White on Polish coat of arms

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The Order of the White Eagle was ordained by King WΕ‚adysΕ‚aw (Vladistas) in 1325, instituted on the occasion of his son Casimir's marriage. Ensign: a white eagle, crowned. To this order belonged both noble Poles and Russians [Lexicon Tetraglotton (1660)]. In 1705, Augustus, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, revived the order. From 1705, many important nobles were inducted to the order and wore its insignia, giving it diplomatic importance. (The Russian branch of the order diverged and became awarded separately by the Czar. Ensign: a white eagle on a cross, eared in flames.)

The reason for the ensign is unknown, but is likely derived from the military eagle of the Rome, because it was common for knights of the white eagle to be inducted as Counts of the Holy Roman Empire at that same time that they were received into the Order of the White Eagle.

One way of wearing the White Eagle was as a silver eagle suspended from braids of gold chain. In other cases the eagle was enameled white. Also, the military eagle of the free forces of Poland was always silver. This is the eagle that atop the standard carried before the army, the finial. For this reason the white eagle is sometimes associated with silver, as opposed to the gold eagle finials belonging to standards of the Holy Roman Emperor.

There are various fables "explaining" the white eagle, but these are all of relatively recent invention and have no antiquity.

Concerning the confounding of white and silver: although some heraldic devices confound silver and white, this is merely a convenience, called the "tincture". In official heraldry notices, the eagle is described as argent (silver), but this is only because French heraldry knows no white. In common parlance in Poland, it was always without question that the eagle was white.

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The OP is making a mountain out of a molehill. Up until recent centuries, it was common (in English at least) to use the heraldic colors when describing coats of arms and flags.

Polish heraldry and vexilology might use ordinary modern Polish words for colors, but English heraldry uses special heraldic words. Thus in English the Polish eagle wasn't white or silver, it was "argent". Argent was considered to be ideally silver colored, but practically either white or silver were equally good for argent when coloring a coat of arms. Fancy and elaborate depictions of heraldry often included gold paint for the heraldic color "or", meaning gold or yellow. But silver tends to tarnish and turn black over time.

In this depiction of an earlier version of the coat of arms of Jerusalem, for example, it looks like a black cross on gold. https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=https%3A%2F%2Fupload.wikimedia.org%2Fwikipedia%2Fcommons%2Fd%2Fde%2FKonradin.jpg&imgrefurl=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FConradin&docid=mbKPrmSUv1rM0M&tbnid=y5sNqCBtF4Hw3M%3A&w=993&h=1432&bih=913&biw=1280&ved=0ahUKEwj5x8eOt_7MAhXn7oMKHfRgCfgQMwgfKAIwAg&iact=mrc&uact=8[1]

But heraldic experts are certain that it was actually a white cross on gold.

http://www.hubert-herald.nl/JerusalemArms.htm[1]

So silver is not often used for argent when coloring coats of arms.

Thus I own a modern book on heraldry where all the or in coats of arms actually looks like gold, being yellow and shiny, but all the argent is plain uncolored white paper because they didn't have a process to print a good silvery surface.

And because flags are made of fabric that moves a lot and would quickly flake off many forms of applied gold or silver, it is even more common to use yellow and white dyes instead of or and argent in flags.

That is why most heraldry books say that in heraldry there is no difference between white and silver. Only a few experts suggest there could be a difference between white and silver in a few rare instances.

Now that computer graphics are common, it is easy to depict or as metallic and golden and argent as metallic and silvery on a computer screen. So perhaps or will be subdivided into gold and yellow, and argent subdivided into silver and white, in future computerized heraldry.

And in flags white is almost always used, even when it is based on argent in a coat of arms. When future computer and TV screens become as thin, light, and flexible as cloth, there may be future flags made out of such computer screens, which might be programmed to display or and argent as gold and silver instead of yellow and white.

But in the context of heraldry - and the flag of Poland is based on its coat of arms - it is at the present almost always pointless to try to make a distinction between silver and white.

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