Turk head (heraldry)

Coat of arms of the Hungarian town Komádi.

In European heraldry, the severed Turk head,[a] most often as pierced by a sword, signifies the many wars fought by European Christian states against the invading Muslim, Turkish-led Ottoman Empire. Other depictions include the head held up by a victor or picked by a raven. It is used in modern town, municipality and village coats of arms in Hungary, Serbia, Croatia and the Czech Republic.

List

Cities and towns

Families

It was adopted by some Austro-Hungarian nobility, such as:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hungarian: Törökfej; Polish: Turecka głowa; Czech and Slovak: Turecká hlava; Serbo-Croatian: Turska glava, Турска глава; Ukrainian: Турецька голова, romanizedTuretska holova.

References

  1. ^ Charles Stickney (May 2001). World Enough: Travel Memoirs. iUniverse. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-595-18474-3.

Further reading