Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The state coat of arms was used on the great princely seal, coins, flags, some public buildings, and various other objects (princely sealing rings, battle or parade swords, etc.), while the dynastic coat of arms was also used on coins, but especially in circumstances related more to the particular life of the Moldavian voivodes (on church or ...
The Botswana Emblems Act describes the coat of arms of Botswana as follows: [3] Argent three barrulets wavy in fesse Azure between in chief three cogwheels proper, one above engaged with two below and in base a bull's head caboshed proper, and for the supporters on either side a zebra the dexter supporting a white elephant's tusk the sinister a ...
The construction sheet of the Flag of Botswana. The Republic of Botswana has a rectangular flag with a 2:3 ratio. [1] Race is a very important feature of the flag. [2] It was designed in order to contrast with the Flag of South Africa at the time when apartheid was in effect. [3] The black band with the white frame has two meanings.
Flag of Moldova Moldavia: Infantry Battalion: 1346–1859 Flag and coat of arms of Moldavia. We have very little information on ancient Moldavian and Wallachian flags. For Moldavia the most important symbol has always been the wild ox head, which is still to be found on the flag of the new Moldavian republic.
The representation of a coat of arms is an artistic creation, subject as such to copyright laws. Restriction of use - Legal notice: Most of the time, the usage of coats of arms is governed by legal restrictions, independent of the status of the depiction shown here. A coat of arms represents its owner.
Coat of arms of Botswana; F. Fatshe leno la rona; Flag of Botswana; P. Plains zebra This page was last edited on 11 March 2024, at 22:47 (UTC). ...
Three equal horizontal stripes of red (top), blue, and white charged with the coat of arms of Serbia shifted slightly to the hoist side; the principal field of the coat of arms displays a white two-headed eagle on a red shield; a smaller red shield on the eagle is divided into four quarters by a white cross. [715] [716] [143] [717] [718]
Iftimi hypothesizes that the coat of arms may have been painted by Eustație Altini, and that the flags in supporters may show the flags of vassalage, granted by Sultan Mahmud II (pp. 13–14). Cyrillic abbreviations read IѠ AΛ. CК. КΛ. В.В., namely: "IO [princely title] ALEXANDRU SCARLAT CALLIMACHI VOIVODE".