Clan Boyle Crest & Coats of Arms

Clan Boyle Crest

Worn by all of the name and ancestry

Crest Description: 
A double headed eagle displayed, parted per pale, embattled Gules and Argent

Clan Boyle Coat of Arms

A note on Coats of Arms:
Under Scottish heraldic law a coat of arms is awarded to an individual (with the exception of civic or corporate arms) . There is no such thing as a ‘family coat of arms’ The arms represented below are personal arms (with the above exceptions). Only the individual granted these arms has the right to use them.  for more information see our pages on heraldry here:
(https://tartanshop.com/pages/all-about-scottish-heraldry)

 

Boyle of Kelburne

BOYLE of Kelburne
Or, three stags’ horns, erect, Gules, two and one

 --------------------------------------------------

Londesborough, All Saints Church photo, Boyle coat of arms. Arms on the brass to Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington

Londesborough, All Saints Church photo, Boyle coat of arms. Arms on the brass to Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington

 --------------------------------------------------

Lord Boyle family

Lord Boyle family

 --------------------------------------------------

Boyle etching

Bookplate for Charles Boyle, Fourth Earl of Orrery, with coat of arms of Boyle impaling Cecil; lettered to left and right of crown with “C.O.” and “E.O.”, and on banner with motto: “Honor Virtutis Praemium.”; top right corner of impression pasted onto sheet of paper. 1731
Etching

 --------------------------------------------------

The coat of arms of the Most Reverend Hugh Charles Boyle, DD who served as the Sixth bishop of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1921-1950

The coat of arms of the Most Reverend Hugh Charles Boyle, DD who served as the Sixth bishop of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1921-1950

 --------------------------------------------------

Earl of Glasgow arms

Arms of the EARLS OF GLASGOW
Quarterly, 1st and 4th: or a double headed eagle displayed gules, armed and beaked azure; 2nd and 3rd: parted per bend embattled argent and gules; over all an escutcheon or, charged with three stag's horns gules

Clan-boyle