Citations:campane

English citations of campane

  • 1828, William Berry, Encyclopaedia Heraldica: Or, Complete Dictionary of Heraldry, page 13:
    CAMPANES. Charges, such as the fesse, bar, or file, when, as is sometimes the case, bells are borne pendent thereto, are blazoned a file, &c. with three campanes, or points campaned; a term derived from campana, a bell.
  • 1875, United States. Patent Office, Specifications and Drawings of Patents Issued from the U.S. Patent Office, page 927:
    [...] knotted or otherwise firmly secured within the nipple a' and tassels C. In the complete form of my improvement both cords B and B' are rove through a tubular handle proper, which is preferably composed of two similar campanes or bell-shaped bulbs or shells, [...]
  • 1880, Frank Leslie's Sunday Magazine, page 476:
    [...] its cupolas, its red-brick campanes, that cluster above its ancient walls, whence, at the time I am writing [...]
  • 1882, John Ogilvie, The Imperial dictionary, on the basis of Webster's English dictionary, page 380:
    Campaned [...] In her. bearing campanes or bells.
  • 2019 April 9, Nigel Pennick, Witchcraft and Secret Societies of Rural England: The Magic of Toadmen, Plough Witches, Mummers, and Bonesmen, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
    [In] Leland's Collectanea [from] 1770 [...] The horse of Sir William Harguil, companion of Sir William Conyers, sheriff of Yorkshire, is described as "his Hors Harnays full of campanes [bells] of silver and gylt." the master of the horse of the Duke of Northumberland was "monted apon a gentyll horse, and campanes of silver and gylt," and a company of knights, "some of their hors harnes was full of campanes, sum of gold and sylver, and others of gold" (Leland 1770).