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Coat
of Arms of His Excellency
The Most Reverend
Walter P. Kellenberg, D.D.
First Bishop of Rockville Centre
Blazon:
Impaled Arms. Dexter: Per saltire azure and or, on an ogress
between two escallops in the flanks and one in base, the chief
charged with a lamb's head couped, all counterchanged, three
coupeaux, one over two, argent, with a bordure wavy of the last.
Sinister: Vert, two ears of corn, a mountain issuing from the
base or, charged with three ermine spots sable, on a chief argent,
two piles azure accosting a mullet of the last. Motto: "Regina
Verte Lumina."
Significance
The entire "achievement," or coat of arms, as it
is generally called, is composed of the shield with its charges,
the motto and the external ornaments. As one looks at the
shield, the terms "dexter" and "sinister"
must be understood contrariwise, as the shield was worn on
the arm in medieval days and these terms were used in the
relationship of one behind the armor.
By custom in ecclesiastical heraldry
the arms of the diocese are displayed in the dexter impalement,
on the left to the viewer.
The arms of the Diocese of Rockville
Centre are based on the history of Long Island and the etymology
of the name Rockville Centre. The shield is divided per saltire
and is bordered by a bordure composed of wavy lines.
The tinctures of the field within the
bordure are gold and blue. These identical tinctures appear
on the coat of arms of King William III of the House of Nassau
and on the arms which the county of Suffolk in England has
used at times, these arms being those of Ipswich. In 1692
Governor Benjamin Fletcher addressed the Council in the old
Stadt Huys in New York and expressed the wish that the name
of William III of the House of Nassau might be retained forever
among them, and therefore asked for a bill calllng Long Island
"The Island of Nassau." The blll was passed, and
as it has never been repealed, this is still the legal name
of the island (Long Island Almanac, 1931, p.71). Suffolk County,
Long Island, was named in honor of the county of like name
in England on November 1, 1683, by the First General Assembly
of the English colonists. It is these two counties which now
comprise the newly created Diocese of Rockville Centre. Thus,
Nassau and Suffolk are commemorated by the tinctures of the
arms of their forebears In England.
It is interesting to note that this
historical division of the shield into two colors is accomplished
by the heraldic saltire, which forms the Greek letter Chi,
the initial letter of Christ in that language.
Three of the four partitions formed by
the saltire are emblazoned with escallop shells for a very
definite reason. Although "Lange Eyeandt" was the
Dutch name Łor the island which was called by the Colonial
Legislature "Nassau," nevertheless, there were earlier
names for Long Island. When discovered in 1609 by Henry Hudson,
Long Island was inhabited by thirteen tribes of Algonquin
Indians. The names of these Indians were Matinecock, Nissaquag,
Setalcott, Corchaug, Canarsee, Rockaway, Merric, Marsapeague,
Secatogue, Patchogue, Shinnecock, Montauk and Manhasset. The
Long Island Almanac (1931, p. 71) says that "Names of
Long Island are a record of the Indian, Dutch and English
occupation." There were no less than twelve names for
the island itself, besides those of Nassau and Long Island.
Seawanhacky or "Island of Shells" was the name generally
used by the Indians of the mainland in preference to Matouwacks
or the rarer Paumanock. Wampanamon is also one of the names
which the Algonquin Indians bestowed on Long Island. It takes
its meaning from "wampum" and also means "Island
of Shells." The name was given to the extreme eastern
point of the Island. It first occurs, among the colonists
in the Indian deed of July 11, 1661, for Montauk. Wampum,
or white money, was made originally from the stem or stock
of the periwinkle. Suckanhock, or black money, was made from
the inside of the, shell of the quahaug or hard clam. The
three principal Indian names given the islands, Meitanawack
(Matouwacks), Seawanhacky and Poumanock, are derived from
the industry carried on by the Indians in the manufacture
of beads and other ornaments from shells. Meitanawack (Matouwacks
) is the material of which the shells were made; Seawanhacky
was the article itself, finished and ready for sale; and Paumanock
was the tax or tribute of wampum which the Indians were obliged
to pay.
