South Oxfordshire: Difference between revisions
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|width="70%" align="center" |'''Heraldry of the World<br>Civic heraldry of the [[United Kingdom]]''' | |width="70%" align="center" |'''Heraldry of the World<br>Civic heraldry of the [[United Kingdom]]''' | ||
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'''SOUTH OXFORDSHIRE''' | '''SOUTH OXFORDSHIRE''' |
Revision as of 12:23, 7 May 2014
Heraldry of the World Civic heraldry of the United Kingdom |
SOUTH OXFORDSHIRE
Additions : 1974 Bullingdon RDC, Henley RDC, Henley-on-Thames, Thame, Wallingford, Wallingford RDC
Official blazon
Arms :
Crest :
Supporters :
Motto :
Origin/meaning
The arms were officially granted in 1981.
The design on the shield embraces variants of the sunburst from the Henley arms, a railway crossing from the arms of Didcot, a portcullis from the arms of Wallingford and two wheatsheaves from the Thame town badge. The shield is supported by an ox for Oxfordshire and a lion guardant for England, each 'gorged' with a crown symbolising the links with the Sovereign extending from the Royal Castle at Wallingford to the Royal Flight at Benson. Each of the supporters holds a beech branch for the Chiltern villages and stands on a grassy mound for the Oxfordshire plain.
The Thames is represented by symbolic water, traversed by a stone bridge, and the whole design is surmounted by a golden dragon passant resting its foreleg on a mitre for Dorchester where the King of Wessex was baptized into Christianity and for the diocese once based there.
Literature : Image and information provided by Laurence Jones.