
The conjoined representation of a crescent and a star is used in various historical contexts, including as a prominent symbol of the Ottoman Empire, and in contemporary times, as a national symbol by some countries, and by some Muslims as a symbol of Islam, while other Muslims reject it as an Islamic symbol. It was developed in the Greek colony of Byzantium ca. 300 BC, though it became more widely used as the royal emblem of Pontic king Mithridates VI Eupator after he incorporated Byzantium into his kingdom for a short period. During the 5th century, it was present in coins minted by the Persian Sassanian Empire; the symbol was represented in the coins minted across the empire throughout the Middle East for more than 400 years from the 3rd century until the fall of the Sassanians after the Muslim conquest of Persia in the 7th century. The conquering Muslim rulers kept the symbol in their coinage during the early years of the caliphate, as the coins were exact replicas of the Sassanian coins.
Both elements of the symbol have a long history in the iconography of the Ancient Near East as representing either the Sun and Moon or the Moon and Venus (Morning Star) (or their divine personifications). It has been suggested that the crescent actually represents Venus, or the Sun during an eclipse. Coins with crescent and star symbols represented separately have a longer history, with possible ties to older Mesopotamian iconography. The star, or Sun, is often shown within the arc of the crescent (also called star in crescent, or star within crescent, for disambiguation of depictions of a star and a crescent side by side). In numismatics in particular, the term crescent and pellet is used in cases where the star is simplified to a single dot.
The combination is found comparatively rarely in late medieval and early modern heraldry. It rose to prominence with its adoption as the flag and national symbol of the Ottoman Empire and some of its administrative divisions (eyalets and vilayets) and later in the 19th-century Westernizing tanzimat (reforms). The Ottoman flag of 1844, with a white ay-yıldız (Turkish for "crescent-star") on a red background, continues in use as the flag of the Republic of Turkey, with minor modifications. Other states formerly part of the Ottoman Empire also used the symbol, including Libya (1951–1969 and after 2011), Tunisia (1831) and Algeria (1958). The same symbol was used in other national flags introduced during the 20th century, including the flags of Kazakhstan (1917), Azerbaijan (1918), Pakistan (1947), Malaysia (1948), Singapore (1959), Mauritania (1959), Azad Kashmir (1974), Uzbekistan (1991), Turkmenistan (1991) and Comoros (2001). In the latter 20th century, the star and crescent have acquired a popular interpretation as a "symbol of Islam", occasionally embraced by Arab nationalism or Islamism in the 1970s to 1980s but often rejected as erroneous or unfounded by Muslim commentators in more recent times. Unlike the cross, which is a symbol of Jesus' crucifixion in Christianity, there is no solid link that connects the star and crescent symbol with the concept of Islam. The connotation is widely believed to have come from the flag of the Ottoman Empire, whose prestige as an Islamic empire and caliphate led to the adoption of its state emblem as a symbol of Islam by association.
Unicode introduced a "crescent and star" character in its Miscellaneous Symbols block, at U+262A (☪).
History
Origins and predecessors
Crescents appearing together with a star or stars are a common feature of Sumerian iconography, the crescent usually being associated with the moon god Sin (Nanna) and the star with Ishtar (Inanna, i.e. Venus), often placed alongside the sun disk of Shamash.
In Late Bronze Age Canaan, star and crescent moon motifs are also found on Moabite name seals.
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The depiction of the crescent-and-star or "star inside crescent" as it would later develop in Bosporan Kingdom is difficult to trace to Mesopotamian art. Exceptionally, a combination of the crescent of Sin with the five-pointed star of Ishtar, with the star placed inside the crescent as in the later Hellenistic-era symbol, placed among numerous other symbols, is found in a boundary stone of Nebuchadnezzar I (12th century BC; found in Nippur by John Henry Haynes in 1896). An example of such an arrangement is also found in the (highly speculative) reconstruction of a fragmentary stele of Ur-Nammu (Third Dynasty of Ur) discovered in the 1920s.
A very early depiction of the symbol (crescent moon, stars and sun disc) is found on the Nebra sky disc, dating from c. 1800 – c. 1600 BC (Nebra, Germany). A gold signet ring from Mycenae dating from the 15th century BC also shows the symbol. The star and crescent (or 'crescent and pellet') symbol appears 19 times on the Berlin Gold Hat, dating from c. 1000 BC.
Classical antiquity
Greeks and Romans
Many ancient Greek (classical and hellenistic) and Roman amulets which depict stars and crescent have been found.
Mithradates VI Eupator of Pontus (r. 120–63 BC) used an eight rayed star with a crescent moon as his emblem. McGing (1986) notes the association of the star and crescent with Mithradates VI, discussing its appearance on his coins, and its survival in the coins of the Bosporan Kingdom where "[t]he star and crescent appear on Pontic royal coins from the time of Mithradates III and seem to have had oriental significance as a dynastic badge of the Mithridatic family, or the arms of the country of Pontus." Several possible interpretations of the emblem have been proposed. In most of these, the "star" is taken to represent the Sun. The combination of the two symbols has been taken as representing Sun and Moon (and by extension Day and Night), the Zoroastrian Mah and Mithra, or deities arising from Greek-Anatolian-Iranian syncretism, the crescent representing Mēn Pharnakou (Μήν Φαρνακου, the local moon god) and the "star" (Sun) representing Ahuramazda (in interpretatio graeca called Zeus Stratios)
By the late Hellenistic or early Roman period, the star and crescent motif had been associated to some degree with Byzantium. If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople, it was Hecate. Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding. Like Byzas in one legend, she had her origins in Thrace. Hecate was considered the patron goddess of Byzantium because she was said to have saved the city from an attack by Philip of Macedon in 340 BC by the appearance of a bright light in the sky. To commemorate the event the Byzantines erected a statue of the goddess known as the Lampadephoros ("torch-bearer" or "torch-bringer").
Some Byzantine coins of the 1st century BC and later show the head of Artemis with bow and quiver, and feature a crescent with what appears to be a six-rayed star on the reverse.
- Crescent and star on a coin of Uranopolis, Macedon, ca. 300 BC (see also Argead star).
- A crescent and star symbol with the star shown in a sixteen-rayed "sunburst" design (3rd century BC) on the Ai-Khanoum plaque.
- Coin of Mithradates VI Eupator. The obverse side has the inscription ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ΜΙΘΡΑΔΑΤΟΥ ΕΥΠΑΤΟΡΟΣ with a stag feeding, with the star and crescent and monogram of Pergamum placed near the stag's head, all in an ivy-wreath.
- Roman-era coin with Greek inscription (1st century AD) with a bust of Artemis on the obverse and an eight-rayed star within a crescent on the reverse side.
The moon-goddess Selene is commonly depicted with a crescent moon, often accompanied by two stars (the stars represent Phosphorus, the morning star, and Hesperus, the evening star); sometimes, instead of a crescent, a lunar disc is used. Often a crescent moon rests on her brow, or the cusps of a crescent moon protrude, horn-like, from her head, or from behind her head or shoulders.
- The Moon-goddess Selene or Luna accompanied by the Dioscuri, or Phosphoros (the Morning Star) and Hesperos (the Evening Star). Marble altar, Roman artwork, 2nd century AD. From Italy.
- The goddess Selene, illustration from Meyers Lexikon, 1888.
In the 2nd century, the star-within-crescent is found on the obverse side of Roman coins minted during the rule of Hadrian, Geta, Caracalla and Septimius Severus, in some cases as part of an arrangement of a crescent and seven stars, one or several of which were placed inside the crescent.
- Coin of Roman Emperor Hadrian (r. 117–138). The reverse shows an eight-rayed star within a crescent.
- Roman period limestone pediment from Perge, Turkey (Antalya Museum) showing Diana-Artemis with a crescent and a radiant crown.
Iran (Persia)
The crescent and star symbol appears on some coins of the Parthian vassal kingdom of Elymais in the late 1st century AD. The same symbol is present in coins that are possibly associated with Orodes I of Parthia (1st century BC). In the 2nd century AD, some Parthian coins show a simplified "pellet within crescent" symbol.
- A crescent and star appearing (separately) on the obverse side of a coin of Orodes II of Parthia (r. 57–37 BC).
- Coin of Vardanes I of Parthia (r. c. AD 40–45)
- Coin of the Sasanian king Kavad II, minted at Susa in 628
- Gold coin of Khosrow II (r. 570–628).
- Coin of Khosrow III
- Coin of Hormizd IV
- Silver dirham issued by Ispahbudh Khurshid of Tabaristan
- Arab-Sassanian coin was issued, which was added with arabic writing by the Umayyads
The crescent and star motif appears on the margin of Sassanid coins in the 5th century. Sassanid rulers also appear to have used crowns featuring a crescent, sphere and crescent, or star and crescent.
Use of the crescent-and-star combination apparently goes back to the earlier appearance of a star and a crescent on Parthian coins, first under King Orodes II (1st century BC). In these coins, the two symbols occur separately, on either side of the king's head, and not yet in their combined star-and-crescent form. Such coins are also found further afield in Greater Persia, by the end of the 1st century AD in a coin issued by the Western Satraps ruler Chashtana. This arrangement is likely inherited from its Ancient Near Eastern predecessors; the star and crescent symbols are not frequently found in Achaemenid iconography, but they are present in some cylinder seals of the Achaemenid era.
Ayatollahi (2003) attempts to connect the modern adoption as an "Islamic symbol" to Sassanid coins remaining in circulation after the Islamic conquest which is an analysis that stands in stark contrast to established consensus that there is no evidence for any connection of the symbol with Islam or the Ottomans prior to its adoption in Ottoman flags in the late 18th century.
Western Turkic Khaganate
Coins from the Western Turkic Khaganate had a crescent moon and a star, which held an important place in the worldview of ancient Turks and other peoples of Central Asia.
Medieval and early modern
Christian and classical heraldric usage
The crescent on its own is used in western heraldry from at least the 13th century, while the star and crescent (or "Sun and Moon") emblem is in use in medieval seals at least from the late 12th century. The crescent in pellet symbol is used in Crusader coins of the 12th century, in some cases duplicated in the four corners of a cross, as a variant of the cross-and-crosslets ("Jerusalem cross"). Many Crusader seals and coins show the crescent and the star (or blazing Sun) on either side of the ruler's head (as in the Sassanid tradition), e.g. Bohemond III of Antioch, Richard I of England, Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse. At the same time, the star in crescent is found on the obverse of Crusader coins, e.g. in coins of the County of Tripoli minted under Raymond II or III c. 1140s–1160s show an "eight-rayed star with pellets above crescent".
