The base, more formally the terrace in base[1] or champagne,[2] is a heraldic
charge that occupies the lower third of the field. It is in that sense the inverse correlate of the
chief. In
French heraldry, the champagne is considered an ‘honourable ordinary’ (‘pièce honorable’),[3] but in
English heraldry it is frequently omitted from lists of the ‘honourable ordinaries’, and grouped, if at all, with the
subordinaries.[4] The diminutive of the base, occupying one half the height of the ordinary, is termed
‘plaine’ in French heraldry.[5] Another, now less common, English language term for the base is the
‘Foot’,[6] a usage the recalls the
Germanic Schildfuß, Danish skjoldfod, or Dutch schildvoet.
In English heraldry, the terms base, terrace in base, and champagne are synonyms that include both charges with a straight-line upper edge running parallel to the chief and those with an upper edge curved or otherwise varied. Standard variations are the
mount and trimount.[7] In
French heraldry in contrast, the terms champagne and its diminutive plaine are reserved for those with straight upper edges and the term terrasse (terrace in base) for those with
curved or otherwise varied upper edges.[8] Champagnes that take a step-wise
lines of division or variation are blasoned in French as
"champagne pignonnée".[9] The latter (‘terrasse’) are furthermore
classed as mobile charges rather than ‘honourable ordinaries’.