Coat of arms of the Prince of Spain explained

Armiger:Juan Carlos de Borbón
Year Adopted:22 April 1971
Crest:Crown of the Prince of Spain
Shield:Quarterly

Castile, León, Aragon, and Navarre; enté en point: Granada; inescutcheon Bourbon (Anjou Branch)

Supporters:Cross of Burgundy
Orders:Order of the Golden Fleece
Other Elements:Base point, the yoke with ribbons and the sheaf of five arrows.

The Coat of arms of the Prince of Spain was set out in the Spanish Decree 814 of 22 April 1971, by which the Rules for Flags, Standards, Guidons, Banners, and Badges were adopted.[1]

Blazon

The shield was divided into four quarters, blazoned as follows:

Argent enté en point, with a pomegranate proper seeded gules, supported, sculpted and leafed in two leaves vert, which was for Granada.

Inescutcheon azure bordure gules, three fleurs-de-lys or, which was for Bourbon-Anjou.

Joined to the shield, the red saltire of Burgundy and, to the dexter and sinister of the base point, the yoke gules in its natural position with ribbons, of the field, and the sheaf of five arrows gules with the arrowheads inverted and ribbons, of the field, which used to be the symbol of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain.

All surrounded by the chain of the Golden Fleece and crowned with a crown of the same metal and precious stones, with eight rosettes, five visible, and eight pearls interspersed, closed at the top by four diadems also adorned with pearls and surmounted by a cross on a globe, which is the crown of the prince.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Spanish Decree 814 of 22nd April 1971. Boletín Oficial del Estado, Official Gazette of the Spanish Government, no. 99. Retrieved 10 December 2015.