The star and crescent combination appears in attributed arms from the early 14th century, possibly in a coat of arms of c. 1330, possibly attributed to John Chrysostom, and in the Wernigeroder Wappenbuch (late 15th century) attributed to one of the three Magi, named "Balthasar of Tarsus".
Crescents (without the star) increase in popularity in early modern heraldry in Europe. Siebmachers Wappenbuch (1605) records 48 coats of arms of German families which include one or several crescents.
A star and crescent symbolizing Croatia was commonly found on 13th-century banovac coins in the Kingdom of Slavonia, with a two-barred cross symbolizing the Kingdom of Hungary.
St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna used to have at the top of its highest tower a golden crescent with a star; it came to be seen as a symbol of Islam and the Ottoman enemy, which is why it was replaced with a cross in 1686.
In the late 16th century, the Korenić-Neorić Armorial shows a white star and crescent on a red field as the coat of arms of "Illyria".
The star and crescent combination remains rare prior to its adoption by the Ottoman Empire in the second half of the 18th century.[citation needed]
- Great Seal of Richard I of England (1198)
- Equestrian seal of Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse with a star and a crescent (13th century)
- The crescent flag ascribed to the Hungarians against the Mongol Golden Horde in the Battle of Mohi, 1241.
- Battle of Wadi al-Khaznadar (Battle of Homs) of 1299 (14th-century miniature)
- Historical coat of arms of Kunság, where Cumans in Hungary settled, 1279.
- Templar seal of the 13th century, probably of the preceptor of the commanderies at Coudrie and Biais (Brittany).
- Polish coats of arms, called Leliwa (1334 seal)
- Coats of arms of the Three Magi, with "Baltasar of Tarsus" being attributed a star and crescent increscent in a blue field, Wernigerode Armorial (c. 1490)
- Coat of arms of John Freigraf of "Lesser Egypt" (i.e. Romani/gypsy), 18th-century drawing of a 1498 coat of arms in Pforzheim church.
- Depictions of stars with crescents are a common motif on the stećak 12th to 16th century tombstones of medieval Bosnia
- 1668 representation by Joan Blaeu of Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Bosnia from 1595 Korenić-Neorić Armorial
- The coat of arms of "Illyria" from the Korenić-Neorić Armorial (1590s)
- Banner of Cumania, used at the coronation of Ferdinand II of Hungary in 1618 and assigned to Gáspár (Caspar) Illésházy.
- Star and crescent on the obverse of the Jelacic-Gulden of the Kingdom of Croatia (1848)
- Coat of arms of the noble family Slatte (1625–1699) in Sweden.
- Coat of arms of the noble family Finckenberg (1627–1809) in Sweden.
- Coat of arms of the noble family Boose (1642–1727) in Sweden.
- Banner of the Zaporizhian Sich (Cossacks of Ukraine) before 1775.
- Coat of arms of Transylvania
Muslim usage
While the crescent on its own is depicted as an emblem used on Islamic war flags from the medieval period, at least from the 13th century although it does not seem to have been in frequent use until the 14th or 15th century, the star and crescent in an Islamic context is more rare in the medieval period, but may occasionally be found in depictions of flags from the 14th century onward.
Some Mughal era (17th century) round shields were decorated with a crescent or star and crescent.
- Depiction of a star and crescent flag on the Saracen side in the Battle of Yarmouk (manuscript illustration of the History of the Tatars, Catalan workshop, early 14th century).
- A miniature painting from a Padshahnama manuscript (c. 1640), depicting Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan as bearing a shield with a star and crescent decoration.
- A painting from a Padshahnama manuscript (1633) depicts the scene of Aurangzeb facing the maddened war elephant Sudhakar. Sowar's shield is decorated with a star and crescent.
- Ottoman sipahis in battle, holding the crescent banner (by Józef Brandt)
- Flag of the Emirate of Jabal Shammar (Ha'il in today's Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) from 1835 to 1921
- Coat of arms of Khedivate of Egypt (1867–1914)
- Flag of the Kingdom of Egypt (1922–1953) and co-official flag of the Republic of Egypt (1953–1958)
- Flag of the Free Officers Movement (1949–1953) and co-official flag of the Republic of Egypt (1953–1958)
- Flag of the Sultanate of Aceh (1496–1903)
Use in the Ottoman Empire
The adoption of crescent and star as the Ottoman state symbol started during the reign of Mustafa III (1757–1774) and its use became well-established during the periods of Abdul Hamid I (1774–1789) and Selim III (1789–1807). A decree (buyruldu) from 1793 states that the ships in the Ottoman navy fly that flag, and various other documents from earlier and later years mention its use. The ultimate source of the emblem is unclear. It is mostly derived from the star-and-crescent symbol used by the city of Constantinople in antiquity, possibly by association with the crescent design (without the star) used in Turkish flags since before 1453.
With the Tanzimat reforms in the 19th century, flags were redesigned in the style of the European armies of the day. The flag of the Ottoman Navy was made red, as red was to be the flag of secular institutions and green of religious ones. As the reforms abolished all the various flags (standards) of the Ottoman pashaliks, beyliks and emirates, a single new Ottoman national flag was designed to replace them. The result was the red flag with the white crescent moon and star, which is the precursor to the modern flag of Turkey. A plain red flag was introduced as the civil ensign for all Ottoman subjects. The white crescent with an eight-pointed star on a red field is depicted as the flag of a "Turkish Man of War" in Colton's Delineation of Flags of All Nations (1862). Steenbergen's Vlaggen van alle Natiën of the same year shows a six-pointed star. A plate in Webster's Unabridged of 1882 shows the flag with an eight-pointed star labelled "Turkey, Man of war". The five-pointed star seems to have been present alongside these variants from at least 1857.
In addition to Ottoman imperial insignia, symbols appear on the flag of Bosnia Eyalet (1580–1867) and Bosnia Vilayet (1867–1908), as well as the flag of 1831 Bosnian revolt, while the symbols appeared on some representations of medieval Bosnian coat of arms too.
In the late 19th century, "Star and Crescent" came to be used as a metaphor for Ottoman rule in British literature. The increasingly ubiquitous fashion of using the star and crescent symbol in the ornamentation of Ottoman mosques and minarets led to a gradual association of the symbol with Islam in general in western Orientalism. The "Red Crescent" emblem was used by volunteers of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as early as 1877 during the Russo-Turkish War; it was officially adopted in 1929.
After the foundation of the Republic of Turkey in 1923, the new Turkish state maintained the last flag of the Ottoman Empire. Proportional standardisations were introduced in the Turkish Flag Law (Turkish: Türk Bayrağı Kanunu) of May 29, 1936. Besides the most prominent example of Turkey (see Flag of Turkey), a number of other Ottoman successor states adopted the design during the 20th century, including the Emirate of Cyrenaica and the Kingdom of Libya, Algeria, Tunisia, and the proposed Arab Islamic Republic.
Contemporary use
National flags
The flag of Tunisia (1831) is the first to use the star and crescent design in 1831. This continues to be the Tunisian national flag post-independence. A decade later, the Ottoman flag of 1844 with a white "ay-yıldız" (Turkish for "crescent-star") on a red background continues to be in use as the flag of the Republic of Turkey with minor modifications.
Other states in the Ottoman sphere of influence using the star and crescent design in their flats such as Libya (1951, re-introduced 2011) and Algeria (1958). The modern emblem of Turkey shows the star outside the arc of the crescent, as it were a "realistic" depiction of a conjunction of Moon and Venus, while in the 19th century, the Ottoman star and crescent was occasionally still drawn as the star-within-crescent. By contrast, the designs of both the flags of Algeria and Tunisia (as well as Mauritania and Pakistan) place the star within the crescent.
- Flag of Turkey
- Flag of Tunisia
- Flag of Libya
- Flag of Algeria
The same symbol was used in other national flags introduced during the 20th century, including the flags of Kazakhstan (1917), Azerbaijan (1918, re-introduced 1991), the Rif Republic (1921), Pakistan (1947), Malaysia (1948), Mauritania (1959), Kashmir (1974) and the partially recognized states of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (1976) and Northern Cyprus (1983). The symbol also may represent flag of cities or emirates such as the emirate of Umm Al-Quwain.
- Flag of Azerbaijan
- Flag of the Rif Republic
- Flag of Pakistan
- Flag of Malaysia
- Flag of Mauritania
- Flag of Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
- Flag of Northern Cyprus
- Flag of Umm al-Quwain
- Flag of East Turkestan (1934)
- Flag of Iraq Turkmens
- Flag of Syrian Turkmen
- Flag of Azad Kashmir
- Alash Autonomy (1917)
- Turkestan Autonomy (1917-1918)
National flags with a crescent alongside several stars:
- Flag of Singapore (1965): crescent and five stars
- Flag of Uzbekistan (1991): crescent and twelve stars
- Flag of Turkmenistan (2001): crescent and five stars (representing five provinces)
- Flag of the Comoros (2002): crescent and four stars (representing four islands)
- Flag of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands of Australia (2003): crescent and southern cross
National flags and coat of arms with star, crescent and other symbols:
- Flag of Moldova (1990)
- Flag of Croatia (1990)
- Flag of Miꞌkmaꞌki (1867)
- Coat of arms of Romania
- Flag of Moldavia (15th to 16th century)
Symbol of Islam
By the mid-20th century, the symbol came to be re-interpreted as a symbol of Islam or the Muslim community. This symbolism was embraced by movements of Arab nationalism or Islamism in the 1970s too, such as the proposed Arab Islamic Republic (1974) and the American Nation of Islam (1973).
Cyril Glassé in his The New Encyclopedia of Islam (2001 edition, s.v. "Moon") states that "in the language of conventional symbols, the crescent and star have become the symbols of Islam as much as the cross is the symbol of Christianity."
By contrast, Crescent magazine — a religious Islamic publication — quoted without giving names that "Many Muslim scholars reject using the crescent moon as a symbol of Islam".
On February 28, 2017, it was announced by the Qira County government in Hotan Prefecture, Xinjiang, China that those who reported others for stitching the 'star and crescent moon' insignia on their clothing or personal items or having the words 'East Turkestan' on their mobile phone case, purse or other jewelry, would be eligible for cash payments.
Municipal coats of arms
The crescent and star as a traditional heraldic charge is in continued use in numerous municipal coats of arms (notably the based on the Leliwa (Tarnowski) coat of arms in the case of Polish municipalities).
