The Constitution officially describes the national arms in Article I, Section 3 after the flag (in Section 2). The blazon reads as: The use of the flag on the escutcheon, and the Standards of St. Andrew and St. George (flags of Scotland and England respectively) symbolizes the historical bloodline of the Sierran monarchs of the House of Columbia with the British monarchs of the House of Stuart, and the claim by the Monarch of Sierra that they are also the rightful heir to the British throne (respectively the English, Scottish, and Irish ones, and to a lesser extent, the French throne). The bear represents the strength and courage of Sierra, demonstrating that the government would defend its people at all costs from threats domestic and foreign. The deer serves as a counter to the bear by r
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| - The Constitution officially describes the national arms in Article I, Section 3 after the flag (in Section 2). The blazon reads as: The use of the flag on the escutcheon, and the Standards of St. Andrew and St. George (flags of Scotland and England respectively) symbolizes the historical bloodline of the Sierran monarchs of the House of Columbia with the British monarchs of the House of Stuart, and the claim by the Monarch of Sierra that they are also the rightful heir to the British throne (respectively the English, Scottish, and Irish ones, and to a lesser extent, the French throne). The bear represents the strength and courage of Sierra, demonstrating that the government would defend its people at all costs from threats domestic and foreign. The deer serves as a counter to the bear by r
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Name
| - Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Sierra
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Caption
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Crest
| - Upon the Royal helm the crown of Scotland Proper, thereon a lion sejant affronté Gules armed and langued Azure, Royally crowned Proper holding in his dexter paw a sword and in his sinister a sceptre, both Proper
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other elements
| - Behind the shield a mantle Gules fringed and tasselled Or and lined ermine
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Use
| - For all government purposes and uses; personal arms of the Sovereign
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supporters
| - , a regardant proper, supporting a like staff, therefrom flowing to the sinister a banner charged with the standard of , Sinister a proper collared or, supporting a like staff, therefrom flowing to the dexter a banner or charged with the Standard of
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lesser
| - Coat of arms of Sierra.png
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compartment
| - Motto 'Libertas sine sacrificio' in the compartment below the shield, with the Tudor rose, shamrock, and thistle engrafted on the same stem and scroll proper Argent.
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Motto
| - ''';
- LIBERTAS SINE SACRIFICO'''
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torse
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Shield
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abstract
| - The Constitution officially describes the national arms in Article I, Section 3 after the flag (in Section 2). The blazon reads as: The use of the flag on the escutcheon, and the Standards of St. Andrew and St. George (flags of Scotland and England respectively) symbolizes the historical bloodline of the Sierran monarchs of the House of Columbia with the British monarchs of the House of Stuart, and the claim by the Monarch of Sierra that they are also the rightful heir to the British throne (respectively the English, Scottish, and Irish ones, and to a lesser extent, the French throne). The bear represents the strength and courage of Sierra, demonstrating that the government would defend its people at all costs from threats domestic and foreign. The deer serves as a counter to the bear by representing peace and harmony, which are the values and desires of the Sierran people and their culture. The banners which the supporters carry, the Royal Standard and the Banner of St George, represent the Monarch's claims of authority and jurisdiction over Sierra and England (and to the greater extent, the United Kingdom). Both the bear and the deer face to viewer's left, symbolizing Sierra's position on the western coast of North America, as the "Occident Kingdom", and the direction by which the descendants of Stuart moved towards restoring their power. The red lion atop the Crown symbolizes the Monarch's ancestral homeland in Scotland, and the authority of the Monarch.
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