Coat of arms of Madrid: Difference between revisions

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|After the victory in the [[Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa]], the Town Council adopts the banner that the Madrid troops carried in it. It depicted the figure of a bear, with seven stars on its back representing the [[ursa minor]] and the [[pole star]].
|After the victory in the [[Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa]], the Town Council adopts the banner that the Madrid troops carried in it. It depicted the figure of a bear, with seven stars on its back representing the [[ursa minor]] and the [[pole star]].
|-
|-
||||
|align="center" colspan="2"|
|align="center"|1242-1544
|align="center"|1222-1242
|To ratify the power that the church and the nobles had over the lands surrounding the town, they modified the shield dividing it into four quarters; in the first and fourth they represent a castle of silver on the red background, and in the remaining two the bear appears, with the intention of indicating that the pastures of Madrid are of the nobility.
|To ratify the power that the church and the nobles had over the lands surrounding the town, they modified the shield dividing it into four quarters; in the first and fourth they represent a castle of silver on the red background, and in the remaining two the bear appears, with the intention of indicating that the pastures of Madrid are of the nobility.
|-
|-
|align="center" colspan="2"|
|align="center" colspan="2"|[[File:Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|100px]]
|align="center"|1544-c.1600
|align="center"|1242-1544
|After twenty years of conflict with the church, the people are granted the hunting rights and the right to exploit the fruit tree areas and the church keeps the lands and pastures that surround the castle and the mountains.
|After twenty years of conflict with the church, the people are granted the hunting rights and the right to exploit the fruit tree areas and the church keeps the lands and pastures that surround the castle and the mountains.


The shield with the Seven stars of the Little Bear is adopted and the same bear of the previous shields steep on an apple tree, symbol of the victory of the town as "villa" and its attainment of the right of exploitation of its lands.
The shield with the Seven stars of the Little Bear is adopted and the same bear of the previous shields steep on an apple tree, symbol of the victory of the town as "villa" and its attainment of the right of exploitation of its lands.
|-
|align="center" colspan="2"|[[File:Coat of Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|130px]]
|align="center"|1544-c.1600
|Doing the Courts in Valladolid and as thanks to the city in which the Emperor Charles V was cured of the fearsome plague fever, put on the arms of Madrid the Royal crown and was renamed “La coronada villa de Madrid”. It changed the apple tree for a strawberry tree.

|-
|-
|align="center"|[[File:Coat of Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|130px]]
|align="center"|[[File:Coat of Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|130px]]
|align="center"|[[File:Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|100px]]
|align="center"|[[File:Arms of Madrid City (c.1600-c.1650).svg|100px]]
|align="center"|c.1600-c.1650
|align="center"|c.1600-c.1650
||In the 17th Century the open Spanish royal crown set upon the shield.<ref name="Geaortigas"/>
||In the 17th Century the Spanish royal crown was smaller
|-
|-
|align="center"|[[File:Coat of Arms of Madrid City (c.1650-1859).svg|130px]]
|align="center"|[[File:Coat of Arms of Madrid City (c.1650-1859).svg|130px]]

Revision as of 05:56, 16 April 2018

Coat of arms of Madrid

The Coat of arms of Madrid, the capital of Spain, has its origin in the Middle Ages,[1] but was redesigned in 1967. In 2004 a logo it includes a shield similar to the symbol of the city and its council.

The shield is argent, a bear sable supported on a strawberry tree vert fructed gules; on a bordure azure seven stars argent. The shield is adorned with a large open royal crown of gold and precious stones, with eight rosettes (five visible) alternating with eight pearls; this crown is commonly used in Spanish heraldry for territorial and municipal arms.[2]

The image of the bear and the strawberry tree is also a component of the badge of the football club Atlético Madrid.

History

At the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212 between Alfonso VIII of Castile and the Almohads, the council of Madrid sent a detachment in support of the Christian king. According to chronicles of the time, these troops carried a flag or banner which identified them: a statant bear on a silver field. This is the first mention in history of the shield of Madrid.

In 1222, the clergymen of the Madrilenian parishes confronted the Council for the use of the fodder in the fields and forests in the municipal jurisdiction. Those were important resources for both institutions, and both wanted the use of these lands. King Alfonso VIII determined that the fodder would belong to the clergymen, whereas the forests would pertain to the Council. This decision did not convince the clergymen, but satisfied the Council. In fact, the council was so satisfied, that it immediately modified the shield of the municipality, adding a tree as proof of its new possessions. The bear, which formerly had been displayed walking, now stood on its hind legs to eat fruits from the tree.[3] It is not certain when it was begun to consider that tree as a strawberry tree because there were few specimens of this tree species in Madrid in 1212.[4]

History of the coat of arms of Madrid
Coat of arms Shield Dates Details
9th century-1212 It represents a flint stone slightly submerged in water and held by two links from which sparks fly when rubbing against the stone. The set is surrounded by a blue ribbon with the Latin legend "Sic Gloria Labore" (This is the glory of work) and in its lower part another Latin word "Paratur" (Prepare you).
1212-1222 After the victory in the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, the Town Council adopts the banner that the Madrid troops carried in it. It depicted the figure of a bear, with seven stars on its back representing the ursa minor and the pole star.
1222-1242 To ratify the power that the church and the nobles had over the lands surrounding the town, they modified the shield dividing it into four quarters; in the first and fourth they represent a castle of silver on the red background, and in the remaining two the bear appears, with the intention of indicating that the pastures of Madrid are of the nobility.
1242-1544 After twenty years of conflict with the church, the people are granted the hunting rights and the right to exploit the fruit tree areas and the church keeps the lands and pastures that surround the castle and the mountains.

