Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Manx flags on the Loch Promenade, Douglas. The flag of the Isle of Man (Manx: brattagh Vannin) is a triskelion, composed of three armoured legs with golden spurs, upon a red background. It has been the official flag of the Isle of Man since 1 December 1932 and is based on the Manx coat of arms, which dates back to the 13th century. [2]
It is possible that the origin of the Manx triskeles is a knotted device depicted on the coinage of their 10th-century Viking predecessors on the Isle; [12] however, that device is dissimilar to the Manx triskeles, and the nearly 300-year gap between its use and the appearance of the Manx triskeles suggests that there is no connection between ...
Manx triskelion. For centuries, the island's symbol has been its ancient triskelion, a device similar to Sicily's trinacria: three bent legs, each with a spur, joined at the thigh. The Manx triskelion does not appear to have an official design: government publications, currency, flags, the tourist authority and others all use different variants.
A sculpture of the Manx triskelion in front of Ronaldsway Airport terminal. For centuries, the island's symbol has been the so-called "three legs of Man" (Manx: Tree Cassyn Vannin), a triskelion of three legs conjoined at the thigh. The Manx triskelion, which dates back with certainty to the late 13th century, is of uncertain origin.
A triskelion or triskeles is an ancient motif consisting either of a triple spiral exhibiting rotational symmetry or of other patterns in triplicate that emanate from a common center. The spiral design can be based on interlocking Archimedean spirals , or represent three bent human limbs.
Manx cat; Mini; Mother's Day; Music of the Isle of Man; National colours; National day; Order of precedence; Order of precedence in China; Order of precedence in England and Wales; Order of precedence in Northern Ireland; Order of precedence in Scotland; Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom; PAL; Peel, Isle of Man; Pound (currency) Ramsey ...
Manx Airlines was an English-owned, Isle of Man-based airline that existed between 1982 and 2002. [1] Its head office was located on the grounds of Ronaldsway Airport in Ballasalla , Malew . [ 2 ] An airline of the same name existed between 1947 and 1958.
The triskelion was borne in the arms of the kings of Mann and the Isles as far back as the 13th century. [9] [note 2] The earliest known arms borne by the MacLeods of Harris and Dunvegan (pictured top-right) are, however, quite different the royal Manx arms. [7]