Walsall: Difference between revisions

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The supporters are sitting lions, their backs to the shield. Their tails are intertwined. the design is completed by a branch of laurel and a branch of oak tied together with a Stafford knot, the emblem of [[Staffordshire]].
The supporters are sitting lions, their backs to the shield. Their tails are intertwined. the design is completed by a branch of laurel and a branch of oak tied together with a Stafford knot, the emblem of [[Staffordshire]].


===Image gallery===
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
File:Walsall3.jpg|alt=Arms (crest) of Walsall|The arms in 1895
File:Walsall3.jpg|alt=Arms (crest) of Walsall|The arms in 1895
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</gallery>
</gallery>


[[Literature]] : Image provided by Walsall Council (www.walsall.gov.uk)
[[Civic Heraldry Literature - United Kingdom|'''Literature''']]:  
Image provided by Walsall Council (www.walsall.gov.uk)


{{media}}
{{media}}

Latest revision as of 13:57, 7 January 2024

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  • Overseas possessions
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WALSALL

Additions : 1966 Darlaston, Willenhall (partly); 1974 Aldridge-Brownhills UDC

Arms (crest) of Walsall

Official blazon

Origin/meaning

Walsall uses a coat of arms based on a 15th Century seal. As these feature the Royal Arms, they have never been officially approved. The shield itself shows the Royal Arms as used until 1603. The crest shows the bear and staff associated with the Earls of warwick and thus Warwickshire.

The supporters are sitting lions, their backs to the shield. Their tails are intertwined. the design is completed by a branch of laurel and a branch of oak tied together with a Stafford knot, the emblem of Staffordshire.

Image gallery

Literature: Image provided by Walsall Council (www.walsall.gov.uk)


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