Royal Badge of Wales


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The Royal Badge of Wales
Details
Armiger Elizabeth II
Adopted 2008
Escutcheon Quarterly Or and Gules, four Lions passant guardant counter-charged armed and langued Azure
Motto Welsh: Pleidiol Wyf I'm Gwlad
Other elements Ensigned with a representation of the imperial crown Proper. A wreath consisting of the plant emblems of the four countries of the United Kingdom.
Earlier versions
Use On all Assembly Measures

A new Royal Badge of Wales was approved in May 2008. It is based on the arms borne by Llywelyn the Great, the famous 13th-century Welsh prince (blazoned quarterly Or and gules, four lions countercharged langued and armed azure), with the addition of the imperial crown atop a continuous scroll which, together with a wreath consisting of the plant emblems of the four countries of the United Kingdom, surrounds the shield. [1] The motto which appears on the scroll, PLEIDIOL WYF I'M GWLAD (I am true to my country), is taken from the National Anthem of Wales and is also found on Welsh design £1 coins. The new badge will appear on the cover of Assembly Measures passed by the National Assembly for Wales.[2]

The current badge follows in a long line of heraldic devices representing Wales. Its predecessors have all been variations on either the Red Dragon, an ancient emblem revived by Henry VII, or the arms of Llywelyn.

Contents

History

Kingdoms of Wales

Before the English conquest, Wales was ruled by a number of regional Kings and Princes, whose dominions shifted and sometimes merged following the vagaries of war (mainly with the English) and marriage and inheritance. All these Kings and Princes were ascribed personal coats of arms, often retrospectively if they lived before the dawn of heraldry, and these were borne by their descendants in Wales. The two principal Welsh kingdoms were those of north Wales (Gwynedd) and south Wales (Deheubarth). Of these, the most successful, and the last, finally, to fall, was that of Gwynedd, and the arms now borne by the English Princes of Wales as an inescutcheon are the historic arms of the dynasty of Gwynedd as borne by the last native Princes of Wales, including Llywelyn the Great and Llywelyn the Last.

The arms associated with former Kingdom of Powys are a red lion rampant on a gold field. They were used by the House of Mathrafal when Powys was an independent kingdom and later by the Earls of Powis (de la Pole and de Cherleton families) up until the late Middle Ages and can now be found on various civic coats of arms.

The arms associated with the principal dynasty of south Wales (Deheubarth) are, on the other hand, a gold lion rampant on a red field within an indented (sometimes engrailed) gold border. Although never included in the English Royal Arms, they continue to be borne by families descended from the dynasty of Deheubarth: most notably by the Talbot family (Earl of Shrewsbury, etc) which married an heiress of the dynasty in the 14th century.

Owain Glyndŵr, the last native Prince of Wales (crowned 1400), bore the arms of Powys and Deheubarth quartered
Former Kingdoms of Wales
Arms/Standard Kingdom/ Principality Details
Kingdom of Gwynedd Traditional Arms of the House of Aberffraw, Gwynedd and the personal arms of Llywelyn the Great. Appropriated by the (British) Princes of Wales in 1911. Quarterly Or and Gules, four lions passant guardant counter charged, armed and langued Azur.
Kingdom of Powys & later the Kingdom of Powys Wenwynwyn Traditional Coat of Arms of the House Mathrafal of Powys and later Powys Wenwynwyn and successive de la Pole dynasty. Or, a lion Gules armed and langed Azure.
Kingdom of Powys Fadog Arms of Madog ap Gruffydd Maelor and later Powys Fadog. Argent, a lion Sable armed and langed Gules.
Kingdom of Deheubarth Traditional Arms of the House of Dinefwr and later by the Talbot dynasty. Gules a Lion rampant Or, a border engrailed of the last.
Kingdom of Gwent Per pale Azure and Sable three Fleurs-de-Lis Or.
Kingdom of Ceredigion Arms of Gwaethfoed, Prince of Ceredigion and later Kingdom of Ceredigion. Sable, Lion rampant regardant Or.
Kingdom of Morgannwg Arms of Iestyn ap Gwrgant and attributed to the Kingdom of Morgannwg. Gules, three Chevronels Argent.
Kingdom of Dyfed Arms of Gwynfardd, Prince of Dyfed and later Kingdom of Dyfed. Azures, Lion rampant between four Roses Or.

Red Dragon badge

The Royal Badge of Wales after modification in 1953

A Royal heraldic badge for Wales has been used since the reign of Henry VII, which is: On a mount Vert a dragon passant with wings elevated Gules[3]. In 1953 the badge was given an augmentation of honour. The augmented badge is blazoned: Within a circular riband Argent fimbriated Or bearing the motto Y DDRAIG GOCH DDYRY CYCHWYN ["the red dragon inspires action"], in letters Vert, and ensigned with a representation of the Crown proper, an escutcheon per fesse Argent and Vert and thereon the Red Dragon passant[4]. In other words the augmented badge places the red dragon upon a shield divided horixontally into a white top half and green bottom half, surrounded with a scroll and topped with the royal crown.

In 1956 this badge was added to the arms of the Welsh capital city Cardiff by placing it on collars around the necks of the two supporters of the shield.[5]

The badge was the basis of a flag of Wales[6] in which it was placed on a background divided horizontally with the top half white and bottom half green. In 1959 Government use of this flag was dropped in favour of the current flag[7][8] at the urging of the Gorsedd of Bards[9]

The badge is currently used by the Wales Office[10] and is printed on Statutory Instruments made by the National Assembly for Wales.[11] The badge was previously used in the corporate logo of the Assembly until the "dynamic dragon" logo was adopted.[12]

There is a further badge for Wales, belonging to the Princes of Wales since 1901, of the red dragon on a mount but with a label of three points Argent about the shoulder to difference it from the monarch's badge.[13] (A similar label of three points is used in his arms, crest and supporters for the same reason.)

Use of the arms of Llywelyn for Wales

Coat of Arms of the Prince of Wales since 1911.
Banner of the Prince of Wales for use in Wales (introduced in 1960).

When in 1911 the future King Edward VIII was made Prince of Wales, a warrant exemplifying his arms was issued. Along with the usual royal arms differenced by a "label" of three points, his main arms included an "inescutcheon surtout" crowned with the heir apparent's coronet and containing the arms of Llywelyn of Gwynedd to represent the principality of Wales.[14]

It is unclear whether, before this date, they were thought of as the "arms of Wales" or simply as the "arms of Llywelyn". But they had certainly not previously been used by heirs to the English or British thrones; indeed, in his 1909 book A Complete Guide to Heraldry, Arthur Charles Fox-Davies had written: "It is much to be regretted that the arms of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales do not include...any allusion to his dignities of Prince of Wales or Earl of Chester." The only allusion, before this innovation, to Wales in the Royal arms had been the inclusion, among many other badges, of on a mount vert a dragon rouge — the royal badge on which the present Flag of Wales is based.

In the 1960s, the Prince of Wales decided to use a banner of the Principality's arms, defaced with an inescutcheon of his heraldic coronet, when performing royal duties in Wales.

In 2007 the Presiding Officer of the National Assembly for Wales entered into discussions with the Prince of Wales and the College of Arms regarding a grant of arms for official use by the assembly.[15] A new Royal Badge designed by the Garter King of Arms, Peter Gwynne-Jones was granted in 2008 based on the Llywelyn arms.[16]

References

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