View Full Version : Pompey Logo?
Olindo
05 Oct 2004, 09:59 AM
Could someone please tell me what exactly the Portsmouth logo is?
Thanks
monkeyhead
05 Oct 2004, 11:36 AM
do you mean what it is ? or what it stands for?
badge here:
pompeygory (http://pompeygory.blog-city.com)
i'll try to find a link to some one who can explain what it means better than me.
pompeyrob
05 Oct 2004, 11:37 AM
Could someone please tell me what exactly the Portsmouth logo is?
Thanks
Do you mean the star and crescent badge or the sponsorship logo on the front of their shirts?
pompeyrob
05 Oct 2004, 11:56 AM
i'll try to find a link to some one who can explain what it means better than me.
You beat me to it by a minute. I wasn`t going to go into one about Richard the Lionheart and the crusades when all he wants to know is what the poxy "ty" logo is! :)
um_chili
05 Oct 2004, 12:00 PM
As long as we're on the topic of origins, can anyone tell me where the nickname "Pompey" came from? The only Pompey I can think of is the Roman emperor from ca 60 BC--some connection there? Thanks.
monkeyhead
05 Oct 2004, 12:02 PM
i'm leaving that one alone too Rob! some people on another site were arguing over the exact meaning of the star and crescent for weeks!!
monkeyhead
05 Oct 2004, 12:02 PM
oh no, not the Pompey question?!!!!!!!!
pompeyrob
05 Oct 2004, 01:04 PM
oh no, not the Pompey question?!!!!!!!!
I copied and pasted this.
Origins of the name "Pompey".
Why Pompey? That is possibly the greatest mystery in the story of Portsmouth Football Club. The origins of the club itself are firmly documented; more obscure though are the origins of a nickname which is perhaps the most instantly recognised in the English game. What is not disputed is that Pompey is Naval in origin - but about the origins of that nickname are numerous theories.
Some claim it lies in an 80-gun French warship Le Pompee captured in 1793 which later fought with distinction in the battle of Algeciras in 1801 and then became guardship of Portsmouth Harbour. Others maintain it was the product of a far from sober sailor's interruption of a talk by AgnesWeston, the naval temperance worker. He surfaced from a beery slumber during her lecture on the Roman Empire to hear that the general Pompey had been killed. 'Poor old Pompey' he is said to have shouted . . . . such are the roots of legend. Bu there is another more authenticated potential root in Naval folk-lore. In 1781 some Portsmouth-based English sailors scaled Pompey's Pillar near Alexandria and 98 feet up above Egypt, toasted their ascent in punch. Their feat earned them the Fleet's tribute as 'The Pompey Boys'.
Taken from the book "POMPEY - The History of Portsmouth Football Club" by Mike Neasom, Mick Cooper & Doug Robinson.
um_chili
05 Oct 2004, 02:55 PM
I copied and pasted this.
Origins of the name "Pompey".
Why Pompey? That is possibly the greatest mystery in the story of Portsmouth Football Club. The origins of the club itself are firmly documented; more obscure though are the origins of a nickname which is perhaps the most instantly recognised in the English game. What is not disputed is that Pompey is Naval in origin - but about the origins of that nickname are numerous theories.
Some claim it lies in an 80-gun French warship Le Pompee captured in 1793 which later fought with distinction in the battle of Algeciras in 1801 and then became guardship of Portsmouth Harbour. Others maintain it was the product of a far from sober sailor's interruption of a talk by AgnesWeston, the naval temperance worker. He surfaced from a beery slumber during her lecture on the Roman Empire to hear that the general Pompey had been killed. 'Poor old Pompey' he is said to have shouted . . . . such are the roots of legend. Bu there is another more authenticated potential root in Naval folk-lore. In 1781 some Portsmouth-based English sailors scaled Pompey's Pillar near Alexandria and 98 feet up above Egypt, toasted their ascent in punch. Their feat earned them the Fleet's tribute as 'The Pompey Boys'.
Taken from the book "POMPEY - The History of Portsmouth Football Club" by Mike Neasom, Mick Cooper & Doug Robinson.
If the official history doesn't have an exact answer, I guess it's lost in the mists of time. Still, damned interesting stories. Thanks.
Olindo
05 Oct 2004, 03:58 PM
I am asking about the star and crescent badge
pompeyrob
05 Oct 2004, 05:52 PM
I am asking about the star and crescent badge
The star and crescent on the Pompey badge is the coat of arms of the City of Portsmouth and comes from the seal of Richard I (Richard the Lionheart), who granted the city it's charter in 1194 when he came back from the crusades.
Richard adopted the star and crescent emblem from Christian Byzantium - he apparently liked the fact that the eight pointed star symbolised the star Regulus from the constellation Leo, which represents the 'heart of the lion' .
I copied and pasted that n`all.
PokerNSoccer
05 Oct 2004, 11:25 PM
Nick Gober and Steve Cohen talked abot this(where did pompey come from?) on Fox Football Friday.
monkeyhead
06 Oct 2004, 01:22 PM
did they know?
AngelLaHash
17 Dec 2005, 04:01 PM
I am asking about the star and crescent badge
Look to the East
Turkey
The star and Moon is a sign for a PORT