National arms of Burundi: Difference between revisions
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====Origin/meaning==== | ====Origin/meaning==== | ||
Burundi became an independent Kingdom in 1962 and adopted arms with a lion's head. | Burundi became an independent Kingdom in 1962 and adopted arms with a lion's head. On top of the shield the royal karyenda drum was shown as a symbol of the mwami (king), surrounded by two laurelsand four spears. The national motto was ''Ganza Sabwa'', which in Kirundi means "(the mwami) rules and reigns".<br> These arms are shown below: | ||
[[File:Burundi2.jpg|center]] | [[File:Burundi2.jpg|center]] | ||
In 1966 Burundi became a republic and the arms were changed to the arms shown above. The lion head remained, but only | In 1966 Burundi became a republic and the arms were changed to the arms shown above. The lion head remained, but only three spears remained. The new motto 'Unité, Travail, Progrès' means Unity, Labour, Progress. | ||
For the colonial arms, see [[Ruanda-Urundi]] | For the colonial arms, see [[Ruanda-Urundi]] |
Revision as of 09:38, 13 November 2012
Heraldry of the World Civic heraldry of Burundi |
NATIONAL ARMS OF BURUNDI
Origin/meaning
Burundi became an independent Kingdom in 1962 and adopted arms with a lion's head. On top of the shield the royal karyenda drum was shown as a symbol of the mwami (king), surrounded by two laurelsand four spears. The national motto was Ganza Sabwa, which in Kirundi means "(the mwami) rules and reigns".
These arms are shown below:
In 1966 Burundi became a republic and the arms were changed to the arms shown above. The lion head remained, but only three spears remained. The new motto 'Unité, Travail, Progrès' means Unity, Labour, Progress.
For the colonial arms, see Ruanda-Urundi