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abcd2 – I think I got the point entirely, and realize exactly what you’re trying to say. The names of the days of the week are around entirely because Norse and Roman ovdei avoda zoro attributed significance to them. Anyway, as far as the fleur de lys goes, the lily in and of itself was the religious symbol (it symbolised the ‘purity’ of Mary), the fleur de lys (being a stylised lily) was a variation on it which had, even by the time of the First Crusade, lost all religious meaning and was purely a heraldic symbol used by the Royal Houses of France and (after the Norman Conquest) Britain. In fact, it is only very recently that scholars decided that there was ever any religious meaning behind the fleur to begin with. By the time of the Crusades it had left its religious roots so far in the dust that entirely secular legends about its origins had already passed into accepted wisdom. One legend has the first Frankish king, Clovis I, picking a lily from the banks of the River Luts (hence Luce, hence Lys) and wearing it in his helmet as he rode into battle. The widespread use of the fleur de lys symbol has, therefore, more to do with its heraldic use than its religious symbolism.