The Emblem of Tamil Nadu (ISO: Tamiḻnāṭṭiṉ ciṉṉam) is the official state emblem of Tamil Nadu and is used as the official state symbol of the Government of Tamil Nadu.

Emblem of Tamil Nadu
ArmigerGovernment of Tamil Nadu
Adopted1949
ShieldSrivilliputhur Andal temple
MottoVāymaiyē vellum
("Truth Alone Triumphs", from Mundaka Upanishad)

Design

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The state emblem was designed in 1949 by artist R. Krishna Rao who was a native of Madurai.[1] Krishna Rao was honoured with awards and titles for his contribution to the state.[1] A student of the Government College of Fine Arts and Crafts in Chennai, who went on to become the principal of the college later, Rao was approached to design the emblem in 1948 when he was a professor of applied arts in the college.

It consists of the Lion Capital of Ashoka without the bell lotus foundation and flanked on either side by an Indian flag. Behind the capital, is the image of a Gopuram or Hindu temple tower based on the Srivilliputhur Andal temple . Around the rim of the seal runs an inscription in Tamil script, one at the top தமிழ் நாடு அரசு ("Tamil Nadu Arasu" which translates to "Government of Tamil Nadu") and the other at the bottom வாய்மையே வெல்லும் ("Vaymaiye Vellum" which translates to "Truth Alone Triumphs" also commonly known as "Satyameva Jayate" in Sanskrit). It is the only state emblem that has the Indian Flag and Hindu temple tower on its seal.

Historical emblems

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Government banner

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The Government of Tamil Nadu can be represented by an image of the emblem of the state placed onto a white background.[2][3] A flag was proposed in 1970 but was not formally adopted.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Swaroop, Vishnu (7 November 2016). "Which Tamil Nadu temple is the state emblem?". Madurai. TOI. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  2. ^ States of India since 1947
  3. ^ "Vexilla Mundi".
  4. ^ "Tamil Nadu State of India Flag Textile Cloth Fabric Waving on the Top Sunrise Mist Fog Stock Illustration - Illustration of celebration, patriotic: 127909992".