Question:

I would like to know the meaning of my surname´s coat of arms.?

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My surname is SARG, which means, coffin (sarcofagus) it is original from Germany

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  1. Just Google "HERALDRY Coats of Arms" and you'll be inundated with it


  2. BEC quoted this:

    "There is also no reason we cannot create a coat of arms and crest for ourselves, whether based on the coat of arms of an ancestor who shared our name (and may or may not be related to us), or designed from scratch to mean something special to our own lives and family."

    That's not in fact true (quite apart from the weird statement that you can have an ancestor who may not be related to you!).

    In Scotland, for instance, it is actually a criminal offence to claim or display arms that you have simply made up yourself. Only people with genuine arms recognised by the Lord Lyon King-at-Arms (the ultimate authority for Scottish heraldry) can display them.

    In many other countries, e.g. Switzerland, the Netherlands and England, if the arms you have invented resemble any genuine ones closely enough to be mistaken for them, that person may take legal action against you.

    In any country where heraldry is taken at all seriously, you will make yourself ridiculous if you pretend to be entitled to a coat of arms when you aren't.

  3. You are mistaken in thinking that your surname automatically gives you a Coat of Arms. Each person in an aristocratic family makes up their own registered coat of arms insignia.Your surname doesn't mean that you are part of a family that can use the coat of arms;you need to have a genealogist trace your family background to see if you are entitles to use  the coat of arms. You CAN make up yourn own personal coat of arms instead of using another family's.

    Visit http://www.fleurdelis.com for the complete story.

    "Coats of arms are not awarded to a family or a name, but to an individual. This is why there is no coat of arms or family crest for the family name "Hardin" -- only a coat of arms and crest granted to someone with that name many years ago. This is why there is often more than one coat of arms associated with a given surname. See the various Hardin arms from different countries and regions. In England, direct descent is required for any heir to have the legal right to bear his ancestor's coat of arms.

    You can try to narrow the search by geographic region of origin, but there may also be more than one coat of arms awarded to several people in ancient Germany. Further complicating the issue is that the authoritative source information for most coats of arms only lists a city and/or county or origin, and sometimes only a country.



      

    That is why, unless you can trace your family history to one individual, and unless the sources list that individual, then the best that you can hope for is to find a coat of arms that is the oldest for a given name from a given region or the one most frequently used. Coats of arms usually started out fairly simple in design, then subsequent generations added onto or made slight variations to the design to make it their own. Marriages often resulted in a combination of two different family lines' coats of arms.

    You can also try contacting the College of Arms for the country you believe your ancestor is from, and for a fee they will search their records to see if a coat of arms was awarded to your ancestor.

    The bearing of coats of arms is not regulated in most countries, including the United States, thus there has been a proliferation of "family name" companies offering histories and coats of arms for a given surname. While there is no reason we cannot enjoy the decoration of a coat of arms associated with someone centuries ago who shared our surname, we should be aware that this is all that it is -- a decoration.

    There is also no reason we cannot create a coat of arms and crest for ourselves, whether based on the coat of arms of an ancestor who shared our name (and may or may not be related to us), or designed from scratch to mean something special to our own lives and family."

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