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  1. The second light Stained glass window depicts the college motto Truth Duty Valour and the Armorial Ensigns for the Royal Military College of Canada, which were assigned by George the fifth at the Court of St. James in July, 1920.

  2. The Royal Military College of Canada ( French: Collège militaire royal du Canada ), abbreviated in English as RMC and in French as CMR, [4] [5] is a military academy and, since 1959, a degree-granting university of the Canadian Armed Forces. It was established in 1874 and conducted its first classes on June 1, 1876.

    • 1876
    • Paladin in scarlet uniform with shield (2009)
    • Truth, Duty, Valour (Verité, Devoir, Vaillance)
  3. George the fifth assigned the Armorial Ensigns for the RMC of Canada on 31 July 1920, in the 11th year of his reign. The Royal Warrant assigning the Armorial Ensigns for RMC was extracted from the Records of the College of Arms, London.

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  5. The Royal Military College of Canada (RMC), is the military academy of the Canadian Forces, and is a degree-granting university. RMC is the only federal institution in Canada with degree granting powers. Located on Point Frederick, a 41-hectare peninsula in Kingston, Ontario, the college is a blend of older, historic buildings and modern ...

    • The Confederation of Canada
    • The Four Founding Provinces
    • Post Cards from Canada
    • The Coat of Arms

    Prior to Confederation, no armorial bearings had been assigned to the various colonies in British North America, with the exception of the seventeenth-century grants to Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Nevertheless, each colony possessed a great seal, and these contained distinctive emblematic devices. Two examples are shown here, both representing th...

    Additional provinces and territories joined Canada in the years following Confederation, and there was a natural desire to augment the original arms with additional quarterings. Versions of these arms appeared that used five, seven, and finally nine quarterings. In many cases these were not legal arms but rather devices based on the provincial seal...

    The first post card on the left (1905) shows the arms of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, followed by the devices used by Manitoba (which differs from the granted arms by the bison running instead of standing), British Columbia (a non-armorial design; the postcard is out-of-date in that BC stopped using this device in 1896), and Pri...

    Because these arrangements were so cluttered, they were found to be completely unsatisfactory. Thus, a coat of arms was formally assigned to the Dominion of Canada by Royal Proclamation in 1921, as shown below. It was decided to make the arms of Canada (or, more properly, the Arms of His/Her Majesty in Right of Canada) very similar to those of Grea...

  6. The whole ensigned by the royal crown proper. The coat of arms of Canada (French: Armoiries du Canada ), also known as the Royal Coat of Arms of Canada (French: armoiries royales du Canada) [11] or, formally, as the Arms of His Majesty The King in Right of Canada ( French: Armoiries de Sa Majesté Le Roi du Canada ), [16] is the arms of ...

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