Plus ultra (Latin:[pluːsˈʊltraː], Spanish:[plusˈultɾa], English: "Further beyond") is a
Latin phrase and the national
motto of
Spain. A reversal of the original phrase non plus ultra ("Nothing further beyond"), said to have been inscribed as a warning on the
Pillars of Hercules at the
Strait of Gibraltar (which marked the edge of the known world in
antiquity), it has metaphorical suggestions of taking risks and striving for excellence. Its original version, the personal motto of the Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V, also
Duke of Burgundy and
King of Spain, was Plus oultre in French. The motto was adopted some decades after
Christopher Columbus traveled to
Guanahaní
History
Plus oultre, French for "further beyond", was adopted by the young Duke of Burgundy and new King of Spain
Charles of Habsburg as his personal motto at the suggestion of his adviser Luigi Marliano, an Italian physician, in 1516.[1][2] It was emblematic of Marliano's vision of a Christian empire spanning beyond the boundaries of the Old World, now that Charles also controlled territories in the New World through the Spanish crown, and it was also associated with the desire to bring the
Reconquista past Gibraltar into North Africa and revive the
crusades of the chivalric tradition. The motto is first recorded on the back of Charles's chair in the church of St Gudule, Brussels.[2] Spaniards translated the original French into Latin due to the hostility they bore for the French-speaking Burgundian advisors and ministers Charles brought with him to Spain from the Low Countries.[2] At Charles's entry into
Burgos in 1520, an arch was set up bearing on one side, "Plus ultra", and on the other "All of Africa weeps because it knows that you have the key [Gibraltar and] have to be its master".[2]Plus oultre continued to be used in the Burgundian Low Countries and also appeared in the wooden panelling of
Charles's palace in Granada. As a consequence of Charles's election as Holy Roman Emperor, both Plus oultre and Plus ultra began to be used in Italy and Germany, together with a less successful German translation, Noch Weiter. In Spain, the Latin motto continued to be popular after Charles V's death. It appeared in Habsburg propaganda and was used to encourage Spanish explorers to ignore the old warning and go beyond the Pillars of Hercules. Today it is featured on both the
flag and
arms of Spain.
The
Plus Ultra Brigade, composed of troops from five Spanish-speaking countries (Spain, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador), served in the
Iraq War in 2003.
The motto is written on the wall tiles of the cloak room at
Mar-a-Lago, a resort in Florida that has been owned by
Donald Trump since 1985 and his principal residence since 2019.[5]
The motto appears frequently in popular culture.
In the manga and anime series My Hero Academia, it is used as the motto of the hero academy U.A. High School.
The light novel series The Saga of Tanya the Evil, which uses Latin phrases and mottos for most of its titles, uses it as the name of the second volume.
The motto is seen tattooed on the arm of Octane, one of the playable characters in the 2019 videogame Apex Legends, and Non terrae plus ultra is one of his possible voice lines entering a battle.
The motto is seen on several tiles of the Fonthill Castle, the home of Henry Chapman Mercer, the eccentric owner of the Mercer Tile company, located in Doylestown, PA. Source:[6]
A.E.I.O.U., the motto of the
Habsburgs, which is often understood as "All the world is subject to Austria" (Alles Erdreich ist Österreich untertan in German or Austriae est imperare orbi universo in Latin), and shares a similar spirit with Plus ultra.
^Bromley, J.S. (1970), The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 6, The Rise of Great Britain and Russia, 1688-1715/25, CUP Archive, pp.
440–442,
ISBN978-0-521-07524-4