stained glass roundel with angel holding a scroll, france c. 1425-50.


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stained glass roundel with angel holding a scroll, france c. 1425-50.
"The time is a quarter past five and Saturday viewing continues with an adventure in the new science fiction series..."
Art by me. (Acrylics on cold-pressed watercolour block.)
Roundels based Antarctic flags
from /r/vexillology Top comment: That last one is stupid enough to be brilliant.
▪︎Part of a set of fourteen sycamore roundels or plates with painted and printed decoration, used at an entertainment given by Sir George Bruce of Canock for King James VI (English)
Place of origin: England
Date: 1850-1940
Medium: Sycamore wood
AH Air Force Roundel: (Baltic-speaking) Prussia
(first posted on DeviantArt: 20th April, 2020)
Amazing. So rich I’ve been eating them by halves. Like the solidified version of a peanut butter lava cake. Is that a thing? I don’t care. Yum.
Daniel Hock (1858–1934)
Swathes of fruit and vegetables, punctuated with ribbons, a ram's skull and carved roundels, 1879
Arms of Dorfbeuern, Austria
Granted 1965
Blazon: Per pale gules and azure two wings displayed argent, surmounted by three roundels in pile of the first, second, and third
The wings (and possibly also the division per pale) are derived from the arms of Michaelbeuren Abbey, though I’m not quite clear on whether those are the arms of the abbey itself, or the abbot Ulrich Hofbauer. (The positioning here suggests the abbey, though; I’d guess the sinister coat is the abbot’s personal arms. Traditionally, in ecclesiastical heraldry, the arms of one’s office take precedence over any personal arms.) The three roundels are a symbol of St. Nicholas, the town’s patron saint, albeit with a tincture swap; they are more usually depicted as bezants, the better to recall the story of the anonymous gift of three dowries.