Seznam pečetí států Spojených států amerických
Pečetě jednotlivých států Spojených států amerických ukazují široké spektrum místních vlivů, prvky z historie těchto států a také různé principy návrhu. Všech 50 států a federální distrikt má vlastní jedinečnou pečeť (znak) nezávisle na federální Velké státní pečeti Spojených států.
Federální distrikt
- Pečeť federálního distriktu Washington, D.C.
Státy
- Pečeť státu Alabama
- Pečeť státu Aljaška
- Pečeť státu Arizona
- Pečeť státu Arkansas
- Pečeť státu Colorado
- Pečeť státu Connecticut
- Pečeť státu Delaware
- Pečeť státu Florida
- Pečeť státu Georgie
- Pečeť státu Havaj
- Pečeť státu Idaho
- Pečeť státu Illinois
- Pečeť státu Indiana
- Pečeť státu Iowa
- Pečeť státu Jižní Dakota
- Pečeť státu Jižní Karolína
- Pečeť státu Kalifornie
- Pečeť státu Kansas
- Pečeť státu Kentucky
- Pečeť státu Louisiana
- Pečeť státu Maine
- Pečeť státu Maryland
- Pečeť státu Massachusetts
- Pečeť státu Michigan
- Pečeť státu Minnesota
- Pečeť státu Mississippi
- Pečeť státu Missouri
- Pečeť státu Montana
- Pečeť státu Nebraska
- Pečeť státu Nevada
- Pečeť státu New Hampshire
- Pečeť státu New Jersey
- Pečeť státu Nové Mexiko
- Pečeť státu Ohio
- Pečeť státu Oklahoma
- Pečeť státu Oregon
- Pečeť státu Pensylvánie
- Pečeť státu Rhode Island
- Pečeť státu Severní Dakota
- Pečeť státu Severní Karolína
- Pečeť státu Tennessee
- Pečeť státu Texas
- Pečeť státu Utah
- Pečeť státu Vermont
- Pečeť státu Virginie
- Pečeť státu Washington
- Pečeť státu Wisconsin
- Pečeť státu Wyoming
- Pečeť státu Západní Virginie
Státy (rubové strany)
- Rubová strana pečeti Georgie
- Rubová strana pečeti Marylandu
- Rubová strana pečeti Pensylvánie
- Rubová strana pečeti Texasu
- Rubová strana pečeti Západní Virginie
Nezačleněné území
Pečeti (znaky) Nezačleněných území Spojených států amerických.
- Znak (pečeť) nezačleněného území Americké Panenské ostrovy
- Znak (pečeť) nezačleněného území Americká Samoa
- Znak nezačleněného území Guam
- Znak (pečeť) nezačleněného území Portoriko (pečeť je rozdílná od znaku)
- Znak (pečeť) nezačleněného území Severní Mariany
Indiáni
- Čoktové
Historické pečetě
- Alabama (1817–1868)
- Alabama (1868–1939)
- Havaj (1898–1959)
- Kentucky (1793–1812)
- Louisiana (1802–1879)
- Louisiana (1879–2010)
- Minnesota (1861–1983)
- Minnesota (1983–2024)
- Mississippi (1798–1817)
- Mississippi (1818–1879)
- Mississippi (1879–2014)
- Severní Karolína (1971–1984)
- Severozápadní teritorium (1788–1802)
- Ohio (1967–1996)
- Utah (1850–1896)
- Panamské průplavové pásmo (1908–1979)
Odkazy
Reference
V tomto článku byl použit překlad textu z článku Seals of the U.S. states na anglické Wikipedii.
