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Coat of arms of Switzerland

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Coat of arms of Switzerland
Versions
Hatched coat of arms as shown in the 2017 legislation
Thebanner of arms, which serves asnational flag
ArmigerSwiss Confederation
as well as the following institutions:
ShieldGules, a Cross couped Argent

Thecoat of arms of theSwiss Confederation shows the same white-on-redcross as theflag of Switzerland, but on a heraldic shield instead of the square field.

The federal coat of arms (eidgenössisches Wappen) was defined by theSwiss Diet (Tagsatzung) in 1815, for theRestored Confederacy. A more elaborate federal seal was also defined, as the federal coat of arms surrounded by the twenty-twocantonal coats of arms. Similar heraldic arrangements representing theThirteen Cantons of theOld Swiss Confederacy are on record from the mid-16th century.

The 1815 legislation remained in force in thefederal state established in 1848, as was explicitly recognized by theFederal Council in 1889. While the simple coat of arms was in wide use, especially oncoins, and from the early 20th century also oncar number plates andpassports, the full seal did not see official use beyond its representation instained glass in theFederal Palace of Switzerland (c. 1900).

The 19th-century definition of the federal seal and coat of arms was replaced only in 2017, with the adoption of a new law which defined the Swiss coat of arms as "a Swiss cross in a triangular shield" with fixed proportions, but which no longer recognizes a federal seal.[1]

Design

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Further information:Flag of Switzerland § Design

The 2017 law defines the "Swiss coat of arms" (German:Schweizerwappen) formally the "Coat of Arms of the Swiss Confederation" (German:Wappen der Schweizerischen Eidgenossenschaft,French:armoiries de la Confédération suisse consistent,Italian:stemma della Confederazione Svizzera)as "a Swiss cross in a triangular shield". TheSwiss cross (Das Schweizerkreuz,la croix suisse,la croce svizzera) is defined as

"a white, upright, free-standing cross depicted against a red background, whose arms, which are all of equal size, are one-sixth longer than they are wide."[1]

The shape of the "triangular shield" is defined by means of an image given in an annex to article 2.The colorred to be used is specified in the same annex as:

The coat of arms of Switzerland, corresponding to the CMYK, Hexadecimal, and RGB colours.
Variants of the swiss red found on the coat of arms
Colour Scheme
CMYK0–100–100–0
Pantone485C or 485U
RGB255–0–0
Hexadecimal#FF0000
Scotchcal100 -13
RAL3020 (Traffic Red)
NCSS 1085-Y90R

The triangular shield has been in use by the federal administration since the first half of the 20th century.It is an unusual shape, based on the triangular or "heater" shaped shield of classical heraldry, but with a curved top.

Alternative shapes of the heraldic shield were also in frequent use, and still remain in use in spite of the 2017 legislation. A frequently seen shield shape is the "Iberian" or "curved" type, specifically used to mark Swiss embassies and border crossings, and also used on thefive franks coin. Another frequently seen variant is a Renaissance-style articulated shield, shown as being held by the national personificationHelvetia on the ½, 1 and 2 franks coins.

History

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Old Confederacy

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Further information:Cantonal coats of arms andThirteen Cantons
The coats of arms of the Thirteen Cantons as shown on the "baptismal medal" orPatenpfennig presented by the Confederacy toPrincess Claude of Valois (byJacob Stampfer of Zürich (1547).

The Swiss cross originates as a field sign worn by the troops of theOld Swiss Confederacy. Use of the emblem is attested with certainty in the context of theOld Zürich War, for the year 1444, when theTagsatzung defended itself against allegations that the troops of the Confederacy had deceptively used two different field signs (Heerzeichen).Aegidius Tschudi (Chronik II.390) cites a song containing this allegation, specifying that the Swiss were bearing "two kinds of crosses, white at the back and red in front" (Si trügend zweierlei Crützeren, [...] Hinden wiß und vornen rot) to deceive the Zürich side.[2]

Heraldic representation of the Confederacy was by representations of thecantonal coats of arms.Petermann Etterlin on thetitle page of hisKronika of 1507 shows the coats of arms of theThirteen Cantons (besides those ofChur,Valais andSt. Gallen) surrounding theimperial coat of arms, reflecting the claim of the cantons of the Confederacy toimperial immediacy within theHoly Roman Empire.

