Template:Country data Tasmania: Difference between revisions
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SYMBOLS. | |||
The Union flag of course, as with the National flag, tells of the origin of our State as a British colony which was for many years a part of the British Empire. Then, at the time of federation, Tasmania became a State of Australia, which became a Member of the British Commonwealth of nations. Today, even in the year 2002, the State has a common parliamentary system, Church, language, racial make-up, common law, ethics, morals and principles of its Mother Country, Great Britain, despite the fact that we are fully independent in our own right, within the federal system. It is as written by British historian AJP Taylor, "British communities throughout the world set up free institutions on the pattern of the mother country." (2) We are a Constitutional Monarchy with the Governor representing the Crown in Tasmania. Our military traditions follow closely that of Britain. | |||
The Lion "Passant" represents that connection and loyalty to the Crown. Therefore the heraldic symbols are not without significant meaning; indeed going back at least 800 years. In fact the Arms of William I (The Conqueror 1066-1087) shows two lions, passant guardant on a crowned Shield. Even long before that the symbol of the lion, either Rampant (aggressive), Couchant (reclining) or Passant (sideways walking past) was a symbol of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. The Jews still retain in their heraldry a rampant Lion. The secondary emblem of the tribe of Ephraim of Israel was the Unicorn. Both the Lion of Judah and the Unicorn are found in British Royal and National Arms. The origins of this peculiarity is a subject in itself. However, the Lion is not exclusively a British emblem for it also appears in the Arms of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Belgium. |
Revision as of 23:46, 8 October 2007
Template:Country data Tasmania
is an internal data container not intended to be transcluded directly. It is used indirectly by templates such as flag
, flagicon
, and others.
This template is within the scope of WikiProject Flag Template, a collaborative effort to maintain flag templates on Wikipedia. A more thorough discussion of the flag template system, including parameters not described here, can be found on the project page. |
Standard parameters
Parameter name | Value | Meaning |
---|---|---|
alias |
Tasmania
| Main article name (Tasmania) |
flag alias |
Flag of Tasmania.svg |
Image name (File:Flag of Tasmania.svg, shown on right) |
Example usage
{{flag|Tasmania}}
→ Tasmania
SYMBOLS.
The Union flag of course, as with the National flag, tells of the origin of our State as a British colony which was for many years a part of the British Empire. Then, at the time of federation, Tasmania became a State of Australia, which became a Member of the British Commonwealth of nations. Today, even in the year 2002, the State has a common parliamentary system, Church, language, racial make-up, common law, ethics, morals and principles of its Mother Country, Great Britain, despite the fact that we are fully independent in our own right, within the federal system. It is as written by British historian AJP Taylor, "British communities throughout the world set up free institutions on the pattern of the mother country." (2) We are a Constitutional Monarchy with the Governor representing the Crown in Tasmania. Our military traditions follow closely that of Britain.
The Lion "Passant" represents that connection and loyalty to the Crown. Therefore the heraldic symbols are not without significant meaning; indeed going back at least 800 years. In fact the Arms of William I (The Conqueror 1066-1087) shows two lions, passant guardant on a crowned Shield. Even long before that the symbol of the lion, either Rampant (aggressive), Couchant (reclining) or Passant (sideways walking past) was a symbol of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. The Jews still retain in their heraldry a rampant Lion. The secondary emblem of the tribe of Ephraim of Israel was the Unicorn. Both the Lion of Judah and the Unicorn are found in British Royal and National Arms. The origins of this peculiarity is a subject in itself. However, the Lion is not exclusively a British emblem for it also appears in the Arms of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Belgium.
SYMBOLS.
The Union flag of course, as with the National flag, tells of the origin of our State as a British colony which was for many years a part of the British Empire. Then, at the time of federation, Tasmania became a State of Australia, which became a Member of the British Commonwealth of nations. Today, even in the year 2002, the State has a common parliamentary system, Church, language, racial make-up, common law, ethics, morals and principles of its Mother Country, Great Britain, despite the fact that we are fully independent in our own right, within the federal system. It is as written by British historian AJP Taylor, "British communities throughout the world set up free institutions on the pattern of the mother country." (2) We are a Constitutional Monarchy with the Governor representing the Crown in Tasmania. Our military traditions follow closely that of Britain.
The Lion "Passant" represents that connection and loyalty to the Crown. Therefore the heraldic symbols are not without significant meaning; indeed going back at least 800 years. In fact the Arms of William I (The Conqueror 1066-1087) shows two lions, passant guardant on a crowned Shield. Even long before that the symbol of the lion, either Rampant (aggressive), Couchant (reclining) or Passant (sideways walking past) was a symbol of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. The Jews still retain in their heraldry a rampant Lion. The secondary emblem of the tribe of Ephraim of Israel was the Unicorn. Both the Lion of Judah and the Unicorn are found in British Royal and National Arms. The origins of this peculiarity is a subject in itself. However, the Lion is not exclusively a British emblem for it also appears in the Arms of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Belgium.
TemplateData
TemplateData for Country data Tasmania
This template should not be used directly. It is used indirectly by flag templates such as Template:Flag and Template:Flagicon. See Category:Flag template system for a full list of flag templates and Wikipedia:WikiProject Flag Template for further documentation.
Parameter | Description | Type | Status | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No parameters specified |
SYMBOLS.
The Union flag of course, as with the National flag, tells of the origin of our State as a British colony which was for many years a part of the British Empire. Then, at the time of federation, Tasmania became a State of Australia, which became a Member of the British Commonwealth of nations. Today, even in the year 2002, the State has a common parliamentary system, Church, language, racial make-up, common law, ethics, morals and principles of its Mother Country, Great Britain, despite the fact that we are fully independent in our own right, within the federal system. It is as written by British historian AJP Taylor, "British communities throughout the world set up free institutions on the pattern of the mother country." (2) We are a Constitutional Monarchy with the Governor representing the Crown in Tasmania. Our military traditions follow closely that of Britain.
The Lion "Passant" represents that connection and loyalty to the Crown. Therefore the heraldic symbols are not without significant meaning; indeed going back at least 800 years. In fact the Arms of William I (The Conqueror 1066-1087) shows two lions, passant guardant on a crowned Shield. Even long before that the symbol of the lion, either Rampant (aggressive), Couchant (reclining) or Passant (sideways walking past) was a symbol of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. The Jews still retain in their heraldry a rampant Lion. The secondary emblem of the tribe of Ephraim of Israel was the Unicorn. Both the Lion of Judah and the Unicorn are found in British Royal and National Arms. The origins of this peculiarity is a subject in itself. However, the Lion is not exclusively a British emblem for it also appears in the Arms of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Belgium.