Související články
- Vlajka Spojených států amerických
- Státní znak Spojených států amerických
- Dějiny Spojených států amerických
- Seznam vlajek států Spojených států amerických
- Seznam znaků států Spojených států amerických
- Seznam státních písní států USA
Externí odkazy
- Obrázky, zvuky či videa k tématu Seznam pečetí států Spojených států amerických na Wikimedia Commons
- NETSTATE.com - State Seals of the 50 States
- Seals - US States (anglicky)
- Civic Heraldry.com - Civic heraldry of USA (United States of America) Archivováno 1. 3. 2009 na Wayback Machine. (anglicky)
- US State Symbols - State Symbols, Emblems, and Mascots (anglicky)
- State symbols USA - STATE SEALS - GREAT SEALS Archivováno 14. 8. 2009 na Wayback Machine. (anglicky)
Média použitá na této stránce
The Great Seal of Mississippi from January 19, 1818 to July 1, 2014.
Great Seal of The State of Alabama
Seal of the Mississippi Territory
Seal of New Hampshire.
Great Seal of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Includes crowned "F" and "I" letters for Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain flanking the Agnus Dei (symbolic representation of Christ as a lamb) sitting on a book. Around the edge of the shield are the lions of Leon, the castle of Castile, and the heraldic banner of the Catholic Monarchs. The motto is Latin for "John is his name", from the description of John the Baptist's birth in the New Testament.
The state seal of Virginia. Sic semper tyrannis is Latin for Thus always to tyrants. The current design was originally sculpted for the Commonwealth of Virginia by Charles Keck in 1931, in turn based off the 1776 description authored by George Wythe and George Mason. Colors were assigned in 1949 by members of the Art Commission of Virginia.
Idaho's State Seal
Seal of Illinois. Center image extracted from Illinois flag.
Older version of the state Seal of Ohio; in use from 1967 - 1996. In 1996, the number of rays was reduced to 13.
The Great Seal of the Choctaw Nation. This seal is also incorporated into the Great Seal of Oklahoma, along with the seals of the other Five Civilized Tribes. SVG by Doodledoo.
Seal of the Northern Mariana Islands
Tento vektorový obrázek byl vytvořen programem Inkscape .
State seal of North Carolina, 1971-1984, January 1st
http://ncmuseumofhistory.org/fko/booklet/NorthCarolinaSeal.jpg
http://ncpedia.org/symbols/sealSeal of American Samoa
West Virginia State Seal
Great Seal of North Dakota, designed in 1987 by Lili Stewart.
Great Seal of the State of Colorado
Great Seal of the State of Nebraska
Great Seal of the State of Connecticut
The Great Seal of Mississippi from January 19, 1818 to July 1, 2014.
Great Seal of the State of Arkansas
Seal of Michigan.
Seal of Kentucky, pre-1813.
Seal of the Panama Canal Zone. Posted on the Panama Canal Society website. This seal was created by the federal government of the United States and constitutes the seal of the Panama Canal Zone, a former territory under the administration of the U.S. government. It was created on 1906.
W3C-validity not checked.
The Great Seal of the State of Kansas
The Great Seal of the Territory of Hawaii, in use from 1901 to 1959. Original design approved by Sanford B. Dole, the President of the Republic of Hawaii. Altered in 1901 to represent the change in status from republic to territory.
A former state seal of Minnesota. This actually appears to be an older version of the seal, before 1983 changes which altered the positions of the horse, and added Norway Pines in the back right. In fact, this appears to be the pre-1971 version (which replaced the Indian with a white settler, a change which was also reverted in 1983). The axe in the stump was also missing before 1971, as is the case here. Extracted from PDF version of a 2008 election brochure from the U.S. National Archives (direct PDF URL [1]).
Depiction of the 1868 Great Seal of Alabama, created by the Alabama State Legislature by Act 1868–133: "The seal is in the form of a circle, and two and a quarter inches in diameter; near the edge is the word 'ALABAMA' and opposite, at the same distance from the edge, are the words 'GREAT SEAL.' In the centre of the seal an eagle is represented with raised wings alighting upon the national shield, with three arrows in his left talon. The eagle holds in his beak a streamer, on which immediately over the wings are the words 'HERE WE REST.' The crest-word, which give name to the State, signifies "The land of rest."
