Coat of arms of Jamaica

Coat of arms of Jamaica
ArmigerCharles III in Right of Jamaica
Adopted1661
CrestUpon a log fesse wise a crocodile proper
TorseArgent and gules
ShieldArgent on a cross gules five pineapples slipped or
SupportersOn the dexter side a Taíno native woman holding in the exterior hand a basket of fruits and on the sinister side a Taíno native man supporting by the exterior hand a bow, all proper
Motto"Out of many, one people"

The coat of arms of Jamaica is a heraldic symbol used to represent Jamaica. The coat of arms is a legacy design, with its earliest iteration having been granted for the colony of Jamaica in 1661 under Royal Warrant. The original design was created by William Sancroft, then Archbishop of Canterbury. The present design was adopted after Jamaican independence in 1962, with slight modification.