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Coat of arms of the Prince of Asturias
Escudo del Príncipe de Asturias.svg
Details
Armiger Felipe, Prince of Asturias
Adopted March 16, 2001
Crest The Crown of the Prince of Asturias
Escutcheon Quarterly: Castile, León, Aragon, and Navarre; enté en point: Granada; inescutcheon Bourbon (Anjou Branch); the whole differenced by a label azure.
Orders Order of the Golden Fleece
Earlier versions see below

The Blazon of Coat of arms of the Prince of Asturias appears in Royal Decree 284 of 16 March 2001, whereby His Guidon and His Standard are created.

QUARTERED SHIELD:

  • 2nd, Argent a lion rampant Purpure crowned Or, armed Gules and crowned Or, which is for Leon;
  • 3rd, Or four pallets Gules, which is for Aragon;
  • 4th, Gules a cross, saltire and orle of chains all linked Or, an emerald Proper, which is for Navarre; Argent enté en point, with a pomegranate Proper seeded Gules, supported, sculpted and leafed in two leaves Vert, which is for Granada. Inescutcheon Azure with three fleurs-de-lys Or, bordure Gules, which is Bourbon. The whole differenced by a label of three points Azure, the difference used by the Heirs apparent of the Spanish House of Habsburg.

The shield, crested with a closed crown, which is a circle of gold, with an inset of precious stones in their colours, composed of eight rosettes of acanthus leaves, of which five are visible, interspersed with pearls in their own colour, issuing from which are four pearl diadems, of which three are visible, which converge in a blue orb, with gold semi-meridian and equator, surmounted by a gold cross, the crown lined with red and surrounded by the collar of the Golden Fleece.


[edit] History

For the changes of the heraldic charges and the divisions of the field, see Coat of arms of Spain.
Historical Arms of the Prince of Asturias
Arms Dates Details
Coat of Arms of the Heir of the Crown of Castile 13th-16th Centuries.svg
1388 - 1504 The arms used in the 13th and 14th century by the Prince of Asturias, and the others heirs apparent to the Castilian Throne before the title was adopted, were the undifferenced Royal Arms. However, the Infantes used differenced arms.[1][2]
1506 - 1516 When the House of Habsburg inherited the Crowns of Castile and Aragon marks of Cadency - a label of three points - were added to the heirs apparent’s arms, as was usual in the heraldry of many European monarchies. Prince Charles (Charles I as King of Spain and Charles V as Holy Roman Emperor) used his father’s arms - A quartered shield, depicting Austria, new Burgundy, old Burgundy, Brabant and Flanders on an escutcheon - with a label argent. These arms weren’t used as Prince of Asturias because Prince Charles didn’t add the arms of Castile and Aragon.[1][2][3]
Coat of Arms of Philip II of Spain as Prince of Asturias (Azure Label Variant).svg Coat of Arms of Philip II of Spain as Prince of Asturias (Argent Label Variant).svg
1528 - 1556 Prince Philip (Philip II as King of Spain and Philip I of Portugal) used his father’s arms differenced with a label argent or azure. The Prince Philip’s arms are showed on many Prince’s armours. Now these armours have been kept at the Royal Armoury in the Royal Palace of Madrid. Sometimes, Philip also used the undifferenced arms of his father.[1][2][3]
Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1560-1578 (Azure Label Variant).svg Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1560-1578 (Argent Label Variant).svg
1560 - 1568 In 1568 Prince Carlos, the eldest son of Philip II, died and an Ambrosio Morales’s report for the Prince’s sepulchre said his arms were the Royal Arms but with "a label azure with its three short points". Prince Carlos also used the royal arms differenced with a label argent.[1][2][3]
Argent Label Variant of the Coat of Arms of Philip III of Spain as Prince of Asturias.svg
1584 - 1598 Prince Philip (Philip III as King of Spain and Philip II of Portugal) sometimes used a new label argent variant wavy azure.[2]
Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1580-1665 (Azure Label Variant).svg Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1580-1665 (Argent Label Variant).svg
1608 -1665 The eldest son of Philip III, Prince Philip (Philip IV as King of Spain and Philip III of Portugal), used the Royal Arms with label argent or azure. Philip’s son, Prince Balthasar Charles also bore the same differences.[1][2][3]
Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1700-1761.svg
Coat of Arms of the Prince of Asturias 1761-1931 (House of Bourbon).svg
1707 -1761
1761 -1931
The shields of the House of Bourbon’s heirs apparent hardly ever depicted differences. Chronicler King of Arms Juan José Vilar y Psayla (1830-1894) said the arms of the Prince of Asturias were differentiated by a crown of four half-arches, the Spanish monarch’s crown has eight half-arches since the reign of Philip V (1700-1746).[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Francisco Olmos, José María de Las primeras acuñaciones del príncipe Felipe de España (1554-1556): Soberano de Milán Nápoles e Inglaterra. The First Coins of Prince Felipe of Spain (1554-1556): Sovereign of Milan, Naples and England. pp.165-166 (Spanish)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Rodríguez de Maribona, Manuel Las armas del Príncipe de Asturias - ABC. (Spanish) Accessed 2009-05-28.
  3. ^ a b c d Menéndez-Pidal De Navascués, Faustino (2004). El Escudo de España. Madrid: Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía. pp. 191–192. ISBN 84-88833-02-4. 



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