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Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 01 May 2017, 17:02
by Arthur Radburn
Chris Green wrote:That Haiti, of all the Caribbean states, has no coat of arms seems very strange given that it once had its own peerage. Indeed the current Richmond Herald, Clive Cheesman has edited a book about it.
According to the Haitian Constitution, this device
is a coat of arms : "les Armes de la Republique". Clearly the Haitian idea of a coat of arms does not necessarily require a shield.
At the time of the kingdom and the peerage, Haiti had a more conventional European-style coat of arms, depicting a phoenix. It's depicted on the cover of Clive Cheeseman's
book.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 01 May 2017, 17:28
by Chris Green
According to the Haitian Constitution, this device is a coat of arms : "les Armes de la Republique". Clearly the Haitian idea of a coat of arms does not necessarily require a shield.
The French "armes" does indeed mean coats of arms, but also means armaments. One might be forgiven for wondering if the motley display of equipment was not once the Haitian army's
ordre de bataille entiere.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 02 May 2017, 19:14
by Arthur Radburn
Staying Francophone, these are the arms of the French island of
Saint Barthelemy, approved
circa 1978. The design indicates that the island has, at various times, been ruled by France, the Order of Malta, and Sweden. The indigenous name of the island, Ouanalao, appears on the motto scroll. St Barthelemy's status is now that of an overseas municipality, hence the mural crown.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 03 May 2017, 17:58
by Chris Green
The British Overseas Territory of the
Cayman Islands consist of three islands, Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac and Little Cayman, each represented in its arms by a molet vert fimbriated or.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 03 May 2017, 18:47
by Chris Green
The
Turks & Caicos Islands:
Apparently the green object with a red nose is a cactus.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 03 May 2017, 19:22
by Arthur Radburn
Chris Green wrote:Apparently the green object with a red nose is a cactus.
Specifically, a Turk's Head Cactus, after which the island was named.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 09 Jul 2017, 19:28
by Marcus Karlsson
Arthur Radburn wrote:Staying Francophone, these are the arms of the French island of
Saint Barthelemy, approved
circa 1978. The design indicates that the island has, at various times, been ruled by France, the Order of Malta, and Sweden. The indigenous name of the island, Ouanalao, appears on the motto scroll. St Barthelemy's status is now that of an overseas municipality, hence the mural crown.
During Swedish time the Island was acctualy granted arms showing a Coral. Unfortunately I have no picture.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 26 Sep 2020, 18:30
by Jeremy Keith Hammond
I am actually moving to the Caribbean at the end of October, so this was a fun thread for me to revisit. Here are the arms of Vieques, an island municipality of Puerto Rico and my future home. It sits between Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. Supposedly the tower represents the island lighthouse, which was built in 1896. The US took control of the island in 1898 and I assume (perhaps unfairly) that the arms are Spanish in origin.
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 26 Sep 2020, 18:36
by Mark Henderson
Wait, you're moving to the Caribbean? Long term?
Re: Caribbean heraldry
Posted: 26 Sep 2020, 18:41
by Jeremy Keith Hammond
At least six months, with no specific plans to move back.