Coat of arms of Argentina

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Coat of arms of Argentina
ArmigerArgentine Republic
Adopted1944 (1813)
CrestA Sun of May or
ShieldParty per fess azure and argent, in base two arms throughout fessways, the hands shaking and holding a pike paleways proper ensigned on the top with a Phrygian cap gules.
Other elementsAround the shield two sprigs of laurel vert tied together in base by a ribbon azure charged with a fess argent

The coat of arms of the Argentine Republic or Argentine shield [1] (Spanish: Escudo de la República Argentina) was established in its current form in 1944 but has its origins in the seal of the General Constituent Assembly of 1813.[2] It is supposed that it was chosen quickly because of the existence of a decree signed on February 22 sealed with the symbol.[3] The first mention of it in a public document dates to March 12 of that same year, in which it is stated that the seal had to be used by the executive power, that is, the second triumvirate. On April 13 the National Assembly coined the new silver and gold coins, each with the seal of the assembly on the reverse, and on April 27 the coat of arms became a national emblem. Although the coat of arms is not currently shown on flags, the Buenos Aires-born military leader Manuel Belgrano ordered to paint it over the flag he gave to the city of San Salvador de Jujuy, and during the Argentine War of Independence most flags had the coat of arms.

Description[edit]

Seal of the General Constituent Assembly of 1813.
Seal of a French group in the National Assembly, around 1793.

It is unknown who designed the coat of arms. It is often mentioned that there were three men involved: Alvear, Monteagudo, and Vieytes, but it is known that a few years before, President Bernardino Rivadavia asked the Peruvian Antonio Isidoro Castro to create an Argentine coat of arms; these two schemes have never been found.

The coat of arms is a figure, in which at the top we find the gold-yellowed Sun of May, also found on the flag of Argentina. The rising sun symbolizes the rising of Argentina, as described in the first version of the Argentine National Anthem, se levanta a la faz de la tierra una nueva y gloriosa nación, meaning "a new and glorious nation rises to the surface of the Earth". It must be noticed how the verb "rise", in English and Spanish can be used to describe the motion of the Sun.

In the center ellipse there are two shaking hands, connoting the unity of the provinces of Argentina. The hands come together to hold a pike, which represents power and willingness to defend freedom, epitomized by the Phrygian cap on the top of the spear.

Enlarged version of the coat of arms of Argentina, with flags on each side, year 1863

The blue and white colors are symbols of the Argentine people and the same colors of the Argentine flag. Those derive from those utilised in the cockade promoting liberation from Spain, in the May Revolution in 1810, which in turn came about from the colours of the Borbonic dynasty.

Coat of Arms of the General Constituent Assembly of Argentina depicted on the eight escudo gold coin.
Coat of Arms of the General Constituent Assembly of Argentina depicted on the eight escudo gold coin.

The hands stand for friendship, peace, unity, and brotherhood. The pike is brown (wooden), and the Phrygian cap is red, like the traditional French Revolution era liberty cap. The proximity of the hands and the Phrygian cap, in addition to their individual meanings, represent the national motto of Argentina, en unión y libertad ("in unity and freedom"), and illustrate the idea that in unity (the hands) there is power (the pike), and in power there is freedom (the Phrygian cap).

The Phrygian cap was typically worn by the inhabitants of Phrygia, in the Anatolian peninsula, and is commonly mistaken for being a Pileus. The Pileus was a hat that in ancient Rome became a symbol of freed slaves, who were touched by their owners with a wooden pike before setting them free. Laurel is another classical symbol. At the end of the ancient Olympic Games (and also the 2004 Summer Olympics), the winner was given a laurel crown, and since then it has symbolized triumph and glory.

Provincial shields[edit]

Argentina's provincial shields

City of Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires Province

Catamarca

Córdoba

Corrientes

Chaco

Chubut

Entre Ríos

Formosa

Jujuy

La Pampa

La Rioja

Mendoza

Misiones

Neuquén

Río Negro

Salta

San Juan

San Luis

Santa Cruz

Santa Fe

Santiago del Estero

Tierra del Fuego

Tucumán

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "National country symbols of Argentina". National-symbol.com. Archived from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  2. ^ "Que el Escudo, la Bandera, el Himno y su letra son los símbolos de la soberanía de la Nación" [That the Coat of Arms, the Flag, the Anthem, and its lyrics are the symbols of the sovereignty of the Nation.] (in Spanish). Ministry of Economy and Production. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved November 27, 2011. En adelante se adoptará como representación del escudo argentino, la reproducción fiel del Sello que usó la Soberana Asamblea General Constituyente de la Provincias Unidas del Río de la Plata, el mismo que ésta ordenó en sesión de 12 de marzo de 1813, usase el Poder Ejecutivo.
  3. ^ "Símbolos Nacionales" [National Symbols] (in Spanish). Presidency of the Argentine Nation. Retrieved November 27, 2011. Como testimonio de ello, se conservan dos cartas de ciudadanía expedidas por la Asamblea el 22 de Febrero de 1813, donde figura el Escudo estampado en lacre: una de ellas se conserva en el Museo Histórico Nacional, extendida a favor de Don Antonio Olavaria, y está firmada por el presidente del cuerpo, general Carlos María de Alvear, y el secretario, Don Hipólito Vieytes.

Further reading[edit]

  • Símbolos Nacionales de la República Argentina (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Comisión Administradora de la Biblioteca del Congreso de la Nación. 1997. ISBN 950-691-036-7.