Of Armorial Bearings, pt. 2

And we return from the stacks with a few painted leaves in hand.


The signs of Chaos and Law are perhaps the most recognized among devices borne by protagonists within the Appendix N corpus.

The earliest extant depiction in print of the sign of Chaos appears in the Stormbringer graphic novel of 1976.[ii] TSR would soon illustrate the signs of Chaos and Law in the first printing of Deities and Demigods (1980).


The Signs of Chaos and Law, from Deities and Demigods

from Deities and Demigods, 1st printing[iii]

Moorcock describes the Sign of Chaos as ‘eight arrows radiating from a central hub,’ resembling more a heraldic escarbuncle charge than those illustrations in which the lines of the arrows simply intersect.

Examples of Escarbuncle heraldic charges

Examples of Escarbuncles, from Tesserae gentilitiae[iv]

There is also passing resemblance to Legio Britannia Secunda’s shield device as given in the Notitia Dignitatum.

Shield device of Legio Britannia Secunda

from Notitia dignitatum[v]

Arrows and spears are common enough charges in Western heraldic art, with the Pheon or Broad arrow variant most closely approximating the usual directional arrow representations of the Sign of Law.

Broad-arrow heraldic charge and Futhark T-rune

Broad arrow from A Complete Guide to Heraldry, Fox-Davies,[vi] and Týr rune from Rycerstwo polskie wieków rednich, Piekosiski[vii]

Polish heraldic art makes frequent use of the basic form, as the strzała and rogacina charges, themselves stylized bar characters of arrow and arrowhead. Note also a resemblance between the Sign of Law and the Futhark t-rune, which letter derives from an ideograph for a spear.

Stylized, heraldic arrowhead charges, Polish

Arrowhead variants from Heraldyka polska wieków średnich, Piekosiński[viii]

Stylized, heraldic arrowhead charges, Polish

and Tablice odmian herbowych Chrząńskiego, Ostrowski[ix]


Elric, too, bore his own coat of arms, described as a swooping dragon.

A heraldic dragon charge

A dragon segreant wings elevated, from An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Heraldry, Franklyn[x]

And although he does not specifically describe it, Moorcock names Dorian Hawkwind’s coat of arms as those of Koln.

The red slate roofs and scarlet flamingoes of the Kamarg, Count Brass’s bronze tan “glowing red,” this larger-than-life hero’s strength and protection, all find their thematic echo in his armorial bearings.

A heraldic gauntlet charge

Gauntlet (Fig. 540), from Fox-Davies’ Complete Guide

In stark contrast with Count Brass’s simple device, the elaborate, many-quartered coat of arms of Baron Meliadus readily illustrates the anxious, fanatic decadence of Granbretan.

An extreme example of quartering

The Quarterings of Lloyd of Stockton, an extreme example, from The Oxford Guide to Heraldry, Woodcock[xi]


Zelazny’s chronicles of Amber abound with color and symbolism. Corwin’s personal colors thread black and silver through his memories until he reclaims them walking the Pattern, finally recalling the Sign of the Unicorn, the arms of his father Oberon.

A heraldic unicorn charge

A unicorn rampant, from The Art of Heraldry, Fox-Davies[xii]


And so, we will continue these pursuits.


[i] Moorcock, Michael. Stormbringer. DAW, 1977.

[ii] Gideon. “The Sign of Chaos.” Awesome Lies. 2020, January 1.

[iii] Ward, James, and Robert Kuntz. Deities & Demigods. TSR Games, 1980.

[iv] Pietrasanta, Silvestro. Tesserae gentilitiae. Francisci Corbelletti, 1638.

[v] Gregorius, Nazianzenus, Illus. Péronet Lamy. Notitia dignitatum. Pietro Donato, 1436.

[vi] Fox-Davies, Arthur. A Complete Guide to Heraldry. T.C. & E.C. Jack, 1909.

[vii] Piekosiński, Franciszek. Rycerstwo polskie wieków rednich. Akademia Umiejętności, 1896.

[viii] Piekosiński, Franciszek. Heraldyka polska wieków średnich. Akademia Umiejętności, 1899.

[ix] Ostrowski, Juliusz. Tablice odmian herbowych Chrząńskiego. J. Ostrowski, 1909.

[x] Franklyn, Julian, and John Tanner. An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Heraldry. Pergamon Press, 1970.

[xi] Woodcock, Thomas. The Oxford Guide to Heraldry. Oxford University Press, 2001.

[xii] Fox-Davies, Arthur. The Art of Heraldry: an Encyclopædia of Armory. T.C. & E.C. Jack, 1904.