Joseph Casimir Plagens: Difference between revisions
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'''Born''': January 29, 1880<br> | '''Born''': January 29, 1880<br> | ||
Deceased : March 31, 1943 | '''Deceased''': March 31, 1943 | ||
Auxiliary Bishop of [[Archdiocese of Detroit|Detroit]], 1924-1935<br> | Auxiliary Bishop of [[Archdiocese of Detroit|Detroit]], 1924-1935<br> |
Revision as of 15:24, 28 January 2024
JOSEPH CASIMIR PLAGENS
Born: January 29, 1880
Deceased: March 31, 1943
Auxiliary Bishop of Detroit, 1924-1935
Bishop of Marquette, 1935-1940
Bishop of Grand Rapids, 1940-1943
Auxiliary Bishop of Detroit |
Bishop of Marquette |
Bishop of Grand Rapids |
English | blazon wanted |
- (personal arms) Paly of seven, silver and gules, the second pale charged with a silver lily; on a chief gules a silver eagle issuing.
Origin/meaning
As common in US episcopal heraldry, the arms show the arms of the diocese impaled with the personal arms of the bishop.
Bishop Plagens' arms may be derived from the root-word plaga, which suggested the division of the field of his arms into seven stripes; his two name patrons, St. Joseph and St. Casimir, are indicated: the first by the lily, the second by the silver eagle on red of the old royal Polish arms (his family originates from Poland).
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