- Coat of arms of Halle an der Saale, Germany (1327).
- Coat of arms of Mińsk Mazowiecki, Poland.
- Coat of arms of Przeworsk, Poland.
- Coat of arms of Tarnobrzeg, Poland.
- Coat of arms of Tarnów, Poland.
- Coat of arms of Zagreb, Croatia.
- Flag of Portsmouth, England (18th century): crescent and estoile (with eight wavy rays).
- Coat of arms of Mattighofen, Austria (1781)
- Coat of arms of Oelde, Germany (1910).
- Coat of arms of Niederglatt, Switzerland (1928)
- Coat of arms of Oberglatt, Switzerland (1928)
- Coat of arms of Niederweningen, Switzerland (1928)
- Coat of arms of Drogheda, Ireland
- Coat of arms of Algueirão-Mem Martins parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Aljezur parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Celorico da Beira municipality, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Nisa municipality, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Nossa Senhora das Misericórdias parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Oliveira do Bairro municipality, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Penacova municipality, Portugal
- Coat of arms of São Brás de Alportel parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Sintra municipality, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Sobreda parish, Portugal
- Coat of arms of Vouzela municipality, Portugal
Sports Club Emblems
In rugby union, Saracens F.C. incorporates the crescent and star in its crest. Drogheda United F.C., Portsmouth F.C., and S.U. Sintrense all borrow the crescent and star from their respective towns' coats of arms. Mohammedan SC in Kolkata, India also incorporates the symbol in its crest.
- Emblem of Saracens F.C.
Other uses
- Post WWII flag of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF)
- Turkish Air Force aviator badge
- Flag of the Pakistan Army
- Flag of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity
- Flag of the Organization of Turkic States
- Insignia of East Bengal Regiment
- Logo of Shriners International
- Logo of the Felicity Party of Turkey
- Logo of the Crescent Star Party of Indonesia
See also
- Star
- Lunar phase
- Pentagram of Venus
- New Orleans Police Department
References
- Cyril Glassé , The New Encyclopedia of Islam (revised ed. 2001), s.v. "Moon" (p. 314).
- "Many Muslim scholars reject using the crescent moon as a symbol of Islam. The faith of Islam historically had no symbol, and many refuse to accept it." Fiaz Fazli, Crescent magazine, Srinagar, September 2009, p. 42.
- Andrew G. Traver, From Polis to Empire, The Ancient World, c. 800 B.C.–A.D. 500, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, p. 257
- "The star and crescent are common Persian symbols, being a regular feature of the borders of Sassanian dirhems." Philip Grierson, Byzantine Coins, Taylor & Francis, 1982, p118
- Bradley Schaefer (21 December 1991). "Heavenly Signs". New Scientist: 48–51.
- David Lance Goines (18 October 1995). "Inferential evidence for the pre-telescopic sighting of the crescent Venus".
- This would explain cases where the inside curve of the crescent has a smaller radius of curvature than the outer, the opposite of what happens with the moon. Jay M. Pasachoff (1 February 1992). "Crescent Sun". New Scientist.
- "There are also three cases [... viz., associated with the "Danubian Rider Religion"] where the star, figured as a radiate disc 'balancing the crescent moon', must represent Sol, balancing Luna who is represented as a crescent instead of in bust. The 'star in crescent' theme itself appears only once, on an engraved gem, accompanied by the lion and an indecipherable inscription [...] This theme is connected with the Orient and has a long history behind it in the Hittite, Babylonian, Assyrian, Sassanid and Iranian worlds. Campbell gives us valuable particulars. The heavenly bodies thus symbolized were seen as the powerful influence of cosmic fatalism guiding the destinies of men." Dumitru Tudor, Christopher Holme (trans.), Corpus Monumentorum Religionis Equitum Danuvinorum (CMRED) (1976), p. 192 (referencing Leroy A. Campbell, Mithraic Iconography and Ideology' '(1969), 93f.
- e.g. Catalogue of the Greek coins in The British Museum (2005), p. 311 (index).
- A similar stele found in Babylon is kept in the British Museum (no. 90837).
- Michael R. Molnar, The Star of Bethlehem, Rutgers University Press, 1999, p78
- "the three celestial emblems, the sun disk of Shamash (Utu to the Sumerians), the crescent of Sin (Nanna), and the star of Ishtar (Inanna to the Sumerians)" Irving L. Finkel, Markham J. Geller, Sumerian Gods and Their Representations, Styx, 1997, p71. André Parrot, Sumer: The Dawn of Art, Golden Press, 1961
- Othmar Keel, Christoph Uehlinger, Gods, Goddesses, and Images of God in Ancient Israel, Fortress Press, 1998, p. 322.
- A.H. Gardiner, Egyptian Grammar: Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs. 3rd Ed., pub. Griffith Institute, Oxford, 1957 (1st edition 1927), p. 486.
- W. J. Hinke, A New Boundary Stone of Nebuchadrezzar I from Nippur with a Concordance of Proper Names and a Glossary of the Kudurru Inscriptions thus far Published (1907), 120f. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, object nr. 29-20-1.
- J. V. Canby, Reconstructing the Ur Nammu Stela, Expedition 29.1, 54–64.
- Christopher A. Faraone (2018). The Transformation of Greek Amulets in Roman Imperial Times. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 40–53. ISBN 978-0-8122-4935-4.
- B.C. McGing, The Foreign Policy of Mithradates VI Eupator, King of Pontus, Brill, 1986, p 97
- "The star and the crescent, the emblem of the Pontus and its kings, were introduced by Mithradates and his successors to the Bosporus and appeared on Bosporan coins and locally produced jewelry. On the coins this symbol often appears near the head of a young man wearing a Phrygian cap, who is identified as either a solar deity or his deified worshipper. [...] the star and the crescent, the badge of the Pontus and its kings, shown on the Colchian amphora stamp, and appearing on engraved finger-rings discovered in this area allude to the possibility of an earlier association of the Pontic dynasty with the cult of mounted Mithra. Mithra in fact must have been one of the most venerated gods of the Pontic Kingdom, since its rulers bore the theophoric name of Mithradates [...] although direct evidence for this cult is rather meager." Yulia Ustinova, The Supreme Gods of the Bosporan Kingdom, Brill, 1998, 270–274
- Strabo (12.3.31) writes that Mēn Pharnakou had a sanctuary at Kabeira in Pontus where the Pontic kings would swear oaths. Mēn Pharnakou is a syncretistic Anatolian-Iranian moon deity not directly comparable to Zoroastrian Māh. Albert F. de Jong, Traditions of the Magi: Zoroastrianism in Greek and Latin Literature (1997), %A9n%20Pharmakou&f=false p. 306.
- "His royal emblem, an eight rayed star and the crescent moon, represented the dynasty's patron gods, Zeus Stratios, or Ahuramazda, and Mén Pharnakou, a Persian form of the native moon goddess." Andrew G. Traver, From Polis to Empire—The Ancient World c. 800 B.C.–A.D. 450, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, p. 257
- "The significance of the star and crescent on royal coins has also been frequently debated. Many scholars have identified the star and the crescent as royal symbols of the Pontic kingdom. Their appearance on every royal issue suggests they were indeed important symbols, and the connection of this symbol to the royal family is definite. The nature of it, however, is still uncertain. Kleiner believed they were symbols of an indigenous god and had their origins in Persia. He associated the star and crescent with the god Men and saw them as representations of night and day (the star may be considered the sun here). Ritter, on the other hand, suggested that the star and crescent symbols derived from Perseus, just as the star symbol of the Macedonians did. […] Ma and Mithras are two other deities with whom the star and crescent symbol are associated. Olshausen believed that the star and crescent could be related to a syncretism of Pontic and Iranian iconography: the crescent for Men and the star for Ahura Mazda. Recently, Summerer has convincingly suggested that Men alone was the inspiration for the symbol on the royal coins of the Pontic kingdom. Deniz Burcu Erciyas, "Wealth, Aristocracy, and Royal Propaganda Under The Hellenistic Kingdom of The Mithradatids in The Central Black Sea Region in Turkey", Colloquia Pontica Vol.12, Brill, 2005, p 131
- "Devotion to Hecate was especially favored by the Byzantines for her aid in having protected them from the incursions of Philip of Macedon. Her symbols were the crescent and star, and the walls of her city were her provenance." Vasiliki Limberis, Divine Heiress, Routledge, 1994, p 15. "In 340 B.C., however, the Byzantines, with the aid of the Athenians, withstood a siege successfully, an occurrence the more remarkable as they were attacked by the greatest general of the age, Philip of Macedon. In the course of this beleaguerment, it is related, on a certain wet and moonless night the enemy attempted a surprise, but were foiled by reason of a bright light which, appearing suddenly in the heavens, startled all the dogs in the town and thus roused the garrison to a sense of their danger. To commemorate this timely phenomenon, which was attributed to Hecate, they erected a public statue to that goddess [...]" William Gordon Holmes, The Age of Justinian and Theodora, 2003 p 5-6; "If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople, it was Hecate. Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding. Like Byzas in one legend, she had her origins in Thrace. Since Hecate was the guardian of "liminal places", in Byzantium small temples in her honor were placed close to the gates of the city. Hecate's importance to Byzantium was above all as deity of protection. When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city, according to the legend she alerted the townspeople with her ever-present torches, and with her pack of dogs, which served as her constant companions. Her mythic qualities thenceforth forever entered the fabric of Byzantine history. A statue known as the 'Lampadephoros' was erected on the hill above the Bosphorous to commemorate Hecate's defensive aid." Vasiliki Limberis, Divine Heiress, Routledge, 1994, pp. 126–127. This story survived in the works , who in all probability lived in the time of Justinian I. His works survive only in fragments preserved in Photius and the 10th century lexicographer Suidas. The tale is also related by Stephanus of Byzantium, and Eustathius.
- On the Ai-Khanoum plaque from Ai Khanoum, Bactria, 3rd century BC. Helios is shown separately in the form of a bust with a rayed halo of thirteen rays. F. Tissot, Catalogue of the National Museum of Afghanistan, 1931-1985 (2006), p. 42.
- H. G. Liddell, A History of Rome from the earliest times to the establishment of the Empire (1857), p. 605. C.f. forumancientcoins.com.
- LIMC, Selene, Luna 35.
