Murrey: Difference between revisions

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(use of murrey as livery colour; murrey not often distinguished from sanguine in earlier times but now it almost always is)
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In [[heraldry]], '''murrey''' indicates a purple-red, or mulberry, [[tincture]]. It is classified as one of the [[stains]] and so its use is extremely rare in English heraldry. Sometimes murrey is regarded as a distinct heraldic color, and sometimes it is considered the same as [[sanguine]].
In [[heraldry]], '''murrey''' indicates a purple-red, or mulberry, [[tincture]]. It is classified as one of the [[stains]] and so its use is extremely rare in English heraldry, though there were a greater number of instances of its use as a livery colour. In earlier times murrey was not usually considered a distinct heraldic [[tincture]] from [[sanguine]], but in the present, post-Victorian period, they are almost always distinguished.


[[Category:Device heraldry]]
[[Category:Device heraldry]]

Revision as of 03:22, 13 December 2005

Murrey.PNG

In heraldry, murrey indicates a purple-red, or mulberry, tincture. It is classified as one of the stains and so its use is extremely rare in English heraldry, though there were a greater number of instances of its use as a livery colour. In earlier times murrey was not usually considered a distinct heraldic tincture from sanguine, but in the present, post-Victorian period, they are almost always distinguished.