, derived from that of Gibraltar A very similar coat of arms is in use by the nearby Spanish municipality of
San Roque, using a slightly different version of the same main heraldic elements (the escutcheon with the castle and key), with the addition of the old Spanish Royal
Crown above the escutcheon. When Gibraltar was
captured by an Anglo-Dutch force on behalf of the pretender to the Spanish Throne, the
Archduke Charles, in 1704, the
city council and much of the population established a new town near the existing chapel of
Saint Roch to the west of Gibraltar, in an area that remained under Spanish control. The Royal Warrant of 1502 which granted the coat of arms was taken by the city council to San Roque along with Gibraltar's standard and records, and is now in the San Roque municipal archives. The establishment became a new town in 1706, addressed by King
Philip V of Spain as "My city of Gibraltar resident in its Campo", and becoming the
Spanish Gibraltar. Therefore, they kept the old coat of arms granted to Gibraltar in 1502. In 2015, the Commonwealth of the Municipalities of the
Campo de Gibraltar (
Cádiz) adopted a coat of arms and a flag. This new coat of arms shows the elements of the coat of arms of Gibraltar with seven green stars that represent the municipalities of the Commonwealth, two equal horizontal stripes (green and purple) with the colours of this organisation, and a
bordure Or with its motto
PRO GEOGRAPHIA, HISTORIA ET VOLUNTATE CONIVNCTI (
Latin: United by geography, history, and will). The modern Spanish Royal Crown is used as
heraldic crest. ==See also==