The Viceregal Lion
  1. The Governor General of Canada
Heraldry Today

The contents of this Register are intended for research purposes only. The heraldic emblems found in the Register may not be reproduced in any form or in any media without the written consent of the Canadian Heraldic Authority and/or the recipient.

John Timothy Dunlap

New York, New York, United States of America
Registration of Arms
January 20, 2011
Vol. VI, p. 27

Click on each image to enlarge. The blazon and symbolism for each element will accompany the enlarged image.


Blazon

Arms

Argent a double-headed griffin sejant affronté per fess Gules and Sable, holding in its claws a sword point in base Argent hilted Or;

Crest

Issuant from waves Argent, a wall Gules charged with a trillium proper between two thistles Or, and issuing therefrom a hand proper grasping a sword Argent hilted Or;

Motto

CONCUSSUS SURGO;

Flag

A standard, the Arms in hoist, the fly Argent charged with the Crest and to the sinister with two representations of the Badge separated by two bends sinister Argent fimbriated Gules inscribed with the Motto in letters Sable;

Flag

A banner of the Arms;

Badge

Two griffins’ heads erased and addorsed, that to the dexter Gules, that to the sinister Sable;


Symbolism

Arms

The design is based on other arms that have been used by people named Dunlop or Dunlap, being a red double-headed eagle on a white shield. Here the eagle has been changed to a double-headed griffin. The griffin is a symbol of the legal profession, in which Mr. Dunlap, his father and his sister have made their careers. A griffin, holding a sword and a balance, has been used as a symbol of the Advocates’ Society, on whose board Mr. Dunlap’s father served. The red, black and white were the colours of the Ottawa Rough Riders football team, for which Mr. Dunlap’s father played and which he owned in the 1970s. The sword is held in the form of a cross to indicate the family’s Christian faith.

Crest

The crest combines elements found in crests used by armigers named Dunlop and Morrison, thus honouring the heritage of Mr. Dunlap’s father and mother. The waves around the wall make an illusion to the family home on the island of Cape Breton for almost two hundred years. The thistles mark the Nova Scotian and Scottish roots of the family, and the trillium indicates that Mr. Dunlap’s father served as Agent-General of the province of Ontario in the United States of America.

Motto

Meaning “When struck I rise”, this Latin phrase is taken from the emblem book Devises héroïques by Claude Paradin, published in 1563. This statement of resilience and determination also alludes to Mr. Dunlap’s father’s time as a football player, which required getting up after being knocked down.

Flag

The symbolism of this emblem is found in other element(s) of this record.

Flag

The symbolism of this emblem is found in other element(s) of this record.

Badge

The symbolism of this emblem is found in other element(s) of this record.


Background

Canada Gazette Information

The announcement of the Letters Patent was made on November 12, 2011, in Volume 145, page 3515 of the Canada Gazette.


Artist Information

Creator(s)
Original concept of Bruce Patterson, Deputy Chief Herald of Canada, assisted by the heralds of the Canadian Heraldic Authority.

Painter
Eva Pilar-Cass

Calligrapher
Doris Wionzek


Recipient Information

Individual

The recipient’s emblems were originally recorded in the name of his father, John Gerard Dunlap, in the Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada, Volume IV, page 293, 15 July 2003.