The '
coat of arms of the
Bagrationi dynasty' has been used by the former royal dynasty of
Georgia and their descendants. It is still an official blazon of the
Spain-based
Royal House of Georgia who claims the Georgian crown.
The earliest example of the Bagrationi blazon dates back to the 17th century, though the individual details are much earlier.
The shield is quartered by the cross, depicting in the first quarter the harp and the sling, attributes of the
biblical king
David from whom the dynasty claimed their descent; in the second, the crossed sable and scepter crowned with the royal sphere; in the third,
a pair of scales, emblematical of King
Solomon and in the fourth, mounted
St George, patron saint of Georgia, with a lance slaying a dragon. An escutcheon shows the tunic of Our Lord, representing the holiest relic of Georgia, said to be buried under the
Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in the town of
Mtskheta. The supporters are lions rampant. The shield is surmounted with the royal crown of Georgia, the so-called
Iberian crown.
The motto is: "The Lord hath sworn in truth unto David, He will not turn from it: Of the fruit of the body will I set upon the throne."