Neil Thompson: Difference between revisions

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====Official English blazon====
====Official English blazon====
[[File:Thompson badge.png|thumb|200px|right|Badge of {{PAGENAME}}]]
Arms: Per fess arched and enhanced Gules and Or in chief a cross double parted and fretted of the second and in base a Chinese dragon globular of the first.<br>
Arms: Per fess arched and enhanced Gules and Or in chief a cross double parted and fretted of the second and in base a Chinese dragon globular of the first.<br>
Crest: A dragon’s foot Gules armed Or grasping an oak tree eradicated Proper acorned Or.
Crest: A dragon’s foot Gules armed Or grasping an oak tree eradicated Proper acorned Or.

Revision as of 14:08, 6 July 2021

HOTW personal arms badge notext.png
Heraldry of the World
Personal arms
HOTW personal arms badge notext.png

NEIL THOMPSON

Registration no.: 022/2019

Country of origin : United Kingdom
Place of origin : Surrey
Granted : Yes
Granted/officially recorded by : Office of the Chief Herald of Ireland

Thompson arms.png

Official English blazon

Badge of Neil Thompson

Arms: Per fess arched and enhanced Gules and Or in chief a cross double parted and fretted of the second and in base a Chinese dragon globular of the first.
Crest: A dragon’s foot Gules armed Or grasping an oak tree eradicated Proper acorned Or.

Origin/meaning

The parallel lines at the top of the shield represent railway tracks and are an acknowledgement of the armiger’s 25-year career in the railway industry, as well as many British and Irish ancestors who worked on the railways, one of whom tragically lost his life in an accident at Westland Row Station in Dublin in 1926.

The red Chinese dragon represents the armiger’s strong connection with the island of Taiwan. The armiger worked as a Consultant on the Taiwan High-Speed Railway project, both before and after the railway’s entry into service in 2007. The armiger was born in the year of the Wood Dragon in the Chinese zodiac. His official name in Chinese, adopted when his daughter was born in Taiwan, includes ‘Lucky Dragon’ (劉瑞龍). The red Chinese dragon on the shield, with its circular shape, is a charge previously unknown in Irish heraldry, which required the Herald of Arms to use innovative blazonry, using globular to describe the dragon’s posture.

Registration details

The International Register of Arms, 21st December 2017. Registration No. 0441 (Vol.3)

The Chinese Armorial 12th January 2019.



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