- Cohen, Beth, "Outline as a Special Technique in Black- and Red-figure Vase-painting", in The Colors of Clay: Special Techniques in Athenian Vases, Getty Publications, 2006, ISBN 9780892369423, pp. 178–179;
- Savignoni L. 1899. "On Representations of Helios and of Selene." The Journal of Hellenic Studies 19: pp. 270–271
- Zschietzschmann, W, Hellas and Rome: The Classical World in Pictures, Kessinger Publishing, 2006. ISBN 9781428655447. p.23
- British Museum 1923,0401.199; LIMC Selene, Luna 21 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 4 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Mithras 113 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 15 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 34 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 2 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 7 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 9 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 10 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine; LIMC Selene, Luna 19 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine. For the close association between the crescent moon and horns see Cashford.
- Selene and Luna on Roman Coins (forumancientcoins.com): "Bronze coin of Caracalla from Nicopolis ad Istrum with a single star in the arms of the crescent moon; coin of Geta showing five stars; a denarius of Septimius Severus with an array of seven stars." Roman-era coins from Carrhae (Harran): Carrhae, Mesopotamia, modern day Harran (wildwinds.com)
- Michael Alram, Nomina Propria Iranica in Nummis, Materialgrundlagen zu den iranischen Personennamen auf Antiken Münzen (1986); C. Augé, "Quelques monnaies d'Elymaïde," Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique, November 1976; N. Renaud, "Un nouveau souverain d'Elymaïde," Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique, January 1999, pp. 1–5. Coins of Elymais (parthia.com).
- "The star and crescent are common Persian symbols, being a regular feature of the borders of Sassanian dirhems." Philip Grierson, Byzantine Coins, Taylor & Francis, 1982, p118
- "A rare type with crescent and star alone on the reverse is probably Chashtana's earliest issue, struck before he extended his power into Malwa." H.H. Dodwell (Ed.), The Cambridge Shorter History of India, Cambridge University Press, 1935, p. 83.
- Achaemenid period: "not normally associated with scenes cut in the Court Style"; Persepolis seal PFS 71 (M. B. Garrison in Curtis and Simpson (eds.), The World of Achaemenid Persia: History, Art and Society in Iran and the Ancient Near East (2010), p. 354) PFS 9 (M. B. Garrison, Seals And The Elite At Persepolis; Some Observations On Early Achaemenid Persian Art (1991), p. 8). Parthian period: "[t]he Parthian king Mithradates I conquered Mesopotamia around 147 BC, and Susa in about 140 BC A later Parthian king, Orodes II (58–38 BC), issued coins at Susa and elsewhere which display a star and crescent on the obverse. The succeeding ruler, Phraates IV (38-3/2 BC), minted coins showing either a star alone or a star with crescent moon. In representing the star and crescent on their coins the Parthians thus adopted traditional symbols used in Mesopotamia and Elam more than two millennia before their own arrival in those parts." John Hansman, "The great gods of Elymais" in Acta Iranica, Encyclopédie Permanente Des Etudes Iraniennes, v.X, Papers in Honor of Professor Mary Boyce, Brill Archive, 1985, pp 229–232
- "Sasani coins remained in circulation in Moslem countries up to the end of the first century (Hijra). This detailed description of Sasani crowns was presented because the motifs mentioned, particularly the crescent and star gradually changed into Islamic symbols and have often appeared in the decorative patterns of various periods of Islamic art. [...] The flags of many Islamic countries bear crescents and stars and are proof of this Sasani innovation." Habibollah Ayatollahi (trans. Shermin Haghshenās), The Book of Iran: The History of Iranian Art, Alhoda UK, 2003, pp 155–157
- "when we come to examine the history of the crescent as a badge of Muhammadanism, we are confronted by the fact that it was not employed by the Arabs or any of the first peoples who embraced the faith of the prophet" "The truth is that the crescent was not identified with Islam until after the appearance of the Osmanli Turks, whilst on the other hand there is the clearest evidence that in the time of the Crusades, and long before, the crescent and star were a regular badge of Byzantium and the Byzantine Emperors, some of whom placed it on their coins." William Ridgeway, "The Origin of the Turkish Crescent", in The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 38 (Jul. – Dec. 1908), pp. 241–258 (p 241)
- Babayarov, Gaybulla; Kubatin, Andrey (2013). "Byzantine Impact on the Iconography of Western Turkic Coinage". Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 66 (1): 52. doi:10.1556/AOrient.66.2013.1.3. ISSN 0001-6446. JSTOR 43283250.
- In the 12th century found on pennies of William the Lion (r. 1174–1195). William Till, An Essay on the Roman Denarius and English Silver Penny (1838), p. 73. E.g. "Rev: short cross with crescent and pellets in angles and +RAVLD[ ] legend for the moneyer Raul Derling at Berwick or Roxburgh mint" (timelineauctions.com). Seaby SE5025 "Rev. [+RAV]L ON ROC, short cross with crescents & pellets in quarters" (wildwinds.com Archived 16 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine).
- Bohemond III of Antioch (r. 1163–1201) "Obv. Helmeted head of king in chain-maille armor, crescent and star to sides" (ancientresource.com)
- "Billon denier, struck c. late 1140s – 1164. + RA[M]VNDVS COMS, cross pattée, pellet in 1st and 2nd quarters / CIVI[TAS T]RIPOLIS, eight-rayed star with pellets above crescent. ref: CCS 6–8; Metcalf 509 (ancientresource.com).
- "The earliest church in the Morea to include a saint holding a shield marked by the crescent and star may be St. John Chrysostom, which has been dated on the basis of style to ca. 1300 [...]" Angeliki E. Laiou, Roy P. Mottahedeh, The Crusades From the Perspective of Byzantium and the Muslim World, Dumbarton Oaks, 2001, p 278
- p. 21; adopted by Virgil Solis in his Wappenbüchlein (1555)
- Sara L. Uckelman, An Ordinary of Siebmacher's Wappenbuch (ellipsis.cx) (2014)
- Kolar-Dimitrijević, Mira (2014). Povijest novca u Hrvatskoj, 1527. − 1941 [History of money in Croatia, 1527 − 1941] (PDF) (in Croatian). p. 13. ISBN 978-953-8013-03-4. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- "Wien 1, Stephansdom, Mondschein". Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften (in German). Retrieved 2 March 2024.
- Richard is depicted as seated between a crescent and a "Sun full radiant" in his second Great Seal of 1198. English heraldic tradition of the early modern period associates the star and crescent design with Richard, with his victory over Isaac Komnenos of Cyprus in 1192, and with the arms of Portsmouth (Francis Wise A Letter to Dr Mead Concerning Some Antiquities in Berkshire, 1738, p. 18). Heraldic tradition also attributes a star-and-crescent badge to Richard (Charles Fox-Davies, A Complete Guide to Heraldry, 1909, p. 468).
- Found in the 19th century at the site of the Biais commandery, in Saint-Père-en-Retz, Loire-Atlantique, France, now in the Musée Dobré in Nantes, inv. no. 303. Philippe Josserand, "Les Templiers en Bretagne au Moyen Âge : mythes et réalités", Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l'Ouest 119.4 (2012), 7–33 (p.24).
- In 15th-century Europe, it was widely assumed that the gypsies were Egyptians (hence the name gypsies), and several gypsy leaders are known to have styled themselves as "counts of lesser Egypt". Wilhelm Ferdinand Bischoff, Deutsch-Zigeunerisches Wörterbuch (1827), p.14
- Mohd Elfie Nieshaem Juferi, "What Is The Significance Of The Crescent Moon In Islam?". bismikaallahuma.org. 12 October 2005. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- Pamela Berger, The Crescent on the Temple: The Dome of the Rock as Image of the Ancient Jewish Sanctuary (2012), p. 164f
- İslâm Ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Vol. 4. Istanbul: Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı. 1991. p. 298.
- "It seems possible, though not certain, that after the conquest Mehmed took over the crescent and star as an emblem of sovereignty from the Byzantines. The half-moon alone on a blood red flag, allegedly conferred on the Janissaries by Emir Orhan, was much older, as is demonstrated by numerous references to it dating from before 1453. But since these flags lack the star, which along with the half-moon is to be found on Sassanid and Byzantine municipal coins, it may be regarded as an innovation of Mehmed. It seems certain that in the interior of Asia tribes of Turkish nomads had been using the half-moon alone as an emblem for some time past, but it is equally certain that crescent and star together are attested only for a much later period. There is good reason to believe that old Turkish and Byzantine traditions were combined in the emblem of Ottoman and, much later, present-day Republican Turkish sovereignty." Franz Babinger (William C. Hickman Ed., Ralph Manheim Trans.), Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time, Princeton University Press, 1992, p 108
- e.g. A. Locher, "With Star and Crescent: A Full and Authentic Account of a Recent Journey with a Caravan from Bombay to Constantinople"; Andrew Haggard, "Under Crescent and Star" (1895).
- "Mosque and minaret are surmounted by crescents; the air glowing over the Golden Horn is, as it were, full of moons." Hezekiah Butterworth, Zigzag journeys in the Orient vol. 3 (1882), p. 481.
- The symbolism of the star and crescent in the flag of the Kingdom of Libya (1951–1969) was explained in an English language booklet, The Libyan Flag & The National Anthem, issued by the Ministry of Information and Guidance of the Kingdom of Libya (year unknown, cited after Jos Poels at FOTW, 1997) as follows: "The crescent is symbolic of the beginning of the lunar month according to the Muslim calendar. It brings back to our minds the story of Hijra (migration) of our Prophet Mohammed from his home in order to spread Islam and teach the principles of right and virtue. The Star represents our smiling hope, the beauty of aim and object and the light of our belief in God, in our country, its dignity and honour which illuminate our way and puts an end to darkness."
- Edward E. Curtis, Black Muslim religion in the Nation of Islam, 1960–1975 (2006), p. 157.
- Joshua Lipes; Jilil Kashgary (4 April 2017). "Xinjiang Police Search Uyghur Homes For 'Illegal Items'". Radio Free Asia. Translated by Mamatjan Juma. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
A second announcement, issued Feb. 28 by the Chira (Cele) county government, said those who report individuals for having "stitched the 'star and crescent moon' insignia on their clothing or personal items" or the words "East Turkestan"—referring to the name of a short-lived Uyghur republic—on their mobile phone case, purse or other jewelry, were also eligible for cash payments.