The first known example where the cantonal coats of arms are shown as surrounding a Swiss cross representing the Confederacy is a medal commissioned by theTagsatzung from Zürich goldsmith Hans Stampfer in 1547 as a gift for the Frenchprincess Claude. The obverse side of this medal shows the coats of arms of the Thirteen Cantons in their order of precedence, the reverse shows the coats of arms of theAssociates, both groups surrounding a central cross with ornamental foliage. Similar representations are found throughout the early modern period, on commemorative medals and on regimental seals used bySwiss Guards in French service.[3]The first mention of theConfederate Cross (Eidgenossen Crütz) shown in a shield (on pennies minted by Schwyz) dates to 1533.[4]

Napoleonic period and Restored Confederacy

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Seal of the Helvetic Republic, version used by the "smaller council" (Kleiner Rath)
The heraldic emblem used during 1803–1814 as shown (in abbreviation) on cantonal coins

The NapoleonicHelvetic Republic adopted an official seal on 12 May 1798, showingWilliam Tell and his son, holdingthe apple pierced by the crossbow bolt.This seal disappeared with the dissolution of the Helvetic Republic five years later. TheSwiss Confederation established by Napoleon in 1803 adopted the seal, described as: "an armed Old Swiss, on whose shield shall be inscribed 'XIX. Kantone', surrounded by the inscription 'Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft. 1803.'"[5]

Seal of the Swiss Confederacy as defined by theTagsatzung in 1815

TheTagsatzung (Swiss Diet) re-introduced the white cross in the red field for the seal of the Confederacy in 1814. The commission for drafting a federal constitution on 16 May 1814 recommended the adoption of a seal of the Confederacy based on the "field sign of the old Swiss".[6]On 4 July 1815, the Diet accepted the design of the commission, adopting it as the provisional seal and describing it as "in the center, the federal red shield with the white cross as common federal heraldic emblem, surrounded by a simple circular Gothic ornament, on the outside of which the inscription 'Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft' with the year number MDCCCXV, and in an outer circle all XXII cantonal coat of arms in circular fields, according to their federal order of precedence; around all, a simple wreath".[7]

Modern Switzerland

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The 22 cantonal coats of arms in the stained glass dome of theFederal Palace of Switzerland (ca. 1900)
Coat of arms on the obverse of theSchützentaler minted by theThree Leagues for thefederal shooting competition of 1842
Five francs coin in the design used during 1888–1916

In November 1889, theFederal Council published a "communication regarding the federal coat of arms", detailing the history of the use of the Swiss cross since the 15th century.[8]

Seals produced from 1815 onward, and cantonal coins minted from 1826 showed the arms of the cross in the 7:6 length to width ratio. Later in the 19th century, there was a trend of depicting the cross as composed of five equal squares. The two competing designs were controversially discussed in the late 19th century, especially after the introduction of the new design for thefive franks coin, which showed the Swiss coat of arms in aBaroque-style heraldic shield. The Federal Council in 1889 introduced the 7:6 ratio as official. The associated communication explains that "our heraldic cross is not a mathematical figure, but at the same the Christian cross symbol and the field sign of the Old Confederacy". The 1889 law avoids specification of the shape of the shield, the omission being explained in the communication as deliberate, in order to avoid prejudicing the ongoing controversy, and in order to enable the shape of the shield to be left to the "tastes of the current time and practical necessity".[9]The legislation, passed on 12 December 1889 (SR 111), explicitly invokes theTagsatzung decision of 1815 as retaining validity, with the only addition of specifying the proportions of the cross, the four arms having equal length, in a ratio to their width of7:6.[10]

In the 1850 series of theSwiss franc coins, the small denominations (1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 centimes) had a coat of arms with floral ornaments, while the larger denominations (½, 1, 2 and 5 francs) showed a seatedHelvetia figure holding a triangular shield on which the Swiss cross was displayed within an oval shape. The coat of arms in the denominations 5, 10 and 20 centimes was replaced by a female head (Liberty) in 1881. In the 1 and 2 centimes coins, the coat of arms was replaced by a simple Swiss cross in 1948.For the ½, 1, and 2 francs coins, the seated Helvetia was replaced by her standing figure in 1875.The 1888 five franks coin showed a coat of arms with a heraldic shield in a shape inspired by Baroque cartouche designs. The 1922 design of the five franks coin introduced a simplified shield of the rounded "Iberian" type.

