Étampes-sur-Marne: Difference between revisions
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The besant in point indicates the name of the town: Étampes comes from the Latin stampae which means place where one beats currency which would make Étampes the monetary workshop of Château-Thierry. | The besant in point indicates the name of the town: Étampes comes from the Latin stampae which means place where one beats currency which would make Étampes the monetary workshop of Château-Thierry. | ||
[[Civic Heraldry Literature - France|'''Literature''']]: Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr | |||
{{media}} | {{media}} | ||
[[Category:French Municipalities E|Etampes-sur-Marne]] | [[Category:French Municipalities E|Etampes-sur-Marne]] | ||
[[Category:Aisne|Etampes-sur-Marne]] | [[Category:Aisne|Etampes-sur-Marne]] |
Revision as of 05:18, 9 September 2022
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ÉTAMPES-SUR-MARNE
Département : Aisne
French | De gueules au lion contourné d'argent accompagné en chef à dextre d'une croisette, à senestre d'une étoile et en pointe d'un besant, le tout d'or. |
English | No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation |
Origin/meaning
The lion is taken from the arms of two families that were lords of Étampes in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; the Mauroys (a silver lion in blue, with a golden bordure) and the Pinterel (who had, among others, a golden lion in their arms).
The small cross is taken from the arms of Michel Philippes des Petits Monts (1703-1793), last lord of Étampes. The star belongs to the arms of his wife Catherine Marguerite Pastey (1691-1776).
The besant in point indicates the name of the town: Étampes comes from the Latin stampae which means place where one beats currency which would make Étampes the monetary workshop of Château-Thierry.
Literature: Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr
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