File:Crowned Floral Badges of the United Kingdom (shamrock dexter).svg
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Summary
[edit]DescriptionCrowned Floral Badges of the United Kingdom (shamrock dexter).svg |
English: One of the floral heraldic badges of the United Kingdom since 1801 with the Irish shamrock on the proper right, the Scots thistle on the proper left, and both grafted onto the stem of the English Tudor rose. Above all the St Edward's Crown. (During the reign of Victoria the crown was changed to a different crown, and reverted to the St Edward's crown at the start of Elizabeth II's reign.) Blazon This badge and its mirror image (with the thistle on the proper right and the shamrock on the left) were approved by George III by an Order in Council in November 1800. The other heraldic badge of the United Kingdom is the crowned shield of arms of the Union. Similar badges, without the shamrock and red saltire, were the heraldic badges of the United Kingdom between 1 May 1707 and 31 December 1800, having been approved by Queen Anne by an Order in Council subsequent to the Acts of Union, whose first and twenty-fourth articles deal with Anne's royal prerogative to determine the heraldry and order of heraldic precedence of the new United Kingdom: & . The United Kingdom of Queen Anne therefore used a thistle grafted onto a Tudor rose's stem and royally crowned George III's prerogative to determine to national heraldry and flag of the second United Kingdom is similarly enunciated by the Acts of Union 1800: & The floral badge is, for example, worn prominently on the uniforms of the Yeomen Warders, the Yeomen of the Guard, etc.; appears as the "Union Wreath" on various regimental colours, military uniforms, etc.; and is frequently seen as in architecture and the decorative arts throughout the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth realms. A bejewelled version of the floral Union Badge appears prominently on the Diamond State Diadem itself (alternating with the crosses-pattée in place of the traditional fleurs-de-lys) designed for George IV's coronation (the first after the Union of Great Britain and Ireland) and worn by queens thereafter; Elizabeth II wore it for her own coronation and for the state openings of parliament, as well as wearing it on all bank notes, stamps, and coins. |
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current | 21:03, 31 July 2022 | 364 × 388 (330 KB) | Smasongarrison (talk | contribs) | cleaner paths with svgomg // Editing SVG source code using c:User:Rillke/SVGedit.js | |
14:43, 18 February 2022 | 364 × 388 (514 KB) | GPinkerton (talk | contribs) | Uploaded a work by {{Own based|Crowned Floral Badges of the United Kingdom.svg|display=24}} from {{Derived from |Crowned Floral Badges of the United Kingdom.svg|display = 16 | opt = l}} with UploadWizard |
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