The coat of arms of State of Mexico (Spanish: Escudo del estado de México, lit.
[1] The coat of arms of the State of Mexico is a representation of a legend of the conquest of New Spain to today.
The coat of arms of the State of Mexico is a national eagle on the top of the Coat of Arms, in accordance with the Law on the Coat of Arms, the Flag and the National Anthem, and the drawing in the upper left quarter representing the Xinantécatl volcano, the Pyramid of the Sun of Teotihuacán and the original toponym of Toluca, the capital of the State of Mexico.
Represented in the third and fourth quarters, together, below the previous ones, containing the toponym of Mexico, which gave its name to the Homeland and the State; the furrows of agriculture producing corn plants and the open book of knowledge, on it a factory gear, a sickle, a pickaxe, a shovel and a flask, tools of human work.
It also contains eighteen bees that represent the number of Judicial Districts of the State.