Thursday, May 15, 2025

Another Reason I Like to Travel


I've been lucky enough (or as my wife used to say, we've been willing enough to go into debt) to travel a lot of different places over the years.

And every place I go, I look for wearable heraldic souvenirs of our travels. What this means in practice is tee shirts and baseball caps with coats of arms on them.

Now, not every place offers such items (I'm looking at you, Dublin, Ireland and Glasgow, Scotland! No tee shirts, no baseball caps, not even a keychain with the city arms on them. And I looked! I even asked! The closest I came in Dublin was a fuzzy "viking" horned hat with the city's coat of arms on it. I bought it, but it's not something I feel quite brave enough to wear in public. Especially with the little bells hanging from the ends of the horns, not to mention the blue braids on each side. See photograph immediately below).


And, of course, not every place I've gone offers "real" heraldry on their wearable souvenirs.

Once example of this is my recent trip to Victoria, British Columbia, to attend the Annual General Meeting of the Royal Heraldry Society of Canada, of which I have been a member for more years than I care to remember.

Having some free time before meetings, I wandered down to the central city to see what I could find. And I found an armorial tee shirt and matching (sort of) baseball cap.


As you can see, they both bear the same fictitious coat of arms, though only the shirt bears the legend: Canada: Fast and Furious.

The "arms" consist of the logo of the Porsche automobile company (with the legend "Canada" across the top of the shield instead of "Porsche"), and the inescutcheon bears a black rampant moose (instead of the black rearing horse) and the word "Original" in chief instead of "Stuttgart", the city where Porsche is located.

Here's Porsche to compare:


And the "arms" on the shirt:


So, while it may not be the arms of the city of Victoria, or even the arms of British Columbia, it's a fun little take-off with a specifically Canadian twist of the logo of Porsche, and I expect to have some fun wearing each of these items in the future.


And if you can't have some fun with heraldry, what's the point? As J.P. Brooke-Little said in his Introduction to his book An Heraldic Alphabet: "[H]erein lies the fun and if heraldry ever ceases to be fun - chuck it."

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