The reason for the three escallop shells (Island of Shells)
on the coat of arms is now apparent. The escallop shell is
also truly heraldic, and a symbol which is often used to signify
the flowing of water in the Sacrament of Baptism; in the Middle
Ages anyone who made the pilgrimage to the Shrine of St. James
the Greater at Compostella was entitled to wear the escallop
shell as a badge.
The wavy silver bordure is the heraldic equivalent of water
and, surrounding, as it does, the other charges, signifies
the insular nature of the diocese. Medieval heraldry was very
fond of these canting arms or "armes parlantes,"
which are allusive arms bespeaking the name of the bearer
- the shells express the Indian name for Long Island.
The lamb's head is the symbol of St. Agnes, virgin and martyr,
the titular of the Cathedral of the Diocese of Rockville Centre.
St. Agnes has been represented with a lamb, the symbol of
her virginal innocence, since the Middle Ages. On her feast,
January 21, two lambs are solemnly blessed and from their
wool are made the palliums sent by the Pope to the archbishops
of the Church throughout the world.
The black roundle in the center of the shield with the three
stones or rocks affords canting arms for Rockville Centre.
The black roundle is indeed in the exact center of the shield.
The three rocks or stones are derived from the coat of arms
of Pope Pius XII, who established the new Diocese of Rockville
Centre in April, 1957. The roundle is tinctured in black to
represent the seventeenth century name of Brooklyn, from the
diocese of which the See of Rockville Centre was separated
in April of 1957. The black tincture represents the marshes,
which recalled to the Dutch their homeland in Breuckelen on
the Vecht in the Province of Utrecht. The Dutch who settled
Brooklyn at first called it "Breuck-Landt," meaning
"broken land," or "marshland," inasmuch
as a great deal of land was broken up by patches of water.
The sinister impalement bears the personal
coat of arms of Bishop Kellenberg. The coat of arms of the
Kellenberg family, which stems from the vicinity of Holland
and Germany, consists of a mountain in natural colors upon
a black field with a golden chief (upper compartment) bearing
a black eagle. The coat of arms of Bishop Kellenberg has been
differenced by changing the tincture of the field from black
to green to recall Saint Patrick as the patron of the Bishop's
native Archdiocese of New York, and to commemorate the eighteen
years which the Bishop spent as a priest in Saint Patrick's
Cathedral.
The mountain in the base and the two ears of corn form canting
arms which bear symbols for the name of the bearer, "Berg,"
the last syllable of Kellenberg, means mountain in German;
and "Kern," the family name of the Bishop's mother,
means an ear of corn. Several Kern coats of arms bear ears
of corn to confirm this etymology.
A trinitarian number of ermine spots are charged on the mountain
for patronage to His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, whom
Bishop Kellenberg served as Auxiliary Bishop.
Besides the ears of corn, the shield has been further differenced
by removing the eagle from the chlef and substituting a blue
star between two like-tinctured piles (reversed triangular
objects) on a silver field to honor the Blessed Mother of
God by her colors, blue and white. The star is the symbol
of the Blessed Virgin under the title of Morning Star from
her litany. This star also recalls Saint Mary's Cathedral
in the Diocese of Ogdensburg, where Bishop Kellenberg ruled
at the time of his appointmen to Rockville Centre.
The motto is taken from the hymn of first vespers in the new
office of the Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady on August
15. It is translated:
"Queen, guide me by thy light."
The external ornaments are composed of the green pontifical
hat with its six tassels on each side disposed in three rows,
and the precious mitre, the processional cross and the crosier,
all in gold. These are the presently accepted heraldic trappings
of a prelate of the rank of Bishop. Before 1870, the pontifical
hat was worn at solemn cavalcades held in conjunction with
papal functions. The color of the pontifical hat and the number
and color of the tassels were signs of the rank of a prelate,
a custom which is still preserved in ecclesiastical heraldry.

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