Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.02.2019, Side 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.02.2019, Side 1
Stefan Jonasson On February 12, 1919, less than three months after Iceland reclaimed its sovereignty as the Kingdom of Iceland, King Christian X granted the nation a new coat of arms (skjaldarmerki in Icelandic). It was a marked departure from earlier coats of arms, reinforcing the fundamental change of status that sovereignty represented. The official description of the coat of arms, as outlined in the royal decree, stated: “The Icelandic coat of arms shall be a crowned shield charged with the flag of Iceland. The bearers of the shield are the country’s four familiar guardian spirits: a dragon, a vulture [i.e., eagle], a bull and a giant.” The four animals chosen were the landvættir – land spirits – that were named by Snorri Sturluson in Heimskringla. The landvættir were believed to be the guardians of Iceland, protecting the safety of its people, the fertility of its land, and sanctity of its traditions. The four animals are commonly associated with the four quarters of the country – the dragon with the east, the eagle with the north, the ox with the west, and the giant with the south. As Snorri describes them, it was the landvættir that dissuaded King Haraldur Bluetooth from invading Iceland when he was in the mood for conquest. The flag on the shield predates sovereignty, but only by a few years. As early as 1885, Alþingi had resolved that Iceland was entitled to its own merchant flag, but nothing came of it other than identifying the three colours that would eventually appear in the present flag. Over the decades that followed, individuals put forward ideas for an Icelandic flag but nothing further happened until 1913, when Prime Minister Hannes Hafstein proposed that the king establish a national flag for use in Iceland and its territorial waters by royal decree. On the second to last day of the year, the prime minister appointed a committee “to consider in detail the design of the flag, establish as far as possible the nation's wishes and present proposals to the government on the shape and colour early enough to give Parliament, when it next convenes, the opportunity to deliver an opinion on it.” The committee presented two options, which were considered by Alþingi during its 1914 session. The process ran into a roadblock in November when the king declined to issue a royal decree at the request of the new prime minister, Sigurður Eggerz, which led to the prime minister’s resignation. When yet a third prime minister, Einar Arnórsson, presented the proposed flag for approval, King Christian X issued a royal decree sanctioning the flag on June 19, 1915. It was the same tricolour flag he had rejected the previous November. This flag was confirmed as the national flag on the eve of sovereignty. Following the establishment of the Republic of Iceland in 1944, the coat of arms was modified to remove the crown from above the shield, since Iceland was no longer a constitutional monarchy, the landvættir were redrawn, and the base on which they stood was changed to a slab of columnar basalt. Some proposed that the gyrfalcon be reinstated, but in the end it was decided to keep the basic form and elements of the coat of arms that was granted in 1919. The amended coat of arms was confirmed by a presidential decree this time, which was issued by President Sveinn Björnsson. Iceland had earlier coats of arms. During the period of Home Rule, when Iceland was a semi-autonomous realm within Denmark, the coat of arms consisted of a white gyrfalcon on a blue shield. Prior to this, the coat of arms depicted a stockfish with a crown above it on a red shield and it was commonly known as Þorskmerkið (the cod markings). Þorskmerkið was the coat of arms from the early 16th century until the dawn of Home Rule. Earlier coats of arms, during the Icelandic Commonwealth and era of Norwegian rule, are more difficult to confirm with certainty, since their existence is subject to speculation. LÖGBERG HEIMSKRINGLA The Icelandic Community Newspaper • 1 February 2019 • Number 03 / Númer 03 • 1. febrúar 2019 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40012014 ISSN: 0047-4967 VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA INSIDE David Gislason’s reflections on Icelandic sovereignty / page 5 A yearning for home PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON An Icelandic film on Netflix / page 7 PHOTO: ZIK ZAK KVIKMYNDIR And Breathe Normally Svava Jónsdóttir on her book Portraits of a Nation / page 10 Every Icelander Counts Iceland’s coat of arms granted 100 years ago, modified 25 years later IMAGE COURTESY OF FENN-O-MANIC CC BY SA 3.0 Kingdom of Iceland coat of arms, 1919-1944 IMAGE: SSOLBERGJ CC BY 3.0 Þorskmerkið, the coat of arms from the 16th century to 1903 IMAGE: SSOLBERGJ CC BY-SA 3.0 Coat of arms during Home Rule, 1903-1919 IMAGE: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS RKT2312 Coat of arms of the Republic of Iceland, 1944 to the present day

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