Great Seal of the Philippines
The Great Seal of the Philippines (Filipino: Dakilang Sagisag ng Pilipinas) is a special mark used on important government papers in the Philippines. It can be the physical seal or the design on it. The law says that the President of the Philippines takes care of the seal. According to Republic Act No. 8491, the Great Seal should be round and have the same design as the national Coat of Arms. Around the arms, there's a double circle with the official name of the Philippines in Filipino. The color of the arms doesn't matter, but it should be shown in a specific way. The Great Seal must also have the national motto of the Philippines. It's put on all commissions signed by the President and other important papers of the Philippines, as needed by the law or tradition. The President keeps the Great Seal.[1]
| Great Seal of the Philippines | |
|---|---|
| File:Seal of the Philippines.svg | |
| Details | |
| Motto | "Republika ng Pilipinas", "Maka-Diyos, Maka-Tao, Makakalikasan at Makabansa" ("Republic of the Philippines", "For God, People, Nature and Country") |
Great Seal Of The Philippines Media
- Coat of arms of the Philippines (1898–1901).svg
Government Seal of the First Philippine Republic (1898–1901)
- Seal of US Department of the Philippine Islands.png
De facto Great Seal of the Philippine Islands (1903–1905)
- Seal Philippines, USA (1940-1941).svg
Government Seal of the Philippines, 1940-1941
- Great Seal of the Philippines (1943-1945).svg
Great Seal of the Second Philippine Republic (1943–1945)
- Great Seal of the Philippines (1946-1978).svg
Great Seal of the Republic of the Philippines (1946–1978)
- Great Seal of the Philippines (1978-1986).svg
Great Seal of the Republic of the Philippines (1978–1986)
References
- ↑ "REPUBLIC ACT NO. 8491 - AN ACT PRESCRIBING THE CODE OF THE NATIONAL FLAG, ANTHEM, MOTTO, COAT-OF-ARMS AND OTHER HERALDIC ITEMS AND DEVICES OF THE PHILIPPINES". www.chanrobles.com. Retrieved 2023-11-24.