Diocese of Allentown: Difference between revisions

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'''DIOCESE OF ALLENTOWN ''' (Dioecesis Alanpolitana)
'''DIOCESE OF ALLENTOWN ''' (Dioecesis Alanpolitana)


Country : [[Ecclesiastical heraldry of the United States|United States]]<br>
Country: [[Ecclesiastical heraldry of the United States|United States]]<br>
Denomination : [[:Category:Catholic heraldry|Roman Catholic]]
Denomination: [[:Category:Catholic heraldry|Roman Catholic]]


Established : 1961
Established: 1961


[[File:allentown.us.png|center|300 px|Arms (crest) of {{PAGENAME}}]]
[[File:allentown.us.png|center|300 px|Arms (crest) of {{PAGENAME}}]]
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{{religion}}
{{religion}}
{{us}}
{{media}} Background from the diocesan website
{{media}} Background from the diocesan website


[[Category:Ecclesiastical heraldry of the United States]]
[[Category:Ecclesiastical heraldry of the United States]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic dioceses]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic dioceses]]

Latest revision as of 08:11, 11 August 2024

DIOCESE OF ALLENTOWN (Dioecesis Alanpolitana)

Country: United States
Denomination: Roman Catholic

Established: 1961

Arms (crest) of Diocese of Allentown

Official blazon

Gules, a barrulet argent encircled at fess point by a ring or between two fleurs-de-lis argent in chief and a cross gules on a plate in base.

Origin/meaning

The red background recalls the ardent devotion to the Church of Saint-Catharine of Siena, the patron saint of the cathedral of Allentown, which led to the return of Pope Gregory XI from Avignon to Rome.

The golden ring encircling the silver barrulet is a representation of the ring, given to Sanit-Catharine by Our Lord during an apparation, signifying her mystical marriage to Christ.

The two silver lilies come from the arms of Pope John XXIII. On the arms of this pope the lilies signified the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint-Joseph.

The silver roundel (plate) bearing a red cross, is pars pro toto for three such roundels in the c.o.a. of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, commemorating that the archepiscopal See, gave the counties Berks, Carbon, Lehigh, Northampton and Schuylkill to form the territory of the new diocese of Allentown. These roundels in their turn were from the arms of the Penn-family, the proprietors of the Province of the Pennsylvania Colony, who in 1733, authorized the first legal public Catholic Mass in the British Empire since the Reformation.

Arms (crest) of Diocese of Allentown

The arms in Allentown
(image by ‎Frederick Bainhauer‎)

Arms of Bishops

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