Coat of arms of Aruba
The Coat of arms of Aruba was originally designed in Amsterdam in 1955. Since then, it has been in use as the national symbol of Aruba. The symbol has seven main elements:[1]
- The lion crest symbolizes power and generosity.
- A white Cross divides the shield into quarters, and represents devotion and faith.
- In the first quarter is an aloe plant, the island's first important export.
- In the second quarter, Hooiberg, Aruba's most recognizable and second highest hill, represents Aruba rising out of the sea.
- The third quarter depicts hands shaking, symbolic of Aruba's good relations with the world.
- In the fourth quarter, a cogwheel represents industry.
- Below the shield is a pair of laurel branches, traditional symbols of peace and friendship.
Blazon
Shield: quartered by a cross Argent, the first Azure an aloe plant Or, the second Or the Hooiberg hill Vert issuant from barry wavy sea of Azure and Argent, the third Or two dexter hands Gules shaking each other fesswise, the fourth Gules an Argent cogwheel
Crest: a lion couchant Gules
Supporters: a pair of laurel branches Vert, tied at the bottom
gollark: I tried downgrading it from 5.14.2 to 5.14.1 or something, but that didn't do anything, and I probably can't downgrade further without just reverting all my package versions to a week or so ago, which is not ideal.
gollark: Anyone know why the Qt-using applications (deepin-screenshot, multiMC, calibre) on my laptop recently started segfaulting after I updated my system?
gollark: There *are* already non-docker container tools.
gollark: It's running Arch Linux, the most stablest OS.
gollark: It's less mad than the Styropyro Cult Wars at least.
References
- http://www.visitaruba.com/facts/general/coatofarms.html Archived 2009-01-07 at the Wayback Machine "Aruba Facts - General Knowledge - Coat of Arms"
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.