Virginia State Coat of Arms
Virginia State Coat of Arms
Official Coat Of Arms of Virginia
Virginia State Coat of Arms
- Adopted
- 1776
- Status
- Official state coat of arms
What Is the Virginia Coat of Arms?
The coat of arms is the central design on the obverse, or front side, of the Great Seal of Virginia. The Great Seal has two sides: the front shows Virtus and the fallen tyrant; the back shows three Roman goddesses. The coat of arms is the front image that appears on the state flag and most official documents.
The design has looked essentially the same since July 5, 1776. It was standardized in 1950 when the General Assembly resolved decades of inconsistencies that had accumulated across different printings, engravings, and manufacturers.
History and Origin of the Virginia Coat of Arms
On July 1, 1776, the Virginia Convention appointed a committee of four to design a seal for the Commonwealth: Richard Henry Lee, George Mason, George Wythe, and Robert Carter Nicholas Sr. Four days later, the committee presented a design. The Convention voted on it and approved it that same day, July 5, 1776.
The design is generally believed to be principally the work of George Wythe, a lawyer, classical scholar, and signer of the Declaration of Independence. Wythe and the committee drew on their knowledge of Roman mythology and the political ideals of ancient republics to create a design that rejected all European royal symbolism.
The original seal was ordered from Paris. On October 4, 1779, the General Assembly passed an act to procure a new seal based on the 1776 design. The same act changed the motto on the reverse side from the original Latin phrase to Perseverando, meaning 'by persevering.'
By the mid-1800s, different artists, engravers, and manufacturers had produced varying versions of the seal without a single authoritative rendering to follow. On February 1, 1950, the General Assembly formally standardized the design, establishing precise specifications for the figures' proportions, dress, and colors.
Meaning of the Virginia Coat of Arms
The Virginia coat of arms was designed in the summer of 1776 to say one thing: a free people have defeated the tyrant who once ruled them. Virtus, the Roman goddess at the center, is not a figure of war in progress but of a war already won. The motto Sic Semper Tyrannis beneath her gives the design a direct voice that has carried the same meaning for 250 years.
Symbols on the Virginia Coat of Arms
The coat of arms places all its action in a single scene: a Roman goddess standing over a defeated man. The word 'Virginia' appears above, and the motto appears below.
Virtus
A woman dressed as an Amazon warrior stands at the center of the coat of arms. Her right hand rests on a long spear with the point downward, touching the earth; her left hand holds a sheathed sword called a parazonium, pointing upward. Her head is erect and her face is turned upward. She is Virtus, the Roman goddess of virtue, described in the statute as the genius of the Commonwealth.
The spear pointing down and the sheathed sword together signal that the battle is already won. She is not fighting but standing guard over a defeated enemy.
The Fallen Tyrant
A man lies prostrate on the ground beneath Virtus's left foot. His crown has fallen from his head. In his left hand he holds a broken chain, and in his right hand he holds a scourge, a type of whip used for punishment.
Each detail was chosen to represent the tools of tyranny laid low: the crown for royal authority, the chain for enslavement, and the scourge for the power to punish. The Virginia Convention designed this figure in 1776 as a direct image of what the colonists believed they had just thrown off.
Sic Semper Tyrannis
The motto Sic Semper Tyrannis appears on a scroll beneath the main scene. It is Latin for 'Thus always to tyrants.' Virginia's state motto has carried this same text since the original 1776 adoption, and the phrase has been part of every official version of the coat of arms since.
The motto is attributed to the broader republican tradition of 18th-century colonial leaders who admired the Roman Republic. It states not what Virginia is, but what always happens to those who rule by force.
Reverse: Three Goddesses
The back of the Great Seal shows three Roman goddesses standing together. Libertas stands at the center holding a wand topped by a Phrygian liberty cap. Ceres stands to her left holding a cornucopia and a stalk of wheat. Aeternitas stands to the right holding a golden globe topped by a phoenix.
The reverse side carries the word Perseverando, meaning 'by persevering.' This motto replaced the original reverse motto in 1779. The three goddesses represent the blessings that flow from freedom: individual liberty, agricultural abundance, and the endurance of the state.
Meaning of the Virginia Coat of Arms
The coat of arms was designed in 1776 by men who had just declared independence and expected war with Britain. They chose to show the war's outcome rather than its beginning: Virtus stands over the tyrant, not fighting him. The past tense is the message.
The broken chain, fallen crown, and scourge on the defeated figure are not abstract warnings but a specific indictment: this is what colonial rule looked like, and the Revolution had ended it. The motto names the outcome: tyrants fall, always.
Virginia Coat of Arms Facts
Previous Versions of the Virginia Coat of Arms
The design of the coat of arms has not changed since 1776. What changed over time was how different engravers and printers interpreted the design, since no single standardized rendering existed for most of the seal's history.
The only formal design change after 1776 came in 1779, when the General Assembly changed the motto on the reverse side of the Great Seal from the original Latin phrase to Perseverando. The obverse, which forms the coat of arms, was not altered. The 1950 standardization did not change the design but fixed how it was drawn.
Original Convention Design (1776)
A mid-nineteenth-century engraved rendering that preserves the original 1776 design adopted by the Virginia Convention. It shows Virtus, the fallen tyrant, and the motto Sic Semper Tyrannis in a pre-standardized historical form descended from the original Commonwealth seal.
Commonwealth Rendering
An early twentieth-century Commonwealth rendering associated with Virginia's 1904 flag era. The 1776 symbolism remains unchanged, but the figure proportions and ornamental treatment differ from both earlier engravings and the later standardized form.
Pre-Keck Rendering
A 1928 rendering from the last major pre-standardization phase. It documents how the arms were commonly drawn just before Virginia moved to the modern official standard.
Standardized Rendering (1950)
The official standardized design adopted by the General Assembly on February 1, 1950. It resolved proportional and coloring inconsistencies that had accumulated across different engravings and printings since the 18th century. The design itself was not changed, only fixed to a single authoritative version.
Quick Answers
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What does Sic Semper Tyrannis mean?
Who designed the Virginia coat of arms?
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What does the fallen tyrant represent on the Virginia coat of arms?
What is on the back of the Virginia seal?
Sources
- Wikipedia — Flag and seal of Virginia
- Encyclopedia Virginia — Seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia
- Wythepedia — The Seals of Virginia
- Wythepedia — Report on the Great Seal of Virginia
- Code of Virginia — Title 1, Chapter 5, Article 1
Virginia State Symbols
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