Great Seal of the United States
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The Great Seal of the United States is used to authenticate certain documents issued by the United States government. The phrase is used both for the physical seal itself (which is kept by the U.S. Secretary of State), and more generally for the design impressed upon it. The Great Seal was publicly first used in 1782.
The design on the obverse of the great seal is the national coat of arms of the United States and is officially used on documents such as passports as well as for military insignia, embassy placards, and various flags. As a coat of arms, the design has official colors; the physical Great Seal itself, as affixed to paper, is monochrome.
Since 1935, both sides of the Great Seal appear on the reverse of the One-Dollar Bill of the United States.
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The main figure on the obverse (or front) of the seal is the coat of arms of the United States, a bald eagle with its wings outstretched (or "displayed", in heraldic terms). From the eagle's perspective, it holds a bundle of thirteen arrows in its left talon, (referring to the thirteen original states), and an olive branch, in its right talon, both of which symbolize that the United States of America has "a strong desire for peace, but will always be ready for war." (see: Olive Branch Petition). Although not specified by law, the olive branch is usually depicted with thirteen leaves and thirteen olives, again representing the thirteen original states. The eagle has its head turned towards the olive branch, said to symbolize a preference for peace. The eagle clutches the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("Of Many, One") in its beak; over its head there appears a "glory" with thirteen mullets (stars) on a blue field. In the current (and several previous) dies of the great seal, the thirteen stars above the eagle are arranged in rows of 1-4-3-4-1, forming a six-pointed star.
The shield the eagle bears on its breast, though sometimes drawn incorrectly, has two main differences from the American flag. First, it has no stars on the blue chief (though other arms based on it do: the chief of the arms of the United States Senate may show thirteen or fifty, and the shield of the September 11 Commission has, sometimes, fifty mullets on the chief). Second, unlike the American flag, the outermost stripes are white, not red; so as not to violate the heraldic rule of "color on color."
The 1782 resolution of Congress adopting the arms, still in force, legally blazoned the shield as "Paleways of 13 pieces, argent and gules; a chief, azure." As the designers recognized, this is a technically incorrect blazon under traditional English heraldic rules, since in English practice a vertically striped shield would be described as "paly," not "paleways," and it could not be striped of an uneven number. A more technically proper blazon would have been argent, six pallets gules… (six red stripes on a white field), but the phraseology used was chosen to preserve the reference to the thirteen original colonies.
The 1782 resolution adopting the seal describes the image on the reverse as "A pyramid unfinished. In the zenith an eye in a triangle, surrounded by a glory, proper." The pyramid is conventionally shown as consisting of thirteen layers of blocks to refer to the thirteen original states. There are also thirteen sides shown on the ribbon. The adopting resolution provides that it is inscribed on its base with the date MDCCLXXVI (1776) in Roman numerals. Where the top of the pyramid should be, the so-called Eye of Providence watches over it. Two mottos appear: Annuit Cœptis signifies that the Eye of Providence has "nodded at (our) beginnings."[1] Novus Ordo Seclorum, freely taken from Virgil, means "a new order of the ages". It is incorrectly rendered as "New World Order" by some theorists, and "a new secular order" by others. The word seclorum does not mean "secular", as one might assume, but is the genitive (possessive) plural form of the word saeculum, meaning (in this context) generation, century, or age. Saeculum did come to mean "age, world" in late, Christian, Latin, and "secular" is derived from it, through secularis. However, the adjective "secularis," meaning "worldly," is not equivalent to the nominative plural possessive "seclorum," meaning "of the ages."[2]. The reverse has never been cut (as a seal) but appears, for example, on the back of the one-dollar bill.
The all-seeing eye was a well-known classical symbol of the Renaissance. The eye in a triangle design originally was suggested by Pierre Eugene du Simitiere, and later heraldist William Barton improved upon the design. In Du Simitière's original sketch, two figures stand next to a shield with the all-seeing pyramid above them. The August 20, 1776 report of the first Great Seal Committee describes the seal as "Crest The Eye of Providence in a radiant Triangle whose Glory extends over the Shield and beyond the Figures."