- The blazon of the coat of arms is attested in the 19th century, as Azure a crescent or, surmounted by an estoile of eight points of the last (William Berry, Robert Glover, Encyclopædia Heraldica, 1828). This is apparently based on minor seals used by Portsmouth mayors in the 18th century (Robert East H. Lewis, Extracts from Records in the Possession of the Municipal Corporation of the Borough of Portsmouth and from Other Documents Relating Thereto, 1891, p. 656). The medieval seal showed no such design (Henry Press Wright, The Story of the 'Domus Dei' of Portsmouth: Commonly Called the Royal Garrison Church, 1873, p. 12). The claim connecting the star and crescent design to the Great Seal of Richard I originates in the mid 20th century (Valentine Dyall, Unsolved Mysteries: A Collection of Weird Problems from the Past, 1954, p. 14).
- Peter Ziegler (ed.), Die Gemeindewappen des Kantons Zürich (1977), 74–77.
- Charles Boutell, "Device of Star (or Sun) and Crescent". In The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume XXXVI (New Series). London: John Nicols & Son, London, 1851, pp. 514–515
External links
Media related to Star and crescent at Wikimedia Commons
The dictionary definition of ☪ at Wiktionary
The conjoined representation of a crescent and a star is used in various historical contexts including as a prominent symbol of the Ottoman Empire and in contemporary times as a national symbol by some countries and by some Muslims as a symbol of Islam while other Muslims reject it as an Islamic symbol It was developed in the Greek colony of Byzantium ca 300 BC though it became more widely used as the royal emblem of Pontic king Mithridates VI Eupator after he incorporated Byzantium into his kingdom for a short period During the 5th century it was present in coins minted by the Persian Sassanian Empire the symbol was represented in the coins minted across the empire throughout the Middle East for more than 400 years from the 3rd century until the fall of the Sassanians after the Muslim conquest of Persia in the 7th century The conquering Muslim rulers kept the symbol in their coinage during the early years of the caliphate as the coins were exact replicas of the Sassanian coins Ancient design of the crescent and star symbol as used in Byzantium in the 1st century BC The crescent and star symbol used in the minted coins of the Sassanian Empire from the 3rd century until the 7th century This coin was coined under Ardashir III The Adoration of the Magi by Stephan Lochner on the left the crescent and star is depicted in the flag of representatives of Byzantium Both elements of the symbol have a long history in the iconography of the Ancient Near East as representing either the Sun and Moon or the Moon and Venus Morning Star or their divine personifications It has been suggested that the crescent actually represents Venus or the Sun during an eclipse Coins with crescent and star symbols represented separately have a longer history with possible ties to older Mesopotamian iconography The star or Sun is often shown within the arc of the crescent also called star in crescent or star within crescent for disambiguation of depictions of a star and a crescent side by side In numismatics in particular the term crescent and pellet is used in cases where the star is simplified to a single dot The combination is found comparatively rarely in late medieval and early modern heraldry It rose to prominence with its adoption as the flag and national symbol of the Ottoman Empire and some of its administrative divisions eyalets and vilayets and later in the 19th century Westernizing tanzimat reforms The Ottoman flag of 1844 with a white ay yildiz Turkish for crescent star on a red background continues in use as the flag of the Republic of Turkey with minor modifications Other states formerly part of the Ottoman Empire also used the symbol including Libya 1951 1969 and after 2011 Tunisia 1831 and Algeria 1958 The same symbol was used in other national flags introduced during the 20th century including the flags of Kazakhstan 1917 Azerbaijan 1918 Pakistan 1947 Malaysia 1948 Singapore 1959 Mauritania 1959 Azad Kashmir 1974 Uzbekistan 1991 Turkmenistan 1991 and Comoros 2001 In the latter 20th century the star and crescent have acquired a popular interpretation as a symbol of Islam occasionally embraced by Arab nationalism or Islamism in the 1970s to 1980s but often rejected as erroneous or unfounded by Muslim commentators in more recent times Unlike the cross which is a symbol of Jesus crucifixion in Christianity there is no solid link that connects the star and crescent symbol with the concept of Islam The connotation is widely believed to have come from the flag of the Ottoman Empire whose prestige as an Islamic empire and caliphate led to the adoption of its state emblem as a symbol of Islam by association Unicode introduced a crescent and star character in its Miscellaneous Symbols block at U 262A HistoryOrigins and predecessors Sealing depicting the Neo Sumerian King Ibbi Sin seated with a star or Dingir and crescent adjacent to himDepiction of the emblems of Ishtar Venus Sin Moon and Shamash Sun on a boundary stone of Meli Shipak II 12th century BC Venus Sun and Moon on the Stele of Nabonidus r 556 539 BC found at Harran Sanliurfa Museum Crescents appearing together with a star or stars are a common feature of Sumerian iconography the crescent usually being associated with the moon god Sin Nanna and the star with Ishtar Inanna i e Venus often placed alongside the sun disk of Shamash In Late Bronze Age Canaan star and crescent moon motifs are also found on Moabite name seals The Egyptian hieroglyphs representing moon N11 and star N14 appear in ligature forming a star and crescent shape as a determiner for the word for month ꜣbd The depiction of the crescent and star or star inside crescent as it would later develop in Bosporan Kingdom is difficult to trace to Mesopotamian art Exceptionally a combination of the crescent of Sin with the five pointed star of Ishtar with the star placed inside the crescent as in the later Hellenistic era symbol placed among numerous other symbols is found in a boundary stone of Nebuchadnezzar I 12th century BC found in Nippur by John Henry Haynes in 1896 An example of such an arrangement is also found in the highly speculative reconstruction of a fragmentary stele of Ur Nammu Third Dynasty of Ur discovered in the 1920s A very early depiction of the symbol crescent moon stars and sun disc is found on the Nebra sky disc dating from c 1800 c 1600 BC Nebra Germany A gold signet ring from Mycenae dating from the 15th century BC also shows the symbol The star and crescent or crescent and pellet symbol appears 19 times on the Berlin Gold Hat dating from c 1000 BC Classical antiquity Greeks and Romans Many ancient Greek classical and hellenistic and Roman amulets which depict stars and crescent have been found Mithradates VI Eupator of Pontus r 120 63 BC used an eight rayed star with a crescent moon as his emblem McGing 1986 notes the association of the star and crescent with Mithradates VI discussing its appearance on his coins and its survival in the coins of the Bosporan Kingdom where t he star and crescent appear on Pontic royal coins from the time of Mithradates III and seem to have had oriental significance as a dynastic badge of the Mithridatic family or the arms of the country of Pontus Several possible interpretations of the emblem have been proposed In most of these the star is taken to represent the Sun The combination of the two symbols has been taken as representing Sun and Moon and by extension Day and Night the Zoroastrian Mah and Mithra or deities arising from Greek Anatolian Iranian syncretism the crescent representing Men Pharnakou Mhn Farnakoy the local moon god and the star Sun representing Ahuramazda in interpretatio graeca called Zeus Stratios By the late Hellenistic or early Roman period the star and crescent motif had been associated to some degree with Byzantium If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople it was Hecate Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding Like Byzas in one legend she had her origins in Thrace Hecate was considered the patron goddess of Byzantium because she was said to have saved the city from an attack by Philip of Macedon in 340 BC by the appearance of a bright light in the sky To commemorate the event the Byzantines erected a statue of the goddess known as the Lampadephoros torch bearer or torch bringer Some Byzantine coins of the 1st century BC and later show the head of Artemis with bow and quiver and feature a crescent with what appears to be a six rayed star on the reverse Crescent and star on a coin of Uranopolis Macedon ca 300 BC see also Argead star A crescent and star symbol with the star shown in a sixteen rayed sunburst design 3rd century BC on the Ai Khanoum plaque Coin of Mithradates VI Eupator The obverse side has the inscription BASILEWS MI8RADATOY EYPATOROS with a stag feeding with the star and crescent and monogram of Pergamum placed near the stag s head all in an ivy wreath Roman era coin with Greek inscription 1st century AD with a bust of Artemis on the obverse and an eight rayed star within a crescent on the reverse side The moon goddess Selene is commonly depicted with a crescent moon often accompanied by two stars the stars represent Phosphorus the morning star and Hesperus the evening star sometimes instead of a crescent a lunar disc is used Often a crescent moon rests on her brow or the cusps of a crescent moon protrude horn like from her head or from behind her head or shoulders The Moon goddess Selene or Luna accompanied by the Dioscuri or Phosphoros the Morning Star and Hesperos the Evening Star Marble altar Roman artwork 2nd century AD From Italy The goddess Selene illustration from Meyers Lexikon 1888 In the 2nd century the star within crescent is found on the obverse side of Roman coins minted during the rule of Hadrian Geta Caracalla and Septimius Severus in some cases as part of an arrangement of a crescent and seven stars one or several of which were placed inside the crescent Coin of Roman Emperor Hadrian r 117 138 The reverse shows an eight rayed star within a crescent Roman period limestone pediment from Perge Turkey Antalya Museum showing Diana Artemis with a crescent and a radiant crown Iran Persia The crescent and star symbol appears on some coins of the Parthian vassal kingdom of Elymais in the late 1st century AD The same symbol is present in coins that are possibly associated with Orodes I of Parthia 1st century BC In the 2nd century AD some Parthian coins show a simplified pellet within crescent symbol A crescent and star appearing separately on the obverse side of a coin of Orodes II of Parthia r 57 37 BC Coin of Vardanes I of Parthia r c AD 40 45 Coin of the Sasanian king Kavad II minted at Susa in 628 Gold coin of Khosrow II r 570 628 Coin of Khosrow III Coin of Hormizd IV Silver dirham issued by Ispahbudh Khurshid of Tabaristan Arab Sassanian coin was issued which was added with arabic writing by the UmayyadsA coin of Sassanid king Kavadh I during his second reign r 488 531 Kavadh was the first Sassanid ruler to introduce star and crescent motifs as decorations on the margin of the obverse side of his coins Note the continued use of the star and the crescent appearing on either side of the king s head The crescent and star motif appears on the margin of Sassanid coins in the 5th century Sassanid rulers also appear to have used crowns featuring a crescent sphere and crescent or star and crescent Use of the crescent and star combination apparently goes back to the earlier appearance of a star and a