The origin of the three lions goes something like this. King Henry I was known as the 'Lion of Justice', and kept a small zoo which included lions. He either used two lions on his shield (as Duke of Normandy, a state whose flag has two lions) to start with, or used one from his nickname then added the other upon his second marriage to Adeliza of Louvain (1121), whose symbol was also a lion. The two-lion shield was thus a personal one for the king, not the country as a whole. Henry's grandson later came to the throne as Henry II , and married the doughty Eleanor of Aquitaine, whose symbol was yet another lion. By the year 1195 their son, Richard I, had combined his parents' arms to form three lions.
The three England lionsSome old geezer in the pub was telling me this last night! He said it was: "Claws", "Maine" and "He Roars"Take it or leave it!the actual names of the three lions are : roary pauz and mayne .From a guide at the Houses of Parliament and from other sources.The names of the three Lions are as follows.Rollo, Mayne and AquitaneSource verified.
O'Brien coat of arms of the three lions are the modern arms granted to Murrough O'Brien in 1543 upon his surrender of the title "King of Thomond" to English King Henry VIII. In return for the surrender of the Irish title, King Henry VIII gave Murrough the English title of Earl of Thomond and granted unto him his personal coat of arms: "Gules in pale three lions passant guardent armed and langued azure." The king's arms were differenced to Murrough as: "Gules three lions passant guardant per pale or and argent." A high honor from the English view, but defeat for the Gaelic Irish.
Are you talking about the flag of the French kings? None. The French monarchy used either a white or blue flag covered with fleur-de-lis. Earlier French kings used only three fleur-de-lis but later kings used a field of fleur-de-lis. The United Kingdom has a total of four lions on its Royal Standard: three from the English Coat of Arms, and one from the Scottish Coat of Arms.
The red flag with three golden lions comes from the English coat of arms (seen in the first and fourth quarters of the United Kingdom's coat of arms). They are three lions passant guardant, in heraldic terms. After the Norman conquest of England in 1006, the arms of the House of Normandy were used for England, they consisted of two golden lions on a red field. King Henry II of the House of Plantagenet used, in 1158, the first known arms of an English monarch: one golden lion rampant on a red field (very much a reversal of the current Scottish standard and coat of arms. King Richard I (often referred to as Richard the Lionheart), Henry's son, decided to use his personal arms for England: two golden lions rampant on a red field, however by the end of his life he was using three lions passant on a red field--the current English arms. The origin of the third lion is unclear, some say it was to represent the Anglo-Norman empire, other say it was to represent the single leopard of Aquitaine, and other still maintain that there was no fixed number and three was eventually just settled on. These arms would be used relatively constantly to represent England, often including other arms to represent other territories, such as the French arms to represent the claim of the English monarch to the French crown. The lions and the term lions can still be seen today in an assortment of places other than the United Kingdom coat of arms. It is also used in the arms and royal standard (flag of the monarch) in many Commonwealth nations. It is seen in the logos for the English national football team (where "Three Lions" is also the nickname), the national cricket team, and the Great Britain rugby league team. It's also the nickname of said Great Britain team and also the English rugby league team. It is not, however, used as a logo or nickname for the English rugby union team where a red rose is used.
No, in the Lions 4 NFL championships they beat the New York Giants once (1935) and the Cleveland Browns three times (1952, 1953, 1957).
The lions are bluey-navy sort of colour.
The flag with three lions is an English standard flag. This flag shows three lions which are entirely made up of gold, are looking forward and in walking position with foreleg raised.
They aren't actually lions, they're actually Griffins But...as Griffins,Leopards or Lions...why blue?
Richard I
Three. The represent Normandy, Acquitaine and Anjou I believe.
three lions laying facing west side and a crown over their head.
It is either a lion - the three lions on the English football (soccer) shirta rose - on the English rugby shirta crown - the crown of Her Majesty the Queen on the Royal Mail
The three England lionsSome old geezer in the pub was telling me this last night! He said it was: "Claws", "Maine" and "He Roars"Take it or leave it!the actual names of the three lions are : roary pauz and mayne .From a guide at the Houses of Parliament and from other sources.The names of the three Lions are as follows.Rollo, Mayne and AquitaneSource verified.
lions usally come out at day time
Three Lions was created on 2010-05-17.
O'Brien coat of arms of the three lions are the modern arms granted to Murrough O'Brien in 1543 upon his surrender of the title "King of Thomond" to English King Henry VIII. In return for the surrender of the Irish title, King Henry VIII gave Murrough the English title of Earl of Thomond and granted unto him his personal coat of arms: "Gules in pale three lions passant guardent armed and langued azure." The king's arms were differenced to Murrough as: "Gules three lions passant guardant per pale or and argent." A high honor from the English view, but defeat for the Gaelic Irish.
The Detroit Lions.