In honor of the fact that there were originally thirteen States in the Union, items consisting of this number is a common motif in the seal. There are:
- 13 stars (in the crest)
- 13 stripes
- 13 arrows in the eagle’s talon
- 13 letters in the mottos "e pluribus unum" and "annuit coeptis" (apparently coincidental; there are 52 letters on the whole seal, which is itself evenly divisible by 13)
- 13 olive leaves (by custom, not by law)
- 13 olives on the branch (by custom, not by law)
- 13 brick levels of the pyramid (by custom, not by law)
- 13 sides showing on the ribbon (by custom, not by law)
On July 4, 1776, the same day that independence from England was declared by the thirteen states, the Continental Congress named the first committee to design a Great Seal, or national emblem, for the country. Similar to other nations, The United States of America needed an official symbol of sovereignty to formalize and seal (or sign) international treaties and transactions. It took six years and three committees in order for the Continental Congress to agree on a design.
The first of these committees was formed by Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams. Each of these men proposed a design for the seal. Franklin chose an allegorical scene that demonstrated the Motto, "Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God," where there is a depiction of the Exodus when the Jewish people are confronted by Pharaoh and achieve their liberation from slavery in Egypt. Jefferson suggested a depiction of the children of Israel in the wilderness, led by a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night for the front of the seal; and Hengist and Horsa, the two brothers who were the legendary leaders of the first Anglo-Saxon settlers in Britain, for the reverse side of the seal. Adams chose the painting known as the "Judgment of Hercules" where the young Hercules must choose to travel either on the flowery path of self-indulgence or the rugged, more difficult, uphill path of duty to others and honor to himself. Of these initial designs, Congress ultimately chose none but did use four of the design elements from this committee in its final design (Eye of Providence, the date of independence, the shield and the E Pluribus Unum Motto (Out of Many, one).[3]
Finally the problem was turned over to Charles Thomson, the Secretary of the Congress, who merged elements from all three previous attempts. Congress finally approved Thomson's integrated design on June 20, 1782, still in use today; and had it engraved into brass matrices, which were about 2.25 inches in diameter.
On September 16, 1782 Thomson used these matrices for the first time, to verify signatures on a document that authorized George Washington to negotiate an exchange of prisoners. Thomson took care of the Seal until the U.S. Constitution installed the new federal government in 1789, when he passed it over to the Secretary of State, Thomas Jefferson. All subsequent Secretaries of State have been responsible for applying the Seal to diplomatic documents.
The first matrices of the seal were replaced in 1841 when they became too worn to be effective.
There have been a total of seven re-engravings of the Seal since the original, which is now on display in the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
Upon close inspection one may notice strong symbolic themes used in the seal. For example, the shield is reminiscent of the national flag, and the Bald Eagle is a well-known national symbol of the United States.[4]
The pyramid symbolizes strength and duration, and the arrows, as well as the olive branches, represent the power of war and peace together.[citation needed]
Among unanswered questions is if there is any historical significance of the six pointed star pattern formed by the glory of stars above the eagle's head on the obverse side. Beginning in 1841, the individual stars themselves were drawn with only five points, rather than six.[5]
That of the reverse is murkier. Some conspiracy theorists believe the eye atop the pyramid to have its origins in Masonic iconography.[6] However, the eye is not solely a Masonic symbol, nor was it designed by a Mason. Benjamin Franklin was the only Mason among the Great Seal committee,[7] but his ideas were not adopted by the committee.
The obverse side of the Great Seal is used to emboss the design on international treaties and other official United States Government documents. It is stored in the Exhibit Hall of the U.S. Department of State inside a locked glass enclosure. An officer from the State Department does the actual sealing of documents after the U.S. Secretary of State has countersigned the President's signature. It is used approximately 2,000 to 3,000 times a year.
- ^ Journals of the Continental Congress, June 20, 1782
- ^ Lewis and Short, A Latin Dictionary: Founded on Andrews' Edition of Freund's Latin Dictionary: Revised, Enlarged, and in Great Part Rewritten by Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL.D. The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1879, s. vv.
- ^ www.greatseal.com
- ^ www.eagles.org
- ^ The Great Seal of the United States - U.S. Department of State Bureau of Public Affairs
- ^ www.masoncode.com
- ^ Patterson, Richard S.; Richardson Dougall (1976). The Eagle and the Shield: a History of the Great Seal of the United States. Department of State, Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, 529.
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