Coat of arms of Durland: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
|||
Line 60: | Line 60: | ||
}} | }} | ||
; | ;Other variants | ||
{{gallery|align=center|noborder=yes|whitebg=no|width=125|height=125 | {{gallery|align=center|noborder=yes|whitebg=no|width=125|height=125 | ||
| | |File:Coat of arms of a member of the House of Genthana.png|Coat of arms of a member of the Royal House who bears no arms in their own right | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 11:19, 13 January 2024
Coat of arms of Durland | |
---|---|
Versions | |
Armiger | Carilla, Queen of Durland |
Adopted | 9 April 1928 |
Torse | tasseled strings Or |
Blazon | Per pale Azure and Or two lions rampant all counterchanged within a bordure argent. |
Orders | Order of Prince Jora |
Other elements | The monarch places this coat of arms on a mantle gules lined with Ermine. Above the mantle is a pavilion gules again topped with the royal crown. |
The coat of arms of Durland is the arms of dominion of queen Carilla of Durland, and is used to represent both the monarch and the kingdom. It depicts two lions countercharged onto a vertically-divided shield of blue and gold, within a white border (Per pale Azure and Or two lions rampant all counterchanged within a bordure argent.)
The coat of arms is used by the Queen, Parliament, and the Supreme Court. Members of the Royal Family use the arms charged with a label of difference and a crown of rank. The government uses a variation of the arms, without the mantle and with the shield crowned, which is known as the state arms.
Variants
Royal versions
Gallery
- Coats of arms of the Monarch
- Coats of arms of members of the Royal House
- Other variants