Seal of George V The first Great Seal of Northern Ireland was provided in time for the
state opening of the 1924 session of the
Northern Ireland Parliament. Prior to this, the Governor of Northern Ireland (
James Hamilton, 3rd Duke of Abercorn) used his private seal instead, as permitted by the 1922 act. The first seal was designed by
Nevile Wilkinson, the
Ulster King of Arms. The reverse was based on the
Great Seal of the Realm but with the
royal coat of arms bearing an
inescutcheon with a red cross on a gold field, the basis of the historical
coat of arms of Ulster and the sinister banner on the
coat of arms of Northern Ireland, also designed by Wilkinson. The design on the reverse of George VI's seal had his
royal cypher in flanking the shield of arms. The 1924 seal had an image of the reigning monarch,
George V. In 1985 the 1924 great seal was acquired by the
National Heritage Memorial Fund for the
Ulster Museum. The design on the obverse of Elizabeth II's seal is the same as on the obverse of her Great Seal of the Realm, with an equestrian portrait of the queen in the uniform of the
Grenadier Guards, the royal cypher in beneath a
St Edward's Crown below the horse, and the circumscription in . The design on the reverse has a shield of arms emblazoned with the royal arms of the United Kingdom as used in Northern Ireland (with its inescutcheon of the arms of Ulster) surmounted by a
Tudor Crown. The crowned shield is wreathed by a floral pattern including the Irish
shamrock, the English and Welsh
Tudor rose, and the Scottish
thistle. The reverse lacks the royal cypher. ==Uses==