Monthly Archives: April 2026

Territorial Abbot

Last March 19th the Right Reverend Alexandre Ineichen (59) was installed as the 40th Abbot of the Abbey of St. Maurice d’Augane in Switzerland. He had been confirmed in that position by Pope Leo XIV the previous October. The abbey is a community of Canons Regular and the Abbot is a Territorial Abbot, meaning that while he does not hold the rank of Bishop he nevertheless has the governing authority over the territory belonging to the Abbey as its Ordinary. Such a position used to be referred to as an Abbot Nullius but in more recent times is now called a Territorial Abbot. Many such abbacies had existed in former times with the Abbot exercising jurisdiction over not only the members of his community but of the diocesan clergy and lay faithful who lived within the territory of the abbacy. St. Paul VI began a process of phasing out such jurisdictions and today only a handful of them survive.

The distinguishing characteristic of the arms of a Territorial Abbot is that it makes use of the green galero, cords and tassels usually associated with the coat of arms of a bishop. However, since the armiger does not hold the rank of bishop there is no episcopal cross behind the shield but instead the usual veiled crozier of an abbot. Abbot Alexandre has also chosen to place the arms of the Abbey on an inescutchen overall rather than either quartering or impaling his arms with those of the Abbey, a good choice given the composition of his own personal arms.

Archbishop Mansell R.I.P.

On April 21, 2026 the Most Rev. Henry Mansell, Archbishop-Emeritus of Hartford, Connecticut entered into eternal life. He served as archbishop of the Archdiocese of Hartford in Connecticut from 2004 to 2013. Prior to that Archbishop Mansell served as bishop of the Diocese of Buffalo in New York from 1995 to 2003 and as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of New York  from 1992 to 1995. may he Rest in Peace.

United States Coat of Arms

OK people! Learn this and stop screwing it up! In this year when the USA celebrates 250 years of its Independence there will be a ton of schmaltzy Americana stuff all over the place.

The coat of arms of the USA and the flag of the USA are NOT the same thing. The coat of arms (found on the Great Seal of the U.S.) does NOT have stars on the blue field above the red & white stripes on the shield. The blue part (called a “chief”) is entirely blue with nothing on it!!! The stars appear in the crest above the eagle’s head which is a constellation of 13 stars surrounded by a glory and clouds. The flag depicts 50 stars on the blue canton. The flag is not a heraldic banner of the shield from the coat of arms. The shield is not a “vertical depiction” of the flag.

Get this correct, and don’t buy any junk that depicts the coat of arms incorrectly.