1. Home
  2. Search last name
  3. Search Result
  4. Heraldic Traces Romano

Last name: Romano

Dossier: 882984
Type:Heraldic dossiers
  • When you buy a heraldic document a new accurate analysis of the heraldic research will be performed by an expert heraldist and the document will be written in Italian or English.
  • The coat of arms will be checked and, if necessary, redesigned in strict compliance with the heraldic rules by our experts.
Language of the text: Italiano
Nobility: Nobili - Patrizi - Cavalieri - Conti - Baroni
Nobles in:Italia (Campania - Calabria)
The country or region of the dossier mainly refers to the places where the family was ascribed to the nobility and may be different from those of residence

Heraldic dossiers :
Romano


Italiano  English  Español  Portugûes  Deutsch  Français
Nobility crown RomanoAncient and very noble family, which according to tradition originates from Rome, then passed to Amalfi, Sorrento, Naples and Salerno but with noble branches also in Puglia, Calabria and Sicily. The first news relating to the Romans dates back to the 1st century AD. Among the "Regesta Neapolitan" we find an act of 958 in which a Roman, son of Basilio, is mentioned for a sale of some land in Cava. Later is the attestation of the Angevin chancellery which mentions a Roman, Bishop of Cava in 1279. In the "Codex diplomaticus cavensis" there is an attestation, dated 1020-1023, of a Marino, son of Pietro Romano. A parchment dated 127 mentions the "Romans de Scala" in a notarial deed drawn up for such a Thomasia. In 1279 a Roman Brundusio is attested, judge in Tramonti. In two acts of 1325, at the time of King Robert of Anjou, Rainaldo Romano, ...

Buy a heraldic document with your coat of arms

Notice:

  • This text is an automatic translation of a short heraldic preview, it may contain errors.
  • When you buy a heraldic document a new accurate analysis of the heraldic research will be performed by an expert heraldist and the document will be written in Italian or English.
  • The coat of arms will be checked and, if necessary, redesigned in strict compliance with the heraldic rules by our experts.

Blazon Romano

Coat of arms of family Romano

1. Coat of arms of family: Romano
Language of the text: Italiano

Di nero, al leone d'oro coronato dello stesso, col lambello di tre pendenti di rosso attraversante sul leone.

Blasone della famiglia Romano in Campania; fonte bibliografica: "Dizionario storico blasonico delle famiglie nobili e notabili italiane estinte e fiorenti" vol. secondo, pag. 437, compilato dal Comm. G.B. di Crollalanza, edito presso la direzione del giornale araldico, Pisa 1888.

Download Crest

Order Heraldic Document
Coat of arms of family Romano

2. Coat of arms of family: Romano
Language of the text: Italiano

D'azzurro, alla banda d'oro, sostenente un leone illeopardito e coronato dello stesso, armato e lampassato di rosso, accostata nella punta da tre stelle d'oro, ordinate in banda.

Blasone della famiglia Romano in Calabria; fonte bibliografica: "Dizionario storico blasonico delle famiglie nobili e notabili italiane estinte e fiorenti" vol. secondo, pag. 437, compilato dal Comm. G.B. di Crollalanza, edito presso la direzione del giornale araldico, Pisa 1888.

Download Crest

Order Heraldic Document
Verba Volant, Scripta Manent
(Spoken words fly away, written words remain)
Examples of Heraldic Documents
Order now a Professional Heraldic Document

There is no future without a past
Consign the name of your family to History

Go to Catalog

Search last name

How to do a prelimiary Heraldic research

It is possible to do a preliminary research in our archive. About 100,000 heraldic traces, origins of surnames, coat of arms and blazons are available free of charge. Just write the desired last name in the form below and press enter.



Legal notices

  1. The Heraldic Traces are dossiers made by an A.I. useful as a starting point for researchers and passionate heraldists and confirm that there is information to work on and it is possible to order a heraldic document.
  2. Variations of surnames are frequent and mainly derive from involuntary acts such as translation errors or dialectal inflections or from voluntary acts such as attempts to escape persecution or acquisition of titles and properties of other families
     
  3. All content on this page is distributed under license Creative Commons Attribution - Share Alike 3.0 Unported .