Ndola: Difference between revisions
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===Official blazon=== | ===Official blazon=== | ||
'''Arms''' : Barry wavy of eight Or and Azure a pale Vert charged with three mullets Gold.<br> | '''Arms''': Barry wavy of eight Or and Azure a pale Vert charged with three mullets Gold.<br> | ||
'''Crest''': On a wreath Or and Azure, on a mount a fig tree fructed the lower branches entwined with a steel chain the links broken at each end pen- dent on either side all proper.<br> | '''Crest''': On a wreath Or and Azure, on a mount a fig tree fructed the lower branches entwined with a steel chain the links broken at each end pen- dent on either side all proper.<br> | ||
'''Supporters''': On either side a lion holding in the mouth a steel chain the links broken at each end pendent and reflexed over the exterior fore-leg all proper. | '''Supporters''': On either side a lion holding in the mouth a steel chain the links broken at each end pendent and reflexed over the exterior fore-leg all proper. |
Latest revision as of 09:13, 16 June 2024
NDOLA
Province : Copperbelt
Official blazon
Arms: Barry wavy of eight Or and Azure a pale Vert charged with three mullets Gold.
Crest: On a wreath Or and Azure, on a mount a fig tree fructed the lower branches entwined with a steel chain the links broken at each end pen- dent on either side all proper.
Supporters: On either side a lion holding in the mouth a steel chain the links broken at each end pendent and reflexed over the exterior fore-leg all proper.
Origin/meaning
The arms were officially granted on June 10, 1953.
The green vertical pale represents the tropical vegetation which surrounds Ndola, and the three gold mullets represent the three principal groups into which the residents of Ndola can be divided - commerce and industry, the civil service and the railways.They also recall that the town was originally divided into three wards.
On either side of the green pale are wavy blue bars symbolising rivers as symbolic for Ndola's situation on the watershed between the rivers running north to the Congo River and south to the Zambesi River.
The gold portion of the shield represents the wealth derived from copper mining and upon which the town depends.
The wild fig tree forming the crest is a representation of the 'slave tree' still existing in Ndola, but the chains of slavery have been wrenched loose by the two lions which support the shield. The illustration is thus that the advent of British rule - symbolised by the lions - eliminated slavery from the area.
The motto is Indole nec Indolentia, but was not described in the letters patent.
The arms in the town (image Dan by Whitcombe) |
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© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink
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Literature : Image from stamp; Smith 1985