and
Ireland with the arms of Ireland, England, Scotland and
France. The harp has a woman's head and breasts. As
heraldry is essentially a
feudal art, it was not until the
Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169 that Irish
coats of arms came into being, several decades after the art began to take seed in England and
continental Europe. The earliest reference to a
herald of arms for Ireland was in 1392 on the creation of the first
Ireland King of Arms. The Ireland King of Arms, which was under the English
College of Arms, was succeeded by an independent
Ulster King of Arms, and an
Athlone Pursuivant, in 1552, which despite its name had jurisdiction for arms over all of Ireland. In 1943, the Ulster King of Arms was merged with the Norroy King of Arms in England to form the
Norroy and Ulster King of Arms. The office of the
Chief Herald of Ireland was created as successor to the Ulster King of Arms and the arms of Ireland were registered by the Chief Herald of Ireland on 9 November 1945. However, reference to the harp as the arms of the king of Ireland can be found in one of the oldest medieval
rolls of arms. The Wijnbergen Roll, a French roll of arms dating from and preserved in
The Hague,
Netherlands, attributed "D'
azure a la harpe d'
or" () to the King of Ireland ("le Roi d'Irlande"). The harp, traditionally associated with the
biblical King David, was a rare
charge on medieval rolls and only two arms with a harp are listed in a collection of 19 early rolls. Triangular devices appeared on medieval Irish coinage by kings
John and
Edward I in the 12th and 13th centuries. These devices may have been crude harps or it may be that the harp developed from the use of triangles to distinguish Irish coins. The idea of a harp being the arms of Ireland may have originated as a reference to a fictional character, ''le roi d'irelande
, in the courtly legend cycle of Tristan. Alternatively, it may have derived from a celebrated 13th century bardic poem, Tabhroidh Chugam Cruit mo Riogh'', dedicated to Donnchadh Cairbreach O'Briain (d. 1242), a Gaelic
King of Thomond. Whatever its origins, the harp was adopted as the symbol of the new
Kingdom of Ireland, established by
Henry VIII, in 1541. A document in the Office of the
Ulster King of Arms, from either the late reign of Henry VIII or the early reign his son of
Edward VI, states that they were the arms of the kingdom of Ireland. The
Lordship of Ireland, the
medieval realm of Ireland that existed between 1171 and 1541 under the
English crown, had separate arms. A commission of
Edward IV in –8 into the arms of Ireland found them to be
blazoned
Azure, three crowns in pale Or, bordure Argent (three golden crowns ordered vertically on a blue background with a white border). The association of these arms with Ireland is likely to have originated with Irish magnates (both
Norman and
Gaelic) who fought in
Edward I's Scottish wars at the turn of the 14th century. These were the arms of
Edmund the Martyr, which the Irish lords adopted as their banner in the same way as English lords identified with
the banner of Saint George. However, these arms were also well known in other medieval contexts and are often attributed to
King Arthur. ==Achievement==