Official
Blazon:
Arms : Gules three Castles triple towered Argent
(Red shield, three triple-towered silver castles).
Crest : On a Wreath of the Colours a Castle as in the Arms issuant
therefrom a demi Lion guardant supporting a Flagstaff Or flying therefrom a forked
Pennon of the Arms of Saint George (On a wreath of the same colours, a castle –
as in the Arms – issues therefrom, from which a golden lion supports a forked
flag of St.George).
Supporters : On either side a Sea Horse proper crined and finned Or
(On either side stand sea-horses, trimmed in gold).
The arms were granted in 1575 (though were in use
unofficially from the 1300s), but were not confirmed until as late as 1954 by
the College of Arms .
The oldest part of the coat of arms, the triple-castled
shield, goes back to earliest times – the town taking its name from the "New Castle " built by order of Robert
Curthose, eldest son of William the Conqueror, in 1080. The earliest surviving
example of the three silver castles on a red shield, dating from about 1400, is
in the window on the north side of the Chancel of St. John’s church.
In the crest, added later, the castle motif is
repeated; and the lion’s forepaws grasp the flag of St. George. The castle
stands upon a wreath of red and white above a tilting helmet, with eye slit of
fifteenth century style.
The supporters, mythical sea-horses, shaded in
green with gold manes, fins and tails, are a reminder that Newcastle is a seaport. Both the
supporters and crest were added to the shield by grant of William Flower,
Norroy King of Arms, dated 16th August 1575 .
The motto, Fortiter
Defendit Triumphans (‘Triumphing by Brave Defence’) was adopted during the
English Civil War following the stubborn (but ultimately unsuccessful) defence
of the town against the Scots in 1644.
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