TheModel 1900/06 Parabellum pistol ("Swiss Luger") had a Swiss cross engraved on the top of the chamber.The Swiss cross was represented as "in splendor" in the batches produced during 1906–1908, and in a heraldic shield from 1909.The heraldic shield was of the "baroque" type, with an engrailed top, in the 1900/06 models produced from 1909–1914 byDeutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabriken (DWM). The coat of arms is no longer present in the model 1900/06 batches produced byWaffenfabrik Bern during 1918–1933.The Swiss coat of arms is again present on the Model 1929 Parabellum pistol made by Waffenfabrik Bern during 1933–1947, now with a triangular shield.[11] Ordnance pistols produced for thearmy, modelsSIG Sauer P210 (1949–1975) andSIG Sauer P220 (from 1975) continued to have the Swiss coat of arms with triangular shield engraved on the slide, rendered in simple outline (without hatching of the shield).

The representation of the Swiss coat of arms in a convex triangular shield representing the federal administration is a tradition introduced in the early 20th century. This special shield shape had no official force prior to the adoption as "logo" in 2005, but it came to be usedde facto as emblem by the federal authorities from the 1930s, shown onSwiss passports during 1932–1984 (the passport of 1915 still showed a coat of arms with a "French" style shield in a wreath on its first page).Early Swiss car registration plates, introduced in 1905, showed coats of arms with articulate "Baroque" shields.Beginning in 1933, this design was replaced by simplified a shield shape of the "triangular" type with vertical sides, with slight design variations between cantons.

Use by the federal administration

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Coat of arms of Switzerland used by army
The 2005 logo used by the Swiss federal administration
ASwiss army knife — the soldier knife (Soldatenmesser) issued by theSwiss Armed Forces (2008 model). The cardboard box shows the Swiss coat of arms used in the company logo by the manufacturer,Victorinox, while relief depicted on one grip on the knife itself is the coat of arms used by the federal authorities.

The Federal Council in 2004 announced the introduction of a "corporate design" in the sense of a contemporarylogo, to be used by all organs of thefederal administration.Adoption by the Federal Council itself was announced for 2005, with adoption to be complete by all of the federal administration by the end of 2006, with a projected cost of CHF 25 million.[12] The logo consists of the Swiss coat of arms in convex triangular shield alongside the name "Swiss Confederacy" in the four national languages in blackFrutiger Light typeset. Provision is made for using white script and adding a white line surrounding the coat of arms in cases where the logo is printed on red or black backgrounds.[13]

In keeping with the new logo, a new law was passed in 2017, known asWappenschutzgesetz (WSchG,SR 232.21). This law replaces a 1931 law on the protection of federal, cantonal and foreign heraldic emblems.[1]While the older law did not contain any specifications as to federal emblems, the new law specifies the "Swiss coat of arms" and the "Swiss flag", including two images in an annex, declared as authoritative in the text of the law, so that the federal "Swiss coat of arms" is now defined as a Swiss cross in a convex triangular shield.[14]The 2017 law thus also renders obsolete the 1815 definition of the federal coat of arms and its 1889 confirmation, SR 111 being marked as abrogated per 1 January 2017.[10]The image of the coat of arms shown in the document shows thehatching indicating heraldictincture (red orgules indicated by vertical hatching) which has traditionally been used in black-and-white representations of the coat of arms throughout the 20th century. By contrast, the "corporate design" manual used by the federal administration specifies that no such hatching is to be shown in black-and-white representations of thelogo, the red shield instead being shown in solid black.[13]In spite of the more restrictive 2017 definition of the "Swiss coat of arms", other styles of heraldic shield remain in official use, specifically oncoins andnumber plates.

A number of regulations passed along with the new flag law, also in force from 2017, restricted the commercial use of the Swiss cross. Dubbed the "Swissness regulation" (Swissness-Verordnung), these changes were originally proposed in 2006by national councillorJasmin Hutter and state councillor Anita Fetz,[15] and eventually implemented in five separate regulations.[16]Numerous exceptions were granted to companies who have historically used the Swiss cross, such asSwiss army knife producerVictorinox (uses the federal coat of arms as company logo since 1909).

See also

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toNational coat of arms of Switzerland.

