Prosperity
Coats of arms and flags ^ French arms before 1376 ^ French arms after 1376 ^ The arms of Edward III, including the fleur-de-lis; similar arms were used by subsequent English monarchs ^ Standard of the French royal family prior to 1789 and from 1815 to 1830 ^ Scottish royal arms ^ Fleur-de-lis of Florence ^ Fleur-de-lis in the coat of arms of Pope Paul VI ^ Fleur-de-lis of Bosnia ^ National symbol of Bosniaks ^ Flag of Quebec ^ Flag of Acadiana ^ Coat of Arms of Wiesbaden, Capital of Hessen, Germany
If this is the pin then here is an explanation. 241st Field Artillery Regiment DI
Bonaparte.Although it was the Italian Buonoparte until he changed it to the French Bonaparte when he was made commander of the Army of the Interior at the age of 26. He did this to symbolize his final commitment to France.He was christened Napoleone di Buonaparte.
Calvin Harris - Acceptable in the eighties....
* Hongwu Di: Zhu Yuanzhang * Jianwen Di: Zhu Bingwen * Yongle Di: Zhu DI and 13 more
la fleur de lys - lily of the valley (it was the emblem of the French Kings)
Coats of arms and flags ^ French arms before 1376 ^ French arms after 1376 ^ The arms of Edward III, including the fleur-de-lis; similar arms were used by subsequent English monarchs ^ Standard of the French royal family prior to 1789 and from 1815 to 1830 ^ Scottish royal arms ^ Fleur-de-lis of Florence ^ Fleur-de-lis in the coat of arms of Pope Paul VI ^ Fleur-de-lis of Bosnia ^ National symbol of Bosniaks ^ Flag of Quebec ^ Flag of Acadiana ^ Coat of Arms of Wiesbaden, Capital of Hessen, Germany
It's the Satanic Cross.
Logos and other marks used in trade are generally registered as trademarks. The Corvette logo described as "two flags connected at the base, one flag is a checkered flag and the other is a shaded flag with a bowtie design and a fleur-de-lis" is registered to General Motors.
113th Field Artillery Battalion
Lisa Di Capa goes by Lee, and Lis (pronouced Leese).
501 = DI
Di-DAH-Di-Dit is the letter L.
Symbolo di Pace
N2O5 is the symbol for dinitrogen pentoxide.
If this is the pin then here is an explanation. 241st Field Artillery Regiment DI
I collect DUI's from units that served in the Italian Campaign from May 1944 to May 1945. I do not recognize that unit crest. Can you be more descriptive? Is the photo clear enough to provide more details? Are you sure it is a sword? All three Regiments of the 88th Infantry Division has a fleur de lis on it and at least one of its artillery battalions. Units of the 92nd Infantry and 10th Mountain Divisions also have one. But none that I know of have a sword. Rather many have a diagonal line across the shield. If this pin only has 2 emblems on it, then it would look unsymmetrical. Usually, it will have a diagonal line that seperates the 2 emblems or the top half will be a different color than bottom half and each will have an emblem centered on that half. BTW, fleur-de-lis symbolizes service in France in WW1. I found one that might fit your description: the DI pin for 310 Military Police Company(or Battalion). This pin is GREEN/YELLOW and divided diagonally with a wavy line. The emblem on the left looks like a sword and a Fleur-de-lis on upper right. The "sword" is a vertical line with a curved tip with a small vertical line that could be a handle. The motto is "JUSTICE TO ALL". The example I found is a probably a post-WW2 pin. I thought this might fit a unit in Italy because the 85th Division had a 310 Engineer Battalion. However the MP unit may have been 85 MP or 785 MP---not sure which. I can check on that. Custermen