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[[Civic Heraldry Literature - Switzerland|'''Literature''']] : Mühlmann, L. : Wappen und Fahnen der Schweiz, Bühler Verlag, Lengnau, 1977 and 1997. | [[Civic Heraldry Literature - Switzerland|'''Literature''']] : Mühlmann, L. : Wappen und Fahnen der Schweiz, Bühler Verlag, Lengnau, 1977 and 1997. |
Revision as of 15:22, 4 August 2023
URI
Official blazon
Origin/meaning
The arms of Uri date from the early 13th century. The oldest known seal dates from 1249, but is probably older. It shows already a bull's head with a ring.
The first seal (used from 1249) |
The second seal (used from 1258) |
The third seal (used from 1353) |
The fourth seal (used from 1489) |
The arms in a 16th century manuscript |
The arms in the Wapen- en Vlaggenboek van Gerrit Hesman (1708) |
The bull was probably a canting symbol. The oldest Germanic tribes to settle in the area named the area Ur (wilderness). The land was inhabited by a kind of bulls, known as Urochs (Bos primigenus), the ancestor of our present cows.
The arms of the canton thus have basically not changed since.
The arms on a 1569 coin |
The arms on a 1610 coin |
The arms on a 1726 coin |
The arms on a 1811 coin |
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Variations of the arms in the Kaffee Hag albums 1914-1960 |
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Index of the site
Literature : Mühlmann, L. : Wappen und Fahnen der Schweiz, Bühler Verlag, Lengnau, 1977 and 1997.