Page:The Grammar of Heraldry, Cussans, 1866.djvu/15

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HERALDRY.

INTRODUCTION.

That it has been the practice of various communities, in all ages, to distinguish themselves by certain recognised devices, or insignia, we possess abundant and irrefragable testimony, not only in the pages of Sacred History, but in the works of the earliest profane authors of whom we have any record. In the book of Numbers, and elsewhere, constant reference is made the standards, Degalim, which served to distinguish the various Israelitish tribes; and this, too, in such a manner that it is evident the people were previously familiar with the institution.[1]

So Æschylus, who lived nearly 2,500 years ago, in his account of the seven chiefs who warred against Thebes, not only mentions the fact of their having assumed distinctive insignia, but minutely describes the charges blazoned on their respective shields.[2]

  1. ‘So they pitched by their standards, and so they set forward, everyone after their families, according to the house of their fathers.’—Numbers, ii. 34.
  2. The shields are thus described:—
    Tydeus: ‘The sky emblazoned bright with stars; and the