The Tudor rose is depicted white on red on a field of gold or silver, or red on white on a field of any other colour.
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At the 2005 Hampton Court Palace Flower Show, a garden designed in memory of Dowler by Penny Smith won the Tudor Rose award, the show's highest honour.
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It a court sword of the early 17th century, its hilt and pommel being covered with chased silver in various designs, the Tudor rose being the most prominent.
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A new regimental badge was to be worn, a Tudor rose, this was never worn on any article of clothing, but did appear on the colours until 1934.
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The flag consists of a white-bordered dark green cross encompassing a golden Tudor rose ( an historical symbol of the county ) all set in a blue field.
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The left shoulder pauldron incorporates the Tudor Rose, a traditional heraldic symbol of England, while the plates of the armor were designed to resemble the links of her sword.
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The Tudor Rose is used as the emblem of the Nautical Training Corps, a uniformed youth organisation founded in Brighton in 1944 with 20 units in South East England.
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The English oak and the Tudor rose are also English symbols, the latter of which is ( although more modernised ) used by the England national rugby union team.
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The chain is composed of decorative links including the Tudor rose, a harp, a trefoil shaped knot and the letter S ( thought to stand for Seneschal or Steward ).
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The Tudor rose is occasionally seen divided in quarters ( heraldically as " quartered " ) and vertically ( in heraldic terms " per pale " ) red and white.