Armoria
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Themes – trees

To learn more about the arms illustrated, click on the images.

oak tree in the crest of Swinton of that Ilk

TREES are commonly seen in heraldry. In Britain and Germany, the tree most usually encountered is the oak – so much so that, if a blazon mentions “a tree”, it is automatically assumed that it is an oak. Shown at left is a typical British heraldic drawing of an oak tree: note the exaggeratedly large size of the leaves. This is a heraldic convention that allows one to identify the type of tree instantly. Oak trees do occur in the heraldry of South Africa, but in view of their being imports from Europe or North America, they are usually used in the arms of places or institutions specifically associated with historic oak trees.

In these examples, the oak firstly appears as a silhouette, while in the second and third only sprigs with acorns are shown.

silhouetted oak in the arms of Westerford High Schoolsilver oak sprigs in the arms of Stellenbosch Universityoak twig in the crest of Stellenbosch

Probably also an oak is the tree that appears in the arms of Golden Grove Primary School.

tree in the arms of Golden Grove Primary School

The most easily identifiable African tree is the baobab (Adansonia digitata), which appears in the arms of Limpopo Province. This species is the only kind of baobab that grows naturally outside Madagascar; the island has several varieties. The Anglican diocese in Limpopo, called the Diocese of St Mark the Evangelist, also has a baobab in its arms.

baobab tree in the arms of Limpopo Provincebaobab tree in the arms of the Diocese of Limpopo

The national tree is the yellowwood – this encompasses three species of a worldwide genus, Podocarpus falcatus, P latifolius and P henkelii. The poorly drawn specimen in the third quarter of Knysna’s arms is apparently intended to be P falcatus.

yellowwood in the arms of Knysna

Northern Cape has a thorn tree, which unfortunately is not identified. It seems likely to be either the Karoo thorn, Acacia karroo, or the camel thorn, A erioloba.

thorn tree in the arms of Northern Cape Province

Ciskei had a milkwood, or umqwashu, representing the milkwood tree near Peddie where the Mfengu people took an oath.

milkwood tree in the arms of Ciskei

And Limpopo Province features a most unusual tree, the Modjadji cycad, in the coronet that serves in place of a crest in its arms.

fronds of Modjadji cycad in Limpopo’s coronet

There are two distinct trees associated with the Free State (as it is now called): the Oranje Vrij Staat had an unspecified tree in its seal which came to be called the Tree of Freedom. However, through an artist’s interpretation at London postage stamp printing works De la Rue, this became an orange tree (to see how this happened, see here), and was seen as such in the arms of the Union of South Africa.

tree of freedom in the seal of the Oranje Vrij Staatorange tree in the arms of the Union of South Africaorange tree in the (unused) arms granted to the Orange Free State in 1911

Finally we find an olive tree in the arms of the Hoërskool P J Olivier in Grahamstown. It forms part of the arms because of the use, in quarters two and three, of a coat of arms connected with the name Olivier; however it is not the arms of the South African Olivier family.

olive tree in the arms of the Hoërskool P J Olivier


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  • Acknowledgement: crest of Swinton of that Ilk from an illustration of the full heraldic achievement in An Encyclopædic Dictionary of Heraldry by Franklyn and Tanner (Pergamon).

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    Comments, queries: Mike Oettle