crescent on Parthian coins first under King Orodes II 1st century BC In these coins the two symbols occur separately on either side of the king s head and not yet in their combined star and crescent form Such coins are also found further afield in Greater Persia by the end of the 1st century AD in a coin issued by the Western Satraps ruler Chashtana This arrangement is likely inherited from its Ancient Near Eastern predecessors the star and crescent symbols are not frequently found in Achaemenid iconography but they are present in some cylinder seals of the Achaemenid era Ayatollahi 2003 attempts to connect the modern adoption as an Islamic symbol to Sassanid coins remaining in circulation after the Islamic conquest which is an analysis that stands in stark contrast to established consensus that there is no evidence for any connection of the symbol with Islam or the Ottomans prior to its adoption in Ottoman flags in the late 18th century Western Turkic Khaganate Coins from the Western Turkic Khaganate had a crescent moon and a star which held an important place in the worldview of ancient Turks and other peoples of Central Asia Medieval and early modern Christian and classical heraldric usage The crescent on its own is used in western heraldry from at least the 13th century while the star and crescent or Sun and Moon emblem is in use in medieval seals at least from the late 12th century The crescent in pellet symbol is used in Crusader coins of the 12th century in some cases duplicated in the four corners of a cross as a variant of the cross and crosslets Jerusalem cross Many Crusader seals and coins show the crescent and the star or blazing Sun on either side of the ruler s head as in the Sassanid tradition e g Bohemond III of Antioch Richard I of England Raymond VI Count of Toulouse At the same time the star in crescent is found on the obverse of Crusader coins e g in coins of the County of Tripoli minted under Raymond II or III c 1140s 1160s show an eight rayed star with pellets above crescent The star and crescent combination appears in attributed arms from the early 14th century possibly in a coat of arms of c 1330 possibly attributed to John Chrysostom and in the Wernigeroder Wappenbuch late 15th century attributed to one of the three Magi named Balthasar of Tarsus Crescents without the star increase in popularity in early modern heraldry in Europe Siebmachers Wappenbuch 1605 records 48 coats of arms of German families which include one or several crescents A star and crescent symbolizing Croatia was commonly found on 13th century banovac coins in the Kingdom of Slavonia with a two barred cross symbolizing the Kingdom of Hungary St Stephen s Cathedral in Vienna used to have at the top of its highest tower a golden crescent with a star it came to be seen as a symbol of Islam and the Ottoman enemy which is why it was replaced with a cross in 1686 In the late 16th century the Korenic Neoric Armorial shows a white star and crescent on a red field as the coat of arms of Illyria The star and crescent combination remains rare prior to its adoption by the Ottoman Empire in the second half of the 18th century citation needed Great Seal of Richard I of England 1198 Equestrian seal of Raymond VI Count of Toulouse with a star and a crescent 13th century The crescent flag ascribed to the Hungarians against the Mongol Golden Horde in the Battle of Mohi 1241 Battle of Wadi al Khaznadar Battle of Homs of 1299 14th century miniature Historical coat of arms of Kunsag where Cumans in Hungary settled 1279 Templar seal of the 13th century probably of the preceptor of the commanderies at Coudrie and Biais Brittany Polish coats of arms called Leliwa 1334 seal Coats of arms of the Three Magi with Baltasar of Tarsus being attributed a star and crescent increscent in a blue field Wernigerode Armorial c 1490 Coat of arms of John Freigraf of Lesser Egypt i e Romani gypsy 18th century drawing of a 1498 coat of arms in Pforzheim church Depictions of stars with crescents are a common motif on the stecak 12th to 16th century tombstones of medieval Bosnia 1668 representation by Joan Blaeu of Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Bosnia from 1595 Korenic Neoric Armorial The coat of arms of Illyria from the Korenic Neoric Armorial 1590s Banner of Cumania used at the coronation of Ferdinand II of Hungary in 1618 and assigned to Gaspar Caspar Illeshazy Star and crescent on the obverse of the Jelacic Gulden of the Kingdom of Croatia 1848 Coat of arms of the noble family Slatte 1625 1699 in Sweden Coat of arms of the noble family Finckenberg 1627 1809 in Sweden Coat of arms of the noble family Boose 1642 1727 in Sweden Banner of the Zaporizhian Sich Cossacks of Ukraine before 1775 Coat of arms of TransylvaniaMuslim usage While the crescent on its own is depicted as an emblem used on Islamic war flags from the medieval period at least from the 13th century although it does not seem to have been in frequent use until the 14th or 15th century the star and crescent in an Islamic context is more rare in the medieval period but may occasionally be found in depictions of flags from the 14th century onward Some Mughal era 17th century round shields were decorated with a crescent or star and crescent Depiction of a star and crescent flag on the Saracen side in the Battle of Yarmouk manuscript illustration of the History of the Tatars Catalan workshop early 14th century A miniature painting from a Padshahnama manuscript c 1640 depicting Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan as bearing a shield with a star and crescent decoration A painting from a Padshahnama manuscript 1633 depicts the scene of Aurangzeb facing the maddened war elephant Sudhakar Sowar s shield is decorated with a star and crescent Ottoman sipahis in battle holding the crescent banner by Jozef Brandt Flag of the Emirate of Jabal Shammar Ha il in today s Kingdom of Saudi Arabia from 1835 to 1921 Coat of arms of Khedivate of Egypt 1867 1914 Flag of the Kingdom of Egypt 1922 1953 and co official flag of the Republic of Egypt 1953 1958 Flag of the Free Officers Movement 1949 1953 and co official flag of the Republic of Egypt 1953 1958 Flag of the Sultanate of Aceh 1496 1903 Use in the Ottoman Empire The Ottoman Army approaching the city of Sofia in 1788 Star and crescent flags of the Ottoman Empire The first was used as the naval ensign and state symbol from late 18th century and as the official Ottoman national flag from 1844 to 1922 the second is an eight pointed variant of the first used after 1844 The adoption of crescent and star as the Ottoman state symbol started during the reign of Mustafa III 1757 1774 and its use became well established during the periods of Abdul Hamid I 1774 1789 and Selim III 1789 1807 A decree buyruldu from 1793 states that the ships in the Ottoman navy fly that flag and various other documents from earlier and later years mention its use The ultimate source of the emblem is unclear It is mostly derived from the star and crescent symbol used by the city of Constantinople in antiquity possibly by association with the crescent design without the star used in Turkish flags since before 1453 With the Tanzimat reforms in the 19th century flags were redesigned in the style of the European armies of the day The flag of the Ottoman Navy was made red as red was to be the flag of secular institutions and green of religious ones As the reforms abolished all the various flags standards of the Ottoman pashaliks beyliks and emirates a single new Ottoman national flag was designed to replace them The result was the red flag with the white crescent moon and star which is the precursor to the modern flag of Turkey A plain red flag was introduced as the civil ensign for all Ottoman subjects The white crescent with an eight pointed star on a red field is depicted as the flag of a Turkish Man of War in Colton s Delineation of Flags of All Nations 1862 Steenbergen s Vlaggen van alle Natien of the same year shows a six pointed star A plate in Webster s Unabridged of 1882 shows the flag with an eight pointed star labelled Turkey Man of war The five pointed star seems to have been present alongside these variants from at least 1857 In addition to Ottoman imperial insignia symbols appear on the flag of Bosnia Eyalet 1580 1867 and Bosnia Vilayet 1867 1908 as well as the flag of 1831 Bosnian revolt while the symbols appeared on some representations of medieval Bosnian coat of arms too In the late 19th century Star and Crescent came to be used as a metaphor for Ottoman rule in British literature The increasingly ubiquitous fashion of using the star and crescent symbol in the ornamentation of Ottoman mosques and minarets led to a gradual association of the symbol with Islam in general in western Orientalism The Red Crescent emblem was used by volunteers of the International Committee of the Red Cross ICRC as early as 1877 during the Russo Turkish War it was officially adopted in 1929 After the foundation of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 the new Turkish state maintained the last flag of the Ottoman Empire Proportional standardisations were introduced in the Turkish Flag Law Turkish Turk Bayragi Kanunu of May 29 1936 Besides the most prominent example of Turkey see Flag of Turkey a number of other Ottoman successor states adopted the design during the 20th century including the Emirate of Cyrenaica and the Kingdom of Libya Algeria Tunisia and the proposed Arab Islamic Republic Contemporary useNational flags The flag of Tunisia 1831 is the first to use the star and crescent design in 1831 This continues to be the Tunisian national flag post independence A decade later the Ottoman flag of 1844 with a white ay yildiz Turkish for crescent star on a red background continues to be in use as the flag of the Republic of Turkey with minor modifications Other states in the Ottoman sphere of influence using the star and crescent design in their flats such as Libya 1951 re introduced 2011 and Algeria 1958 The modern emblem of Turkey shows the star outside the arc of the crescent as it were a realistic depiction of a conjunction of Moon and Venus while in the 19th century the Ottoman star and crescent was occasionally still drawn as the star within crescent By contrast the designs of both the flags of Algeria and Tunisia as well as Mauritania and Pakistan place the star within the crescent Flag of Turkey Flag of Tunisia Flag of Libya Flag of Algeria The same symbol was used in other national flags introduced during the 20th century including the flags of Kazakhstan 1917 Azerbaijan 1918 re introduced 1991 the Rif Republic 1921 Pakistan 1947 Malaysia 1948 Mauritania 1959 Kashmir 1974 and the partially recognized states of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic 1976 and Northern Cyprus 1983 The symbol also may represent flag of cities or emirates such as the emirate of Umm Al Quwain Flag of Azerbaijan Flag of the Rif Republic Flag of Pakistan Flag of Malaysia Flag of Mauritania Flag of Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic Flag of Northern Cyprus Flag of Umm al Quwain Flag of East Turkestan 1934 Flag of Iraq Turkmens Flag of Syrian Turkmen Flag of Azad Kashmir Alash Autonomy 1917 Turkestan Autonomy 1917 1918 National flags with a crescent alongside several stars Flag of Singapore 1965 crescent and five stars Flag of Uzbekistan 1991 crescent and twelve stars Flag of Turkmenistan 2001 crescent and five stars representing five provinces Flag of the Comoros 2002 crescent and four stars representing four islands Flag of the Cocos Keeling Islands of Australia 2003 crescent and southern cross National flags and coat of arms with star crescent and other