Gelsenkirchen: Difference between revisions

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{{de}}<seo title="Wappen von Gelsenkirchen" titlemode="append"></seo>
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'''GELSENKIRCHEN'''
'''GELSENKIRCHEN'''
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State : [[Nordrhein-Westfalen]]<br/>
State : [[Nordrhein-Westfalen]]<br/>
Urban district (Kreisfreie Stadt) : Gelsenkirchen<br/>
Urban district (Kreisfreie Stadt) : Gelsenkirchen<br/>
Additions : 1903  Bismarck, Bulmke, Hessler, Hüllen,  Schalke, [[&Uuml;ckendorf]]; 1924 Rotthausen, 1928  Horst, [[Buer]]
Additions : 1903  Bismarck, Bulmke, Hessler, Hüllen,  Schalke, [[&Uuml;ckendorf]]; 1924 [[Rotthausen]], 1928  Horst, [[Buer]]


[[File:gelsenki.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]]
[[File:gelsenki.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]]
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[[File:gelsenkir.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]]
[[File:gelsenkir.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]]


The arms were rather complicated; the arms showed a church, with in the gate the miner's tools, and on each side of the tower a small shield, one with the Prussian eagle, and one with the arms of the Counts of the Mark (in gold a bar, chequered of red and silver). The town grew rapidly the last century due to the mining. The church is canting (Kirche=church), the two shields represent the oldest rulers (Mark) and the rulers in 1875 (Prussia).  
The arms were rather complicated; the arms showed a church, with in the gate the miner's tools, and on each side of the tower a small shield, one with the Prussian eagle, and one with the arms of the Counts of the Mark (in gold a bar, chequered of red and silver). The town developed rapidly the last century due to the mining. The church is canting (Kirche=church), the two shields represent the oldest rulers (Mark) and the rulers in 1875 (Prussia).  





Revision as of 14:44, 10 January 2020




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GELSENKIRCHEN

State : Nordrhein-Westfalen
Urban district (Kreisfreie Stadt) : Gelsenkirchen
Additions : 1903 Bismarck, Bulmