Cross pattée

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A cross pattée (also known as a "cross pattee", "cross patty" or "cross formy") is a type of cross that has arms which are narrow at the center, and broader at the perimeter. The name comes from the fact that the shape of each arm of the cross was thought to resemble a paw (French patte). Here are several variants of the cross pattée:

The heraldic cross pattée was sometimes used by the Teutonic Knights (though their more usual emblem was a plain straight black cross on white), and later became associated with Prussia and the 1871-1918 German empire, and continues to be used by the German military after 1918. A version of the Iron Cross is used to date by the German army (Bundeswehr) as its symbol and nationality marking and found on vehicles, aircraft and publications.

The cross pattée is also placed before the name of the bishop who issues a Catholic imprimatur, is occasionally found as a map symbol indicating the location of a Christian site, and is the logo of the "Independent" skate clothing line (in the "alisee" form, with the ends of the arms in the shape of arcs of an enclosing circle). It is also associated with the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity.

A red cross pattée was adopted by the Knights Templar after their official recognition in 1128 by the Synod of Troyes. This cross is often associated with Crusaders or the Crusades.

The character "X" is rendered as a cross pattee in the Microsoft Wingdings font.

[edit] Doubtful examples of cross pattee

The cross pattée is sometimes confused with a Maltese cross. Sometimes a form of the cross is found which is intermediate between a cross pattée and a Maltese Cross, but is neither of the two (though this might sometimes have been considered to be a cross pattée). An altered form with parallel straight lines near the center is well-known in continental European heraldry (and so is called a cross pattee in Rudolf Koch's Book of Signs and a few other sources), but it is doubtful whether this meets the ordinary definition of the English-language term "cross pattée".

Unicode defines the "Cross of Jerusalem" in the Miscellaneous Symbols range at codepoint U+2629, displayed as a Cross potent.

[edit] See also

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