The Irish harp
The shamrock is a popular symbol for Ireland, but it is not the official symbol. The official symbol is the harp, which appears on coins and on official documents.
The official symbol of Ireland is the harp.
The shamrock is the plant that is most commonly associated with being an official plant of Ireland. It is used as a symbol of Ireland in some contexts, though it is not the official symbol of Ireland, which is a harp.
A shamrock is often used as an unofficial symbol for Ireland. The official symbol is a harp.
Ireland's national symbol is a harp. You will see it on Irish coins and official documents.
The symbol we use on most things is the harp. But the shamrock is also seen as a symbol.
This colour green is assituated with ireland. lepurcans, magical creatures, faries etc are also assituated with ireland, along with gunieus ( a drink) but the harp is the traditional symbol.
The harp was and still is on the coins of Ireland. The harp is the official national symbol of Ireland.
The harp has been used as an emblem for Ireland as far back as the 13th century. Since then it has continued to be used as an emblem by different Kings and eventually through to the modern Irish state. The design of harp used has changed in that period. The one now used is known as the Brian Boru harp, and it can be found on Irish coins and lots of official documents like passports.
The harp, which is the official symbol or Ireland, and the shamrock are the main ones.
You are referring to the shamrock, but contrary to popular belief, it is not the national symbol of Ireland. The national symbol of Ireland is the harp, which you will see on coins and on official documents. The shamrock is an emblem of Ireland, but not the official one.
The official symbol of Ireland is a harp, and not a shamrock as many people think. A shamrock normally has 3 parts, if that is the answer you are looking for.