DOUBLE-HEADED EAGLE
The 'double-headed eagle' is a common symbol in heraldry and vexillology. Several Eastern European nations use this symbol today, having adopted this symbol from the Eastern Roman Empire, known more commonly today as the Byzantine Empire. In Eastern Roman heraldry, the heads represent the dual sovereignty of the Emperor (secular and religious) and/or dominance of the Roman Emperors over both East and West. The Russian tsars adopted the symbol both to position themselves as successors to the Byzantine state and to likewise symbolize their dominion over the west (Europe) and the east (Asia).
The two-headed eagle appears on the coat of arms of the following countries and territories:
★ Albania
★ Austria-Hungary (historical)
★ Austria (1934-1938)
★ Byzantine Empire (historical)
★ Greece (1925-1926)
★ Holy Roman Empire (historical)
★ Montenegro
★ Republika Srpska in Bosnia and Herzegovina
★ Russian Federation
★ Russian Empire (historical)
★ Serbia and Montenegro (historical)
★ Serbia
★ Kingdom of Yugoslavia (historical)
★
★ Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (historical)
It also appears on the following flags:
★ Flag of Albania
★ Flag of Montenegro
★ State Flag of Serbia
★ the flag of the Greek Orthodox Church, which is also
★ the flag of the autonomous monastic state of Mount Athos
Origins
Double-headed eagles have been present in imagery for many centuries. The two-headed eagle can be found in archaeological remains of the Hittite civilization dating from a period that ranges from the 20th century BC to the 13th century BC
Cylindric seals discovered in Bogazkoy, modern (Turkey), an old Hittite capital, represent clearly a two-headed eagle with spread wings. The esthetic of this symmetric position explains in part the birth of this religious figure. It probably dates from the 18th century BC, and was used in a tradesman background.
This symbol can also be seen in the same region in two monumental realisations : in Alacahöyük (around 1400 BC) and in Yazilikaya (Turkey). (before 1250 BC). Here the context looks different and totally religious. The eagle becomes a divinity's symbol.
The two-headed eagle slowly disappears during the last Hittite period, from the 9th century BC to the 7th century BC and totally disappears after the end of the empire.
Use by the Turks
The double-headed eagle became the standard of the Seljuk Turks with the crowning of Toghrül (meaning "Eagle") Beg at Mosul in 1058 as "King of the East and the West" and was much used afterwards. The Sultans of Rum, Ala ad-Din Kay Qubadh I (1220-1237) and his son Kay Khusrau II (1237-1246) used the bicephalous eagle in their standards, and the motif was also found on tissues, cut stones, mural squares, and Koran holders.
Turcomans who ruled in Anatolia during the 13th century, inherited it from the Seljuk Turks. Islamic coins from the reign of Khalif Nasreddin Mahmoud bin Mohammad, following Turkish influence, sport a double-headed eagle on one side and the Star of David on the other as early as year 1200.
Today, the Turkish Police has a double-headed eagle in its insignia.
Eastern Roman Empire - Byzantine Empire
Example of the use of the double-headed eagle on imperial vestments, from a chrysobull of Alexios III of Trebizond, mid-14th century.
A double-headed eagle portrayed in a stained glass window inside St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Constantinople was the successor of Rome, and the Byzantines continued the use of the old imperial "single-headed" eagle motif. Although the roots of the transformation to double-headed are almost certainly connected with old depictions in Asia Minor (or, possibly, Turkish use), the details of its adoption are uncertain. Beyond any doubt, it was used in the wider area during the first centuries AD and certainly before the 10th century AD, as it appears in Persian and Armenian art. According to the most prevalent theory, the imperial Roman single-headed eagle was modified to double-headed by emperor Isaakios Komnenos (1057-1059) being influenced from local traditions about such a beast (the ''haga'') in his native Paphlagonia in Asia Minor. Local legends talked about this giant eagle with two heads that could easily hold a bull in its claws; the ''haga'' was seen as a representation of power, and people would often "call" it for protection. Isaakios Komnenos, deeply influenced by these beliefs, had already used it as a family emblem (''N. Zapheiriou, "the Greek Flag from Antiquity to present", Athens, 1947, pp. 21-22''). As there has been reference to "stone representations" of the eagle that were the inspiration for its picture, it is reasonable to assume that Hittite carvings may have been the sources of the myths themselves, but other relevant artwork cannot be excluded as such a source. Whether the eagle became an "imperial" symbol or remained purely a personal symbol for Komnenos, is not clear.
