Chimay: Difference between revisions

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The arms show a sword, which is derived from a local legend. In 57 BC the local inhabitants, the Pleumosiens, acquired in a battle against the Roman army, the sword of Julius Cesar, and ever since the sword supposedly was the symbol of Chimay. Most likely the arms were created in the late middle ages based on this legend. The sword appeared for the first time on a seal dating from 1552. Previous seals showed the arms of the Croy family, Lords of Chimay.  
The arms show a sword, which is derived from a local legend. In 57 BC the local inhabitants, the Pleumosiens, acquired in a battle against the Roman army, the sword of Julius Cesar, and ever since the sword supposedly was the symbol of Chimay. Most likely the arms were created in the late middle ages based on this legend. The sword appeared for the first time on a seal dating from 1552. Previous seals showed the arms of the Croy family, Lords of Chimay.  


===Image gallery===
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
File:Chimay16.jpg|alt=Blason de Chimay/Arms (crest) of Chimay|The arms in a [https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b530239472 16th century manuscript]  
File:Chimay16.jpg|alt=Blason de Chimay/Arms (crest) of Chimay|The arms in a [https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b530239472 16th century manuscript]  

Revision as of 07:21, 3 September 2023

CHIMAY

Province : Hainaut
Additions : 1977 Baileux, Bailièvre, Boulers, Forges, L'Escaillière, Lompret, Rièzes, Robechies, Saint-Rémy, Salles, Vaulx, Villers-la-Tour, Virelles

Armoiries de Chimay

Official blazon

  • (1823) -
  • (1838) De gueules à l'épée d'argent emmanchée d'or et posée en bande la pointe en haut.
  • (1978) De gueules à l'épée d'argent emmanchée d'or et posee en bande la pointe en haut.

Origin/meaning

The arms were granted on July 31, 1823, changed on June 30, 1838 and confirmed on May 24, 1978.

The arms show a sword, which is derived from a local legend. In 57 BC the local inhabitants, the Pleumosiens, acquired in a battle against the Roman army, the sword of Julius Cesar, and ever since the sword supposedly was the symbol of Chimay. Most likely the arms were created in the late middle ages based on this legend. The sword appeared for the first time on a seal dating from 1552. Previous seals showed the arms of the Croy family, Lords of Chimay.

Image gallery

Literature: Servais, 1955


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