Coat of arms of Jeuna

From WikiStates

Revision as of 22:20, 6 April 2009 by Blast (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
State emblem of Jeuna
Coat of arms of Jeuna.svg
Details
Armiger None
Adopted 1902
Motto 妍載華國共和國自由十九〇一
Other elements Two Tung Kang-han rifles and two Jeunese flags crossed behind a blue and white yin yang, a méi flower between them, two olive branches crossed behind the rifles' stocks.
Use on the currency; in the Parliament; on official buildings; on passports; in the header of government documents

The state emblem of Jeuna (紋章; wén zhāng) was adopted in the National Parliament on 9 January 1902 as a representative coat of arms for Jeuna. As a central element, it sports a yin yang, with two Mauser 98s crossed behind it, symbolizing the Sino-German cooperation during this period (the Republican Front of Jeuna had adopted the Mauser 98 as the Tung Kang-han rifle in 1898).