Last modified: 2008-12-13 by phil nelson
Keywords: numerals: 40 | york university |
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York University is located in Downsview, Ontario, a suburb of Toronto. Although the university per se does not have an actual flag, a special banner was issued in 1999 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the university's founding; a color photo of this banner can be seen at the university website.
The university also has a very modernistic logo in salmon pink and white which closely resembles the symbol for a chemical element as indicated on the Periodic Table of Elements.
Finally, there is a b&w line drawing of the university crest or coat of arms on Wikipedia.
It consists of a standard shield with a center base, and surnounted by
a crest consisting of what is apparently a maple tree anchored on a
bar divided diagonally. The shield itself is divided, with two lions
rampant side by side in the chief. The lower portion of the shield
depicts a rose proper; since the drawing is in b& w I am unable to
determine the actual color of the rose, altghough the stem and leaves
are almost certainly green. However, given the name of the institution
I am almost certain that the rose is actually the White Rose of York.
Beneath the shield is a ribbon folded into three parts; the folds at
each end are curled very elaborately, while the university motto is
written on the face of the central fold; the motto, written in sans
serif block lettering, is TENTANDA VIA (Trying the Way).
Ron Lahav, 4 December 2006
It is a simple white flag with a red freehand "40" and a line of black
writing above and below it.
Eugene Ipavec, 4 December 2006
Here is teh 1999
text on various college flags: i.e. Founders, Vanier, McLaughlin, Glendon, Bethune, Stong, Winters,
and Atkinson. Calumet has a vexilloid.
Jan Mertens, 23 November 2008
York University, being a member of the Association of Commonwealth
Universities, is perhaps more entitled to follow the Oxbridge pattern of
residential colleges, with with its own flag, than is the case with those IS
institutions which have attempted to follow this model. Also, York has the
example of the University of Toronto, which has several such colleges, most of
which are based upon a religious foundation. Where York differs is that instead
of adopting conventional heraldic Banners of Arms for their college flags, the
colleges have commissioned contemporary Canadian artists to design flags which
embody the image which the particular college wishes to project.
Ron Lahav, 24 November 2008