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The flag of New Brunswick (French: le drapeau du Nouveau-Brunswick) consists of a golden lion passant on a red field in the upper third and a gold field defaced with a lymphad on top of blue and white wavy lines in the bottom two-thirds.
- February 24, 1965; 58 years ago
- Robert Pichette and Alan B. Beddoe
- 5∶8
The flag of the Duchy of Brunswick was blue over yellow, and demonstrates a remarkable similarity with the Ukrainian national colours. The standard of the dukes of Brunswick given by Siebmachers Wappenbuch, Nuremberg 1878, shows the white horse on a red cloth - this, however, is today assumed to have been in error.
- Constitutional monarchy
- Evangelical Lutheran State Church in Brunswick
Canadian provincial flag that is horizontally divided and bears a golden lion on an upper red stripe and a lymphad (ancient galley) on a central golden stripe; the bottom edge of the flag has narrow, wavy stripes of blue-white-blue.
Flag. The design for the New Brunswick flag is based on the provincial coat of arms, assigned by royal warrant of Queen Victoria in 1868. The provincial flag was adopted by proclamation in 1965.
The arms of Brunswick consist of two gold lions on a red field, and the arms of the King contained the three gold lions of England. The gold lion in the flag therefore reflects New Brunswick's relationship both to the Duchy of Brunswick and England.
New Brunswick adopted the purple violet ( Viola palmata, var, cucullata) as its official flower in 1936. The Women’s Institutes, the Lieutenant Governor and, finally, the province’s schoolchildren helped make this choice.
New Brunswick is one of Canada's provinces, and has established several provincial symbols. Official symbols