After the Latin conquest of Constantinople in 1204, it was used by the successor states of Epirus and Nicaea. The first mention of a double-headed eagle in the West dates from 1250 in a roll of arms of Matthew of Paris for Emperor Friedrich II of the Holy Roman Empire. Theodore II Laskaris chose it for his symbol as Emperor (Empire of Nicaea), taking it to symbolize his state's claims to all the Byzantine Empire's former domains, both European (West) and Asian (East). An alternative (and probably more correct) interpretation is that the eagle symbolized the Emperor's double temporal and spiritual sovereignty. After the recapture of Constantinople and the restoration of the Byzantine Empire, the symbol was used as an emblem of the imperial family, but it is uncertain whether it was the official emblem of the Empire. More recent research has suggested that it was not, its usage being limited to imperial seals and other personal or dynasty symbols such as imperial robes, although there has been no depiction of any Emperor wearing it. The role of "state" symbols was most probably played by flags with the cross. In Byzantine usage, the eagle was almost always connected with colors of imperial power (gold and red). A black eagle on golden background was used outside the imperial family, denoting the subordinate position (the eagle was black as being the 'shadow' of the Emperor's golden eagle) of their bearers.
Holy Roman Empire
The double-headed eagle of the Holy Roman Empire, c. 1510
The coat of arms of the Holy Roman Empire, c. 1540/45
The first mention of a double-headed eagle in the West dates from 1250, in a roll of arms of Matthew of Paris for Emperor Frederick II of the Holy Roman Empire. Usually depicted black on a gold background, it replaced the earlier single-headed eagle, and was subsequently adopted in the coats of arms of many German cities and aristocratic families. After the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the double-headed eagle was retained by the Austrian Empire, and served also as the coat of arms of the German Confederation.
Use by other countries
From Byzantium, two-headed eagles spread to Russia after Ivan III's marriage to Zoe Palaeologina, and to Montferrat, where a cadet branch of the Palaeologi ruled. The Serbian Nemanjić dynasty adopted a white version as their own to signify their own independence of, and indeed, claim to the imperial throne of Constantinople. The while eagle was retained by most Serbian medieval dynasties, as well as the Karađorđević, Obrenović and Petrović-Njegoš houses and remains to this day in use in the coat-of-arms of the countries of Serbia and Montenegro. George Kastrioti (Skanderbeg) adopted a similar flag in his struggle against the Ottomans, consisting of a black eagle on red background, which has been resurrected in the current Flag of Albania. During the next centuries, the eagle was made to hold a sword and/or a sceptre and an orb with a cross, symbols of the aforementioned double sovereignty.
Its usage also survived as a decorative element in the Greek Orthodox Church, which was the inheritor of the Byzantine legacy during the Ottoman Empire, while it remained a popular symbol among Greeks. In modern Greece various variations of the two-headed eagles are used in Church flags (based on Byzantine flag patterns) and, officially, by the Greek Army; the bird found its way into the Greek coat of arms for a brief period in 1925-1926.
It remains also an important motif in the heraldry of the imperial families of Russia (the House of Romanov) and Austria-Hungary (the House of Habsburg), as well as the royal family of Montenegro (the House of Petrovic).
Use in Masonry
The Double-Headed Eagle of Lagash on the cover of Morals and Dogma.
The 'Double-Headed Eagle of Lagash' is used as emblem by the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry[1]. While there are many meanings attached to this symbol, [2] author M. P. Hall whose Masonic membership is questionable at best, but wrote many works on the subject, declares it an alchemical symbol of union between the masculine and feminine principles in the individual.
Use in fiction
In the world of Warhammer 40,000, the double-headed eagle forms the crest of the Imperium of Man, earning it considerable religious and cultural significance. For this reason, it is not too uncommon to create actual double-headed eagles through surgery, mechanical proxy or genetic manipulation. When these are used to aid the abilities of a psyker, they are known as psyber-eagles. The Emperor of Mankind is known to be from central Anatolia (currently Turkey), so it may be a reference to his geographic origins.
In Namco's game, Tales of Symphonia, Aska, a golden, twin-headed bird who is one of the two Summon Spirits of Light is thought to have been inspired by the two-headed eagle.In Ragnarok Online the double-headed eagle appears ins many flags and buildings of the city of Prontera.
In The Mouse That Roared and its sequels, the Double-headed eagle is on the national flag of Grand Fenwick.
Use in sports
The double-headed eagle is the emblem of the Greek sport clubs AEK (black eagle on yellow background) and PAOK (black eagle on white background). It is a symbol of the clubs' origins, since both clubs were founded by Greeks who fled to Greece from Constantinople in 1922-23. It is also the emblem of the Turkish Konyaspor. [3]
Examples of double-headed eagle in coats of arms
See also
★ Eagle (heraldry)
★ Polycephaly
★ Double Eagle
External links
★ The development of the use of the double-headed eagle in Russia
★ Page on the use of heraldry in the Byzantine Empire
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