Queensferry
Country :
(until 1975) West Lothian Also: South Queensferry
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English |
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Origin/meaning
The Burgh arms were granted in 1673.
Queensferry was a Burgh dependent on the Abbey of Dunfermline by about 1328, and as South Queensferry was created a Burgh of Regality in favour of Robert Pitcairn, Archdeacon of St. Andrews, as Commendator of Dunfermline, in 1576-77.
The arms, which are sometimes used with a Burghal coronet added to them, are the same as the device on the oldest known seal of the Burgh, of which an impression dated 1529 is on record.
The arms are canting and show Queen Margaret, who gave the place its name, standing in a boat on the sea. She is said to have landed here after her flight from England about 1067, and it was here that she usually crossed the Firth of Forth when going to and from Edinburgh between 1068-69 and 1093. She and her husband, King Malcolm III (1057-1093), granted the Dunfermline monks the right to ferry pilgrims to St. Andrews across the Firth free of charge and from this franchise descended the Ferry, which continued until the opening of the Forth Road Bridge in 1965.
The Queen carries her famous copy of the Gospels, coloured purple for Royalty.
The Latin motto means "The insignia of the Burgh of the Queen's Ferry".
The arms were granted to the Community Council on August 31, 2000 and are the Burgh arms with a crown of a community council.
The arms in the Coffee Hag albums +/- 1935
The arms in the town with blue background(source)
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© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink
Index of the site
Literature : Porteous, 1906; Urquhart, 1974, 2001