State Seal of Myanmar


The State Seal of Myanmar is used in all official government documents, including publications.For the honor of the State Seal, there are State Seal :my:နိုင်ငံ​တော်အထိမ်းအမှတ်တံဆိပ်ဥပ​ဒေ|Law and :my:နိုင်ငံတော်အထိမ်းအမှတ်တံဆိပ်နည်းဥပဒေများ|Principles for the usages.

Description

The State seal can be used for the following facts.
The original coat of arms adopted at independence contained the Burmese text on the banner, which translates "Union of Burma", as well as three chinthe. Additionally, there was a circle surrounding the map of the country containing Verse 194 of the Buddhavagga in the Dhammapada in Pali: , which translates to "happiness through harmony" or "well-being through unity."
However, during Ne Win's Socialist rule, the 1974 Constitution adopted a new state seal with the following changes: the coat of arms was modified to accommodate Socialist symbols: a cogwheel, a star at the top, and dual olive wreaths. The words on the banner were also changed to, which translates "Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma". In 1988, when the State Law and Order Restoration Council staged a coup, the words were removed.
The previous state symbol of Burmese monarchs was the green peacock. The use of the green peacock was continued during British colonial times and the State of Burma. The peacock also featured on Burmese rupees as a national symbol.
In 2008 a new constitution for Burma was adopted in a controversial referendum. In this new constitution, changes have been made to the coat of arms. The new coat of arms removes the colours blue and dark gold/orange and instead just uses the colours red and gold/yellow. Also, the gear wheel has been removed and replaced with laurel or olive branches and the words on the central portion of the scroll have been changed to.