blazon====
====Official English blazon====
Azure two barrulets Gules fimbriated Or alternate with a cross fleury between two Catherine wheels in pale of the last.
Azure, two barrulets wavy Gules fimbriated Or, alternate with a cross fleury between two Catherine wheels in pale of the last.


====Other language blazon====
====Other language blazon====


===Origin/meaning===
===Origin/meaning===
The shield is inspired by the arms of St. Francis de Sales, patron of the city of Columbus, Ohio, in which the armiger was born and raised. The central charge on the shield is the Cross, a symbol of the armiger’s faith and their focus on Christ at the center of all that he does. The arms of this particular Cross (called a cross fleury) resemble a fleur-de-lis, a stylized lily often used as a symbol of the Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph. In addition the fleur de lis represents the armiger’s patron, St. Jean Marie Baptiste Vianney. The Cross fleury also appears on the coat of arms of the Dominican order whose friars staffed the armiger’s childhood parish. At the top and bottom of the shield there appear wheels, specifically spiked “catherine wheels” which allude to the armiger’s surname, Carter. Three such wheels also appear on the coat of arms of the Carter family.
The shield is inspired by the arms of St. Francis de Sales, patron of the city of Columbus, Ohio, in which the armiger was born and raised. The central charge on the shield is the Cross, a symbol of the armiger’s faith and focus on Christ in all that he does. The arms of this particular Cross (called a cross flory) each terminate in a fleur-de-lis, a stylized lily often used as a symbol of the Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph. In addition, the fleur-de-lis represents the armiger’s patron, St. Jean Marie Baptiste Vianney, and the Holy Trinity. The Cross flory also appears on the Dominican order’s arms, whose friars staffed the armiger’s childhood parish and greatly influenced him. At the top and bottom of the shield, wheels, specifically spiked “Catherine wheels” allude to the armiger’s surname, Carter.
 
On a scroll below the shield appears the armiger’s motto, “Adimple Ea Quae Desunt.” This line, “Complete That Which is Lacking,” is from Colossians 1:24 in which St. Paul is telling the people of Colossae, “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ on behalf of His body, which is the Church.” Thus, it is a reminder to the armiger to complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions by joining his sufferings thereto and a plea to God to fulfil in the armiger what is lacking.  
 


====Registration details====
====Registration details====
The International Register of Arms, 21st September 2020. Registration No. 0570 (Vol.4).
The Society of American Armigers, 09 September 2020. Registration No. AA092.


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Revision as of 01:42, 3 July 2021

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Heraldry of the World
Personal arms
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TYLER A. CARTER

Registration no.: 009/2021

Individual/family : Individual
Country of origin : United States
Place of origin : Columbus, Ohio
Granted : No
Granted/officially recorded by : -

Carter arms.png

Official English blazon

Azure, two barrulets wavy Gules fimbriated Or, alternate with a cross fleury between two Catherine wheels in pale of the last.

Other language blazon

Origin/meaning

The shield is inspired by the arms of St. Francis de Sales, patron of the city of Columbus, Ohio, in which the armiger was born and raised. The central charge on the shield is the Cross, a symbol of the armiger’s faith and focus on Christ in all that he does. The arms of this particular Cross (called a cross flory) each terminate in a fleur-de-lis, a stylized lily often used as a symbol of the Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph. In addition, the fleur-de-lis represents the armiger’s patron, St. Jean Marie Baptiste Vianney, and the Holy Trinity. The Cross flory also appears on the Dominican order’s arms, whose friars staffed the armiger’s childhood parish and greatly influenced him. At the top and bottom of the shield, wheels, specifically spiked “Catherine wheels” allude to the armiger’s surname, Carter.

On a scroll below the shield appears the armiger’s motto, “Adimple Ea Quae Desunt.” This line, “Complete That Which is Lacking,” is from Colossians 1:24 in which St. Paul is telling the people of Colossae, “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ on behalf of His body, which is the Church.” Thus, it is a reminder to the armiger to complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions by joining his sufferings thereto and a plea to God to fulfil in the armiger what is lacking.


Registration details

The International Register of Arms, 21st September 2020. Registration No. 0570 (Vol.4). The Society of American Armigers, 09 September 2020. Registration No. AA092.


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