Autor:
The Seal of Guam. This is a simple modification of Flag of Guam.svg, which was written by Andrew Duhan.
Great Seal of the State of Kentucky
Seal of Delaware
Territorial Seal.
Depiction of the 1817 Great Seal of Alabama, originally designed by Governor William Wyatt Bibb for the Alabama Territory and in use until 1868. Elements of the design include a map of Alabama's river system affixed to a living tree. Variations on the design were used in Territorial and State documents including currency and uniform insignia issued during the U. S. Civil War (1861–1865).
Autor:
- Original Compiled by Aaron Walden.
- Vector derivative by Jdcollins13
Seal of the Cherokee Nation. The phrase written in the Cherokee syllabary is incorrect: It reads "Ꮳꮤꭹꭿ Ꭰᏸꮅ" {tsa-ta-gi-hi a-ye-li), but the correct text is Ꮳꮃꭹꭿ Ꭰᏸꮅ (tsa-la-gi-hi a-ye-li).
Autor: Di (they-them), Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0
Obverse of the Seal of Maryland, adopted in 1959.
Reverse of the Great Seal of West Virginia. A form of this seal is also the Official Seal of the Governor of West Virginia.
The seal of the US state of Minnesota.
Great Seal of the State of Oregon
Autor: Bassoonstuff (Bobby C. Hawkins), Licence: CC BY-SA 3.0
Great Seal of the Navajo Nation.
Reverse of the Seal of Pennsylvania
Seal of the Northwest Territory of the United States, bearing the inscription, "The Seal of the Territory of the U.S. N.W. of the River Ohio." Hon. William Hayden English describes the seal and its symbolism:
- The coiled snake in the foreground and the boats in the middle distance; the rising sun, the forest tree felled by the ax and cut into logs, succeeded, apparently, by an apple tree laden with fruit; the Latin inscription, "Meliorem lapsa locavit," "he has planted a better than the fallen," all combine forcibly to express the idea that a wild and savage condition is to be superseded by a higher and better civilization. [1]
State seal of North Carolina
The Great Seal of the State of Hawaii, in use from 1959 to the present day. Original design approved by Sanford B. Dole, the President of the Republic of Hawaii. Altered in 1901 to represent the change in status from republic to territory. Altered again in 1959 when the Legislature passed Act 272 (Regular Session of 1959).
Great Seal of the State of Georgia
Great Seal of the state of Wisconsin
Autor: Glasshouse, Licence: CC BY 3.0
According to the Texas Secretary of State's office, The Daughters of the Republic of Texas proposed a design for the reverse of the state seal that was adopted by the Fifty-Seventh Legislature, Second Called Session. Governor Price Daniel approved this concurrent resolution on August 26, 1961. Sarah R. Farnsworth designed the art for the seal's reverse. The Seventy-Second Legislature modified the description of the reverse of the state seal as follows:
RESOLVED, That the design for the reverse side of the Great Seal of Texas shall consist of a shield, the lower half of which is divided into two parts; on the shield's lower left is a depiction of the cannon of the Battle at Gonzales; on the shield's lower right is a depiction of Vince's Bridge; on the upper half of the shield is a depiction of the Alamo; the shield is circled by live oak and olive branches, and the unfurled flags of the Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Spain, the United Mexican States, the Republic of Texas, the Confederate States of America, and the United States of America; above the shield is emblazoned the motto, "REMEMBER THE ALAMO", and beneath the shield are the words, "TEXAS ONE AND INDIVISIBLE"; over the entire shield, centered between the flags, is a white five-pointed star...
This concurrent resolution was approved by the governor on June 14, 1991.Great Seal of the State of Louisiana
Seal of Missouri.
Seal of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Seal of Louisiana (1879)
SVG of Pennsylvania state seal
Seal of Oklahoma.
Seal of Wyoming
State Seal of Alaska.