Coat of arms of Stara Zagora

Stara Zagora Coat of Arms was created in 1979 for the 100-th anniversary of the rebuild of Stara Zagora, when the municipality made a decision to create a new Coat of Arms. The task of composing the new Coat of Arms was given to artist Hristo Tanev.

Stara Zagora Coat of Arms

Composition

The symbolic meaning of the shield is - to protect, defend, provide sanctuary and it is the foundation of the seal. In its upper part the shield ends in a castle wall, which emphasizes the important administrative, military, political and economical importance of Stara Zagora for the hundreds of years of its growth and development.

In its central part on a red background, there is a mother and baby lion. This particular picture has been taken from a rock carving from the 12th century found in Stara Zagora in 1949 and has become one of the city symbols. The lioness represents the mother instinct, fertility and is placed in the central part of the Coat of Arms, which has not only historical, but symbolic meaning, to show that despite what the city has been through in the past thousands of year it still continues its existence and continues its progress.

The bottom has green background with golden-yellow stripes which converge towards the center. This enhances the fertility of the Stara Zagora fields and is a symbol of roads to the future. The green color is a symbol of life and death and the hope and happiness. The red color, used for the central part, is a symbol of fire, health, strength and love. The gold-yellow is a sign of light, intellect, belief and good.

gollark: YouTube has nice features like not putting load on your servers, and adaptive bitrate streaming.
gollark: I mean, vast amounts in absolute terms, but not much compared to youtube.
gollark: There are a bunch of them, but they don't actually have very much content.
gollark: Not that you have access to that.
gollark: The osmarks video harvested from youtube™ archive, obviously.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.