The coat of arms or national seal of Tonga (ko e Sila ʻo Tonga) was designed in 1875 with the creation of the constitution.

Coat of arms of Tonga
Sila ʻo Tonga
ArmigerTupou VI, King of Tonga
Adopted4 November 1875
Crestthe Royal Crown of Tonga within an olive wreath.
ShieldQuarterly; first, Or, three mullets of six points argent; second, Gules, the Royal Crown of Tonga proper; third, Azure a dove volant argent holding an olive branch vert; fourth Or, three swords in fret argent; overall, a mullet of six points argent charged with a cross couped gules.
SupportersFlags of Tonga
MottoKo e ʻOtua mo Tonga ko hoku Tofiʻa
"God and Tonga are my inheritance"

Description edit

There is no official specification of how exactly the arms should look. Even the shield on the front gate of the late king's palace is different from the old black/white copy used by the (ex-) government printer on all official stationery, is different from the copy on the prime minister's office webpage, etc. Some have pointed crowns, some rounded; some have normal flags, others have flags looking more like banners; some use the modern orthography, some the old (Ko e Otua mo Toga ko hoku Tofia); some have black swords, others white; and so forth.

Royal Standard edit

 
The Royal Standard of Tonga.

The Royal Standard of Tonga is the monarch's personal flag and is an armorial banner of the Royal Arms of Tonga.

See also edit

Notes edit

External links edit