The historical development of heraldry
Many writers argue that it was not until a generation after the First Crusade that unmistakable evidence of heraldic designs appear, but what evidence there is has to be interpreted within the definition of heraldry. If heraldry is to be considered as the tight discipline developed over the following centuries and, in popular perception, centred on shields, then perhaps the beginnings may be seen in 1127 when King Henry I of England hung an armorial shield around the neck of Geoffrey of Anjou, his future son-in-law. However, in Flanders and in northeastern France hereditary symbols later recognized as heraldic were in use on coins much earlier, the colours of heraldry (probably with basic symbols) were employed on banners for the purpose of identity in battle, and some of the shields on the Bayeux Tapestry (sewn in the late 11th century by women unlearned in the science of heraldry) show designs similar to the gyronny shields borne later by Flemish descendants of men who fought at Hastings.
So there are two schools of thought. Those who insist that heraldry did not begin until the 12th century subconsciously define heraldry as the system of hereditary identification that began in the 12th century. The other school points to the undeniable existence of identification for families and battle formations in biblical times, the continuation of such systems during the Roman era, plus their later use by Charlemagne, and this school believes that the allocation of an arbitrary date for a specific stage in the long evolution of heraldry contributes nothing to scholarship.
The Bayeux Tapestry is a pictorial record of everyday life and warfare at the time of the Norman Conquest of England. The English and Norman soldiers are armed alike. In a few scenes some of the invaders have designs on their shields that have a vague heraldic resemblance. In scene VIII of the tapestry, four of the followers of Guy, Count of Ponthieu, have shields with these devices: some kind of creature holding what appears to be a fish in its mouth, a rough design emerging from the left side of the shield, a cross, and an animal resembling a sheep. In scene XII William the Conqueror’s messenger bears a winged creature on his shield, and this reappears in scenes XIII and XV. In scene XVIII a cross or a variant of it is seen on a shield, but this was perhaps a boss (metal protuberance) to strengthen it. Scene LXXV has an invader with a design of a birdlike creature on the shield, but generally Norman shields have only bosses in the middle. It is in the many very different flags that evidence of inchoate heraldry may be discerned, and, although the illustrations were executed by ladies uninformed of heraldic convention, the flags have sufficient detail as to suggest the identity of Boulogne (or three torteaux) and Alost (sable a chief argent) among other Flemish nobles. The Counts of Alost and Boulogne were among the best-rewarded when William shared out England among his army’s leaders, so one would expect the tapestry to recognize the value of their contribution by identifying them with their flags. (The Count of Boulogne appears also, with a flag bearing the arms his sons would later fly above Jerusalem.)
In 1066, at the time of the Conquest, heraldry, by a modern definition, appears not to have existed anywhere outside Flanders and such bordering counties as Ponthieu. The most that can be said is that possibly some of the rudiments owed to the Flemish influence and out of which heraldry emerged were present. Thirty years later, during the First Crusade, the situation was in flux. The Crusade’s commander was Godfrey of Bouillon, brother of the new Count of Boulogne and son of the Conqueror’s ally. His nobles most certainly had banners, but, apart from the one Godfrey would hoist over Jerusalem after his entry, a cross potent between four crosses or, we do not know their blazons.
The Alexiad, the history of Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus (reigned 1081–1118) written by his daughter, Anna Comnena, contains a vivid description of the “Frankish barbarians”—as the Crusaders were called by the civilized Byzantines. She gave a careful account of the Crusaders’ armour. She said that Alexius exhorted his archers to shoot at the Franks’ horses rather than at their riders, whose armour rendered them almost invulnerable.
For the Frankish weapon of defence is this coat of mail, ring plaited into ring, and the iron fabric is such excellent iron that it repels arrows and keeps the wearer’s skin unhurt. An additional weapon of defence is a shield which is not round, but a long shield, very broad at the top and running out to a point, hollowed out slightly inside, but externally smooth and gleaming with a brilliant boss of molten brass.
The shields in her description are similar to those depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry, and it would appear that none of those she saw bore a design worth noting.
The early roots of heraldry
The new student of heraldry may accept that standards bearing symbols have been in use for thousands of years, that their use in battle prompted the need for clear identification based on colour, that the continuation of ancestry and loyalty tended to make the systems hereditary, and that population growth required a larger number of designs and thus small increases in complexity that would allow blood relationships and alliances to be noted. Twelfth-century heraldry emerged from these developments and, although it appears now to have been based primarily on the personal shield (which in battle was soon disfigured by mud and gore), it continued the evolution of flag identification.
The earliest tangible evidence of 12th-century heraldry is in an enamel at the Musée de Tessé, Le Mans, France, made not earlier than 1151, showing Geoffrey IV of Anjou bearing the shield his father-in-law gave him. It is blue with golden lions rampant (the exact number of lions is not discernible because of the position in which the shield is depicted). Seals bearing heraldic devices and dating from 1136 are still in existence.
As body armour became all-enveloping, a means of distinguishing men in full armour acquired greater importance and accelerated the spread of heraldry. Another factor was the Crusades, in which it was useful to distinguish quickly between men from different lands with different languages, men whose liege lords might be pursuing quite different objectives.
Within a few years heraldry spread throughout all Western Christendom. The first English king who indisputably bore arms was the Crusader Richard I (the Lion-Heart; 1157–99). The three gold lions of England have been used by every English royal house since his time.