Pentagram: Difference between revisions

From Cunnan
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
m (Reverted edits by 202.91.9.6 (Talk); changed back to last version by Cian)
Line 1: Line 1:
rolcadarro
A '''Pentagram''' is a ''[[mullet]] of five points voided and interlaced'', commonly used in [[period]] heraldry. A '''Pentacle''' is a similar [[symbol]], correctly [[blazon]]ed ''A mullet voided and interlaced within and conjoined to an annulet''.
A '''Pentagram''' is a ''[[mullet]] of five points voided and interlaced'', commonly used in [[period]] heraldry. A '''Pentacle''' is a similar [[symbol]], correctly [[blazon]]ed ''A mullet voided and interlaced within and conjoined to an annulet''.



Revision as of 09:23, 13 November 2007

A Pentagram is a mullet of five points voided and interlaced, commonly used in period heraldry. A Pentacle is a similar symbol, correctly blazoned A mullet voided and interlaced within and conjoined to an annulet.

It can be found in Christian churches like Notre-Dame de Paris where it symbolizes the five points from which Christ bled on the cross. In the poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Sir Gawain bore a pentagram upon his shield and it was also used to represent many other things, e.g. the five knightly virtues.

Both the pentagram and the pentacle are used by modern Pagans as a religious symbol, (usually with a single point upward) representing the Five Elements. However, the common usage of a reversed pentagram (two points upward) by Satanists has caused this charge to be added to the SCA College of Heralds' list of restricted charges.