Official state motto Mississippi Latin Adopted 1894

Mississippi State Motto: Virtute et Armis

Virtute et Armis

Virtute et Armis

Virtute et Armis

The motto appears on the state seal of Mississippi

Legal Reference: Laws of Mississippi, Extraordinary Session 1894, Chapter 37
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Motto
Virtute et Armis
Language
Latin
Translation
By Valor and Arms
Adopted
1894
Overview

Mississippi State Motto

Mississippi's state motto is Virtute et Armis, a Latin phrase meaning By Valor and Arms. It was adopted in 1894 through an extraordinary legislative session, 77 years after Mississippi became the 20th state on December 10, 1817.

The motto appears on the state coat of arms, not on the current state flag. Mississippi's flag, redesigned in 2021, displays the phrase In God We Trust instead.

Translation of "Virtute et Armis"

Virtute is the ablative case of virtus, meaning by valor or by courage. Et means and. Armis is the ablative of arma, meaning by arms or by weapons.

In Latin, the ablative case indicates the means of action. The full phrase means: achieving something by means of both valor and arms.

Mississippi State Motto Meaning

Virtute et Armis
By Valor and Arms
Latin

The Latin word virtus originally described the qualities of a good soldier: courage, strength, and excellence in battle. Over time it broadened to include moral character and personal worth, but its martial roots remained close to the surface.

Pairing virtus with arma (arms) makes the military reference direct. The motto combines inner courage with physical military strength as equal sources of achievement.

History of Mississippi's State Motto

Mississippi became the 20th state on December 10, 1817, but went 77 years without an official coat of arms. On February 7, 1894, the legislature appointed a committee to design one. Historical records link the motto to James Rhea Preston, the state superintendent of education, who proposed the Latin phrase for the red scroll in the coat of arms design.

An extraordinary legislative session in 1894 approved the coat of arms under Chapter 37 of the Laws of the Extraordinary Session. The same session also adopted a new state flag with a Confederate battle cross canton. Both decisions came from the same post-Reconstruction legislature.

In 1906, during a revision of the Mississippi Code, the coat of arms law was accidentally omitted. In May 2000, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled that the state technically had no official coat of arms. Governor Ronnie Musgrove signed a new law on February 7, 2001, exactly 107 years after the original adoption, formally restoring the 1894 design. The motto and coat of arms are now codified in Mississippi Code § 3-3-41.

"Virtute et Armis" on the Mississippi State Coat of Arms

Mississippi state coat of arms with Virtute et Armis on a red scroll beneath the eagle shield
The Mississippi state coat of arms. "Virtute et Armis" appears in white letters on gold spaces along the red scroll at the bottom.

The motto appears in white letters on gold spaces along a red scroll at the bottom of the coat of arms. The shield above shows an eagle holding a palm branch in its right talon and a bundle of arrows in its left. Mississippi appears above the eagle in gold, and cotton stalks are arranged below the shield.

Mississippi's current state flag, adopted January 11, 2021, does not show the state motto. The flag features a white magnolia blossom, a ring of 20 white stars and one gold star, and the phrase In God We Trust. The coat of arms with the motto appears on official state documents and government publications.

Mississippi State Motto Facts

  • Mississippi went 77 years after statehood before adopting a coat of arms and motto in 1894.
  • "Virtute et Armis" means "By Valor and Arms" in Latin.
  • Historical records link the motto to James Rhea Preston, the state superintendent of education.
  • The 1894 coat of arms law was accidentally dropped from the 1906 Code revision. Governor Musgrove re-signed it on February 7, 2001.
  • The motto appears on the red scroll of the coat of arms, not on the current state flag.
  • Mississippi Code § 3-3-41 now codifies the coat of arms and motto.

Can You Match All 50 State Mottos?

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Quick Answers

What is Mississippi's state motto?
Mississippi's state motto is "Virtute et Armis," a Latin phrase meaning "By Valor and Arms." It was adopted in 1894 as part of the state coat of arms and is codified in Mississippi Code § 3-3-41.
What does "Virtute et Armis" mean?
"Virtute" comes from the Latin word "virtus" — courage and excellence, especially in battle. "Armis" means arms or weapons. Together: "By Valor and Arms," expressing achievement through both inner courage and military strength.
When did Mississippi adopt its state motto?
In 1894, during an extraordinary legislative session, as part of the state coat of arms. Mississippi became a state in 1817 but had no official coat of arms or motto for 77 years.
Where does Mississippi's motto appear?
On the state coat of arms, in white letters on gold spaces along a red scroll beneath the shield. The motto does not appear on Mississippi's current state flag, which was redesigned in 2021.
Did Mississippi's motto change when the flag changed in 2021?
No. The 2021 flag redesign changed the state flag but not the state motto. The new flag shows "In God We Trust" — the national motto — not the state motto. "Virtute et Armis" remains Mississippi's official state motto.

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