symbols Flag of Moldova 1990 Flag of Croatia 1990 Flag of Miꞌkmaꞌki 1867 Coat of arms of Romania Flag of Moldavia 15th to 16th century Symbol of Islam Used as the symbol of Islam by the Nation of Islam By the mid 20th century the symbol came to be re interpreted as a symbol of Islam or the Muslim community This symbolism was embraced by movements of Arab nationalism or Islamism in the 1970s too such as the proposed Arab Islamic Republic 1974 and the American Nation of Islam 1973 Cyril Glasse in his The New Encyclopedia of Islam 2001 edition s v Moon states that in the language of conventional symbols the crescent and star have become the symbols of Islam as much as the cross is the symbol of Christianity By contrast Crescent magazine a religious Islamic publication quoted without giving names that Many Muslim scholars reject using the crescent moon as a symbol of Islam On February 28 2017 it was announced by the Qira County government in Hotan Prefecture Xinjiang China that those who reported others for stitching the star and crescent moon insignia on their clothing or personal items or having the words East Turkestan on their mobile phone case purse or other jewelry would be eligible for cash payments Municipal coats of arms The crescent and star as a traditional heraldic charge is in continued use in numerous municipal coats of arms notably the based on the Leliwa Tarnowski coat of arms in the case of Polish municipalities Coat of arms of Halle an der Saale Germany 1327 Coat of arms of Minsk Mazowiecki Poland Coat of arms of Przeworsk Poland Coat of arms of Tarnobrzeg Poland Coat of arms of Tarnow Poland Coat of arms of Zagreb Croatia Flag of Portsmouth England 18th century crescent and estoile with eight wavy rays Coat of arms of Mattighofen Austria 1781 Coat of arms of Oelde Germany 1910 Coat of arms of Niederglatt Switzerland 1928 Coat of arms of Oberglatt Switzerland 1928 Coat of arms of Niederweningen Switzerland 1928 Coat of arms of Drogheda Ireland Coat of arms of Algueirao Mem Martins parish Portugal Coat of arms of Aljezur parish Portugal Coat of arms of parish Portugal Coat of arms of Celorico da Beira municipality Portugal Coat of arms of Nisa municipality Portugal Coat of arms of Nossa Senhora das Misericordias parish Portugal Coat of arms of Oliveira do Bairro municipality Portugal Coat of arms of Penacova municipality Portugal Coat of arms of Sao Bras de Alportel parish Portugal Coat of arms of Sintra municipality Portugal Coat of arms of Sobreda parish Portugal Coat of arms of Vouzela municipality PortugalSports Club Emblems In rugby union Saracens F C incorporates the crescent and star in its crest Drogheda United F C Portsmouth F C and S U Sintrense all borrow the crescent and star from their respective towns coats of arms Mohammedan SC in Kolkata India also incorporates the symbol in its crest Emblem of Saracens F C Other uses Post WWII flag of the Japan Air Self Defense Force JASDF Turkish Air Force aviator badge Flag of the Pakistan Army Flag of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity Flag of the Organization of Turkic States Insignia of East Bengal Regiment Logo of Shriners International Logo of the Felicity Party of Turkey Logo of the Crescent Star Party of IndonesiaSee alsoStar Lunar phase Pentagram of Venus New Orleans Police DepartmentReferencesCyril Glasse The New Encyclopedia of Islam revised ed 2001 s v Moon p 314 Many Muslim scholars reject using the crescent moon as a symbol of Islam The faith of Islam historically had no symbol and many refuse to accept it Fiaz Fazli Crescent magazine Srinagar September 2009 p 42 Andrew G Traver From Polis to Empire The Ancient World c 800 B C A D 500 Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 p 257 The star and crescent are common Persian symbols being a regular feature of the borders of Sassanian dirhems Philip Grierson Byzantine Coins Taylor amp Francis 1982 p118 Bradley Schaefer 21 December 1991 Heavenly Signs New Scientist 48 51 David Lance Goines 18 October 1995 Inferential evidence for the pre telescopic sighting of the crescent Venus This would explain cases where the inside curve of the crescent has a smaller radius of curvature than the outer the opposite of what happens with the moon Jay M Pasachoff 1 February 1992 Crescent Sun New Scientist There are also three cases viz associated with the Danubian Rider Religion where the star figured as a radiate disc balancing the crescent moon must represent Sol balancing Luna who is represented as a crescent instead of in bust The star in crescent theme itself appears only once on an engraved gem accompanied by the lion and an indecipherable inscription This theme is connected with the Orient and has a long history behind it in the Hittite Babylonian Assyrian Sassanid and Iranian worlds Campbell gives us valuable particulars The heavenly bodies thus symbolized were seen as the powerful influence of cosmic fatalism guiding the destinies of men Dumitru Tudor Christopher Holme trans Corpus Monumentorum Religionis Equitum Danuvinorum CMRED 1976 p 192 referencing Leroy A Campbell Mithraic Iconography and Ideology 1969 93f e g Catalogue of the Greek coins in The British Museum 2005 p 311 index A similar stele found in Babylon is kept in the British Museum no 90837 Michael R Molnar The Star of Bethlehem Rutgers University Press 1999 p78 the three celestial emblems the sun disk of Shamash Utu to the Sumerians the crescent of Sin Nanna and the star of Ishtar Inanna to the Sumerians Irving L Finkel Markham J Geller Sumerian Gods and Their Representations Styx 1997 p71 Andre Parrot Sumer The Dawn of Art Golden Press 1961 Othmar Keel Christoph Uehlinger Gods Goddesses and Images of God in Ancient Israel Fortress Press 1998 p 322 A H Gardiner Egyptian Grammar Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs 3rd Ed pub Griffith Institute Oxford 1957 1st edition 1927 p 486 W J Hinke A New Boundary Stone of Nebuchadrezzar I from Nippur with a Concordance of Proper Names and a Glossary of the Kudurru Inscriptions thus far Published 1907 120f University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology object nr 29 20 1 J V Canby Reconstructing the Ur Nammu Stela Expedition 29 1 54 64 Christopher A Faraone 2018 The Transformation of Greek Amulets in Roman Imperial Times University of Pennsylvania Press pp 40 53 ISBN 978 0 8122 4935 4 B C McGing The Foreign Policy of Mithradates VI Eupator King of Pontus Brill 1986 p 97 The star and the crescent the emblem of the Pontus and its kings were introduced by Mithradates and his successors to the Bosporus and appeared on Bosporan coins and locally produced jewelry On the coins this symbol often appears near the head of a young man wearing a Phrygian cap who is identified as either a solar deity or his deified worshipper the star and the crescent the badge of the Pontus and its kings shown on the Colchian amphora stamp and appearing on engraved finger rings discovered in this area allude to the possibility of an earlier association of the Pontic dynasty with the cult of mounted Mithra Mithra in fact must have been one of the most venerated gods of the Pontic Kingdom since its rulers bore the theophoric name of Mithradates although direct evidence for this cult is rather meager Yulia Ustinova The Supreme Gods of the Bosporan Kingdom Brill 1998 270 274 Strabo 12 3 31 writes that Men Pharnakou had a sanctuary at Kabeira in Pontus where the Pontic kings would swear oaths Men Pharnakou is a syncretistic Anatolian Iranian moon deity not directly comparable to Zoroastrian Mah Albert F de Jong Traditions of the Magi Zoroastrianism in Greek and Latin Literature 1997 A9n 20Pharmakou amp f false p 306 His royal emblem an eight rayed star and the crescent moon represented the dynasty s patron gods Zeus Stratios or Ahuramazda and Men Pharnakou a Persian form of the native moon goddess Andrew G Traver From Polis to Empire The Ancient World c 800 B C A D 450 Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 p 257 The significance of the star and crescent on royal coins has also been frequently debated Many scholars have identified the star and the crescent as royal symbols of the Pontic kingdom Their appearance on every royal issue suggests they were indeed important symbols and the connection of this symbol to the royal family is definite The nature of it however is still uncertain Kleiner believed they were symbols of an indigenous god and had their origins in Persia He associated the star and crescent with the god Men and saw them as representations of night and day the star may be considered the sun here Ritter on the other hand suggested that the star and crescent symbols derived from Perseus just as the star symbol of the Macedonians did Ma and Mithras are two other deities with whom the star and crescent symbol are associated Olshausen believed that the star and crescent could be related to a syncretism of Pontic and Iranian iconography the crescent for Men and the star for Ahura Mazda Recently Summerer has convincingly suggested that Men alone was the inspiration for the symbol on the royal coins of the Pontic kingdom Deniz Burcu Erciyas Wealth Aristocracy and Royal Propaganda Under The Hellenistic Kingdom of The Mithradatids in The Central Black Sea Region in Turkey Colloquia Pontica Vol 12 Brill 2005 p 131 Devotion to Hecate was especially favored by the Byzantines for her aid in having protected them from the incursions of Philip of Macedon Her symbols were the crescent and star and the walls of her city were her provenance Vasiliki Limberis Divine Heiress Routledge 1994 p 15 In 340 B C however the Byzantines with the aid of the Athenians withstood a siege successfully an occurrence the more remarkable as they were attacked by the greatest general of the age Philip of Macedon In the course of this beleaguerment it is related on a certain wet and moonless night the enemy attempted a surprise but were foiled by reason of a bright light which appearing suddenly in the heavens startled all the dogs in the town and thus roused the garrison to a sense of their danger To commemorate this timely phenomenon which was attributed to Hecate they erected a public statue to that goddess William Gordon Holmes The Age of Justinian and Theodora 2003 p 5 6 If any goddess had a connection with the walls in Constantinople it was Hecate Hecate had a cult in Byzantium from the time of its founding Like Byzas in one legend she had her origins in Thrace Since Hecate was the guardian of liminal places in Byzantium small temples in her honor were placed close to the gates of the city Hecate s importance to Byzantium was above all as deity of protection When Philip of Macedon was about to attack the city according to the legend she alerted the townspeople with her ever present torches and with her pack of dogs which served as her constant companions Her mythic qualities thenceforth forever entered the fabric of Byzantine history A statue known as the Lampadephoros was erected on the hill above the Bosphorous to commemorate Hecate s defensive aid Vasiliki Limberis Divine Heiress Routledge 1994 pp 126 127 This story survived in the works who in all probability lived in the time of Justinian I His works survive only in fragments preserved in Photius and the 10th century lexicographer Suidas The tale is also related by Stephanus of Byzantium and Eustathius On the Ai Khanoum plaque from Ai Khanoum Bactria 3rd century BC Helios is shown separately in the form of a bust with a rayed halo of thirteen rays F Tissot Catalogue of the National Museum of Afghanistan 1931 1985 2006 p 42 H G Liddell A History of Rome from the earliest times to the establishment of the Empire 1857 p 605 C f