References

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  1. ^abcBundesgesetz zum Schutz öffentlicher Wappen und anderer öffentlicher Zeichen vom 5. Juni 1931 (Stand am 1. August 2008).
  2. ^BBl 1889 IV (12 November 1889), p. 632.
  3. ^BBl 1889 IV (12 November 1889), p. 631.
  4. ^BBl 1889 IV (12 November 1889), p. 633.
  5. ^"Am 5. Heumonat 1803 hat die ordentliche Tagsatzung auf den Antrag es Landammanns der Schweiz das eidgenössische Siegel festgesetzt, wie folgt: ein bewaffneter alter Schweizer, auf dessen Schild die Inschrift: XIX. Kantone stehen soll, und mit der Umschrift: Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft. 1803."Repertorium der Abschiede der eidgenössischen Tagsatzungen: vom Jahr 1803 bis Ende des Jahrs 1813, oder während des Zeitraums, da die mediationsmäßige Bundesverfassung Geltung hatte vol. 1 (1842),p. 8.BBl 1889 IV (12 November 1889), p. 634.
  6. ^Article 41 (of the draft constitution):"Das Siegel der Eidgenossenschaft ist das Feldzeichen der alten Schweizer: ein weißes freistehendes Kreuz im rothen Felde, sammt der Umschrift: Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft."
  7. ^"In der Mitte der eidgenössische rothe Schild mit dem weißen Kreuz als gemeineidgenössisches Wappenzeichen ; ringsherum eine zirkeiförmige einfache gothische Verzierung; außer derselben die Inschrift: Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft, mit der Jahreszahl MDCCCXV; in einem äußern Zirkel alle XXII Kantonswappen in runden Feldern nach ihrer eidgenössischen Rangordnung, und das Ganze mit einem einfachen Siegelkranze in unterschobenen kleinen Blättern geschlossen" (Bd. III, S. 120, G.)
  8. ^Botschaft des Bundesrates an die Bundesversammlung, betreffend das eidgenössische Wappen (BBl 1889 IV 630, 12 November 1889)
  9. ^"Wir haben uns bei dem nachstehenden Beschlussesvorschlag, der das Wappen der Eidgenossenschaft in unzweideutiger Weise festzustellen bestimmt ist, an das alte Herkommen gehalten, wonach unser Wappenkreuz nicht eine mathematische Figur, sondern das christliche Kreuzessymbol und zugleich das alteidgenössische Feldzeichen darstellt. Bezüglich des Wappen Schildes, dessen Gestalt auf den neuen eidgenössischen Fünffrankenstücken allermeist zu der Kritik in der Tagespresse und so indirekt zu der Stellung Ihres Postulats die Veranlassung gegeben hat, ist es durchaus unthunlich, eine offizielle Form ein für alle Mal festzustellen. Ob auch der Schildselbst ein wesentlicher Bestandteil eines jeden Wappens bildet, so ist dagegen dessen Gestalt rein nebensächlich, gleichgültig und hängt gänzlich von der Geschmacksrichtung der Zeit und dann auch von dem praktischen Bedürfniß des gegebenen Falles ab. Wir haben deßwegen unterlassen, eine diesbezügliche Bestimmung in den Beschluß aufzunehmen'. "BBl 1889 IV (12 November 1889), p. 636.
  10. ^abBundesbeschluss betreffend das eidgenössische Wappen vom 12. Dezember 1889
  11. ^Pistole 1900/06,Pistole 1900/06 W+F (Pistole 06/24),Pistole 06/29 (swisswaffen.com)
  12. ^Bundesverwaltung erhält einheitliches Erscheinungsbild 25 August 2004.
  13. ^abCorporate Design der Schweizerischen Bundesverwaltung Version 8.1 (2018)
  14. ^SR 232.21 ("Federal Act on the Protection of the Swiss Coat of Arms and Other Public Signs (Coat of Arms Protection Act, CAPA)")"Art. 1 Swiss cross:The Swiss cross is a white, upright, free-standing cross depicted against a red background, whose arms, which are all of equal size, are one-sixth longer than they are wide.Art. 2 Swiss coat of arms:1 The Coat of Arms of the Swiss Confederation (the Swiss coat of arms) is a Swiss cross in a triangular shield.2 The example depicted in Annex 1 defines the shape, colour and proportions.Art. 3 Swiss flag:1 The Swiss flag shows a Swiss cross on a square background.2 The example depicted in Annex 2 defines the shape, colour and proportions."
  15. ^Postulat 06.3056 Schutz der Marke Schweiz,Postulat 06.3174 Verstärkung der Marke Made in Switzerland.
  16. ^Bundesrat verabschiedet Umsetzungs-verordnungen zur Swissness-Vorlage, press release, 2 September 2015.
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