The shield with the Seven stars of the Little Bear is adopted and the same bear of the previous shields steep on an apple tree, symbol of the victory of the town as "villa" and its attainment of the right of exploitation of its lands.

1544-c.1600 Doing the Courts in Valladolid and as thanks to the city in which the Emperor Charles V was cured of the fearsome plague fever, put on the arms of Madrid the Royal crown and was renamed “La coronada villa de Madrid”. It changed the apple tree for a strawberry tree.
c.1600-c.1650 In the 17th Century the Spanish royal crown was smaller
c.1650-1859 Circa 1650 stars set 2, 2, 2 and 1 changing to 3, 2 and 2. Consoles became a common external ornament.[5]
1859-1873 / 1874-1931 In 1859 were added a griffin rampant Or (golden) and a civic crown, awarded by the Cortes for the heroism of the people of Madrid against the French occupation in 1808.

The griffin has its origin in a dragon, or a serpent according to Mesonero Romanos, that was shown on the keystone in the arch of a gate of the disappeared walls of Madrid known as "Puerta Cerrada" or "Puerta de la Sierpe" (Closed Gate or Serpent Gate in English).[6] In 1582 a fire destroyed the gate. At that time the walls had fallen into disuse, for this reason the gate and the surrounding wall have never been rebuilt. The serpent, become dragon, was retained as informal symbol of Madrid until the 19th century, when it was decided to incorporate the dragon that very soon turned into a griffin.[7]

Eight-pointed stars were replaced by five-pointed stars and the open royal crown was changed by the Spanish royal crown closed with eight arches. Consoles, laurel wreaths and the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece were common ornaments.[5][8]

1873-1874 / 1931-1939 During the First and Second Republics, the royal crown was replaced by a mural crown and the collar of the dynastic Order of the Golden Fleece was removed.[5][8]

In March 1938, following the Battle of Cape Palos, the biggest naval battle of the Spanish Civil War, the Distintivo de Madrid, which had been established by the Second Spanish Republic in order to reward courage,[9] was given to Spanish Republican Navy cruisers Libertad and Méndez Núñez, and destroyers Lepanto, Almirante Antequera and Sánchez Barcáiztegui, as well as to their crew members. These ships would thenceforward fly a special pennant and the men would wear a special badge on their uniforms with the coat of arms of Madrid.[10]

1939-1967 In the Francoist period, the five-pointed stars became six-pointed stars and the mural crown was replaced by the heraldic open crown used by Franco's regime. Consoles and laurel wreaths became unusual.[8][11]
1967-1982 In 1967 the griffin and the civic crown were removed.[12]
1982–Present In 1982 the heraldic open crown used by Franco's regime was replaced by the older open royal crown. The design of the elements has become more simplified and the escutcheon shape has been changed too.[13]
Coat in la Casa del Pastor, in calle de Segovia, considered as the oldest in the city
Historic coat of arms in Alcachofa Fountain, Retiro Park
Distintivo de Madrid pennant awarded to the Spanish Republican Navy vessels that took part in the Battle of Cape Palos
Logotype used as common emblem by the City Council
The Statue of the Bear and the Strawberry Tree in Madrid, by Antonio Navarro Santafé

See also

References

  1. ^ Ayuntamiento de Madrid.
  2. ^ Dirección General de Administración Local - Consejería de Justicia y Administraciones Públicas.
  3. ^ El escudo de Madrid Archived 2009-04-19 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Template:Es icon Árboles de Madrid, El Madroño, Foto Madrid.
  5. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference Geaortigas was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ Ramón Mesonero Romanos, (1861), El antiguo Madrid. Madrid, F. de P. Mellado Print. P. 90.
  7. ^ Template:Es icon Ocno Bianor y el dragón de la Puerta Cerrada, Madrid Diario(2009-03-29).
  8. ^ a b c "Título preliminar, 1948 Madrid City Council Regulation" (PDF). www.madrid.es (in Spanish). Madrid City Council. Retrieved November 3, 2013.
  9. ^ Second Spanish Republic 23 January 1938 Decree
  10. ^ Enrique García Domingo, Recompensas republicanas por el hundimiento del Baleares, Revista de Historia Naval 1997, Año XV no. 59, pg. 70 Archived December 15, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ 1939 Coat of arms image.
  12. ^ 1967 Coat of arms image, Sitographics.com.
  13. ^ "Art. III, 1982 Madrid City Council Regulation". www.madrid.es (in Spanish). Madrid City Council. Retrieved November 3, 2013.