forumancientcoins com LIMC Selene Luna 35 Cohen Beth Outline as a Special Technique in Black and Red figure Vase painting in The Colors of Clay Special Techniques in Athenian Vases Getty Publications 2006 ISBN 9780892369423 pp 178 179 Savignoni L 1899 On Representations of Helios and of Selene The Journal of Hellenic Studies 19 pp 270 271 Zschietzschmann W Hellas and Rome The Classical World in Pictures Kessinger Publishing 2006 ISBN 9781428655447 p 23 British Museum 1923 0401 199 LIMC Selene Luna 21 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 4 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Mithras 113 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 15 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 34 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 2 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 7 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 9 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 10 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine LIMC Selene Luna 19 Archived 21 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine For the close association between the crescent moon and horns see Cashford Selene and Luna on Roman Coins forumancientcoins com Bronze coin of Caracalla from Nicopolis ad Istrum with a single star in the arms of the crescent moon coin of Geta showing five stars a denarius of Septimius Severus with an array of seven stars Roman era coins from Carrhae Harran Carrhae Mesopotamia modern day Harran wildwinds com Michael Alram Nomina Propria Iranica in Nummis Materialgrundlagen zu den iranischen Personennamen auf Antiken Munzen 1986 C Auge Quelques monnaies d Elymaide Bulletin de la Societe Francaise de Numismatique November 1976 N Renaud Un nouveau souverain d Elymaide Bulletin de la Societe Francaise de Numismatique January 1999 pp 1 5 Coins of Elymais parthia com The star and crescent are common Persian symbols being a regular feature of the borders of Sassanian dirhems Philip Grierson Byzantine Coins Taylor amp Francis 1982 p118 A rare type with crescent and star alone on the reverse is probably Chashtana s earliest issue struck before he extended his power into Malwa H H Dodwell Ed The Cambridge Shorter History of India Cambridge University Press 1935 p 83 Achaemenid period not normally associated with scenes cut in the Court Style Persepolis seal PFS 71 M B Garrison in Curtis and Simpson eds The World of Achaemenid Persia History Art and Society in Iran and the Ancient Near East 2010 p 354 PFS 9 M B Garrison Seals And The Elite At Persepolis Some Observations On Early Achaemenid Persian Art 1991 p 8 Parthian period t he Parthian king Mithradates I conquered Mesopotamia around 147 BC and Susa in about 140 BC A later Parthian king Orodes II 58 38 BC issued coins at Susa and elsewhere which display a star and crescent on the obverse The succeeding ruler Phraates IV 38 3 2 BC minted coins showing either a star alone or a star with crescent moon In representing the star and crescent on their coins the Parthians thus adopted traditional symbols used in Mesopotamia and Elam more than two millennia before their own arrival in those parts John Hansman The great gods of Elymais in Acta Iranica Encyclopedie Permanente Des Etudes Iraniennes v X Papers in Honor of Professor Mary Boyce Brill Archive 1985 pp 229 232 Sasani coins remained in circulation in Moslem countries up to the end of the first century Hijra This detailed description of Sasani crowns was presented because the motifs mentioned particularly the crescent and star gradually changed into Islamic symbols and have often appeared in the decorative patterns of various periods of Islamic art The flags of many Islamic countries bear crescents and stars and are proof of this Sasani innovation Habibollah Ayatollahi trans Shermin Haghshenas The Book of Iran The History of Iranian Art Alhoda UK 2003 pp 155 157 when we come to examine the history of the crescent as a badge of Muhammadanism we are confronted by the fact that it was not employed by the Arabs or any of the first peoples who embraced the faith of the prophet The truth is that the crescent was not identified with Islam until after the appearance of the Osmanli Turks whilst on the other hand there is the clearest evidence that in the time of the Crusades and long before the crescent and star were a regular badge of Byzantium and the Byzantine Emperors some of whom placed it on their coins William Ridgeway The Origin of the Turkish Crescent in The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland Vol 38 Jul Dec 1908 pp 241 258 p 241 Babayarov Gaybulla Kubatin Andrey 2013 Byzantine Impact on the Iconography of Western Turkic Coinage Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 66 1 52 doi 10 1556 AOrient 66 2013 1 3 ISSN 0001 6446 JSTOR 43283250 In the 12th century found on pennies of William the Lion r 1174 1195 William Till An Essay on the Roman Denarius and English Silver Penny 1838 p 73 E g Rev short cross with crescent and pellets in angles and RAVLD legend for the moneyer Raul Derling at Berwick or Roxburgh mint timelineauctions com Seaby SE5025 Rev RAV L ON ROC short cross with crescents amp pellets in quarters wildwinds com Archived 16 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Bohemond III of Antioch r 1163 1201 Obv Helmeted head of king in chain maille armor crescent and star to sides ancientresource com Billon denier struck c late 1140s 1164 RA M VNDVS COMS cross pattee pellet in 1st and 2nd quarters CIVI TAS T RIPOLIS eight rayed star with pellets above crescent ref CCS 6 8 Metcalf 509 ancientresource com The earliest church in the Morea to include a saint holding a shield marked by the crescent and star may be St John Chrysostom which has been dated on the basis of style to ca 1300 Angeliki E Laiou Roy P Mottahedeh The Crusades From the Perspective of Byzantium and the Muslim World Dumbarton Oaks 2001 p 278 p 21 adopted by Virgil Solis in his Wappenbuchlein 1555 Sara L Uckelman An Ordinary of Siebmacher s Wappenbuch ellipsis cx 2014 Kolar Dimitrijevic Mira 2014 Povijest novca u Hrvatskoj 1527 1941 History of money in Croatia 1527 1941 PDF in Croatian p 13 ISBN 978 953 8013 03 4 Retrieved 16 April 2022 Wien 1 Stephansdom Mondschein Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften in German Retrieved 2 March 2024 Richard is depicted as seated between a crescent and a Sun full radiant in his second Great Seal of 1198 English heraldic tradition of the early modern period associates the star and crescent design with Richard with his victory over Isaac Komnenos of Cyprus in 1192 and with the arms of Portsmouth Francis Wise A Letter to Dr Mead Concerning Some Antiquities in Berkshire 1738 p 18 Heraldic tradition also attributes a star and crescent badge to Richard Charles Fox Davies A Complete Guide to Heraldry 1909 p 468 Found in the 19th century at the site of the Biais commandery in Saint Pere en Retz Loire Atlantique France now in the Musee Dobre in Nantes inv no 303 Philippe Josserand Les Templiers en Bretagne au Moyen Age mythes et realites Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l Ouest 119 4 2012 7 33 p 24 In 15th century Europe it was widely assumed that the gypsies were Egyptians hence the name gypsies and several gypsy leaders are known to have styled themselves as counts of lesser Egypt Wilhelm Ferdinand Bischoff Deutsch Zigeunerisches Worterbuch 1827 p 14 Mohd Elfie Nieshaem Juferi What Is The Significance Of The Crescent Moon In Islam bismikaallahuma org 12 October 2005 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Pamela Berger The Crescent on the Temple The Dome of the Rock as Image of the Ancient Jewish Sanctuary 2012 p 164f Islam Ansiklopedisi in Turkish Vol 4 Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Vakfi 1991 p 298 It seems possible though not certain that after the conquest Mehmed took over the crescent and star as an emblem of sovereignty from the Byzantines The half moon alone on a blood red flag allegedly conferred on the Janissaries by Emir Orhan was much older as is demonstrated by numerous references to it dating from before 1453 But since these flags lack the star which along with the half moon is to be found on Sassanid and Byzantine municipal coins it may be regarded as an innovation of Mehmed It seems certain that in the interior of Asia tribes of Turkish nomads had been using the half moon alone as an emblem for some time past but it is equally certain that crescent and star together are attested only for a much later period There is good reason to believe that old Turkish and Byzantine traditions were combined in the emblem of Ottoman and much later present day Republican Turkish sovereignty Franz Babinger William C Hickman Ed Ralph Manheim Trans Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Princeton University Press 1992 p 108 e g A Locher With Star and Crescent A Full and Authentic Account of a Recent Journey with a Caravan from Bombay to Constantinople Andrew Haggard Under Crescent and Star 1895 Mosque and minaret are surmounted by crescents the air glowing over the Golden Horn is as it were full of moons Hezekiah Butterworth Zigzag journeys in the Orient vol 3 1882 p 481 The symbolism of the star and crescent in the flag of the Kingdom of Libya 1951 1969 was explained in an English language booklet The Libyan Flag amp The National Anthem issued by the Ministry of Information and Guidance of the Kingdom of Libya year unknown cited after Jos Poels at FOTW 1997 as follows The crescent is symbolic of the beginning of the lunar month according to the Muslim calendar It brings back to our minds the story of Hijra migration of our Prophet Mohammed from his home in order to spread Islam and teach the principles of right and virtue The Star represents our smiling hope the beauty of aim and object and the light of our belief in God in our country its dignity and honour which illuminate our way and puts an end to darkness Edward E Curtis Black Muslim religion in the Nation of Islam 1960 1975 2006 p 157 Joshua Lipes Jilil Kashgary 4 April 2017 Xinjiang Police Search Uyghur Homes For Illegal Items Radio Free Asia Translated by Mamatjan Juma Retrieved 16 December 2019 A second announcement issued Feb 28 by the Chira Cele county government said those who report individuals for having stitched the star and crescent moon insignia on their clothing or personal items or the words East Turkestan referring to the name of a short lived Uyghur republic on their mobile phone case purse or other jewelry were also eligible for cash payments The blazon of the coat of arms is attested in the 19th century as Azure a crescent or surmounted by an estoile of eight points of the last William Berry Robert Glover Encyclopaedia Heraldica 1828 This is apparently based on minor seals used by Portsmouth mayors in the 18th century Robert East H Lewis Extracts from Records in the Possession of the Municipal Corporation of the Borough of Portsmouth and from Other Documents Relating Thereto 1891 p 656 The medieval seal showed no such design Henry Press Wright The Story of the Domus Dei of Portsmouth Commonly Called the Royal Garrison Church 1873 p 12 The claim connecting the star and crescent design to the Great Seal of Richard I originates in the mid 20th century Valentine Dyall Unsolved Mysteries A Collection of Weird Problems from the Past 1954 p 14 Peter Ziegler ed Die Gemeindewappen des Kantons Zurich 1977 74 77 Charles Boutell Device of Star or Sun and Crescent In The Gentleman s Magazine Volume XXXVI New Series London John Nicols amp Son London 1851 pp 514 515External linksMedia related to Star and crescent at Wikimedia Commons The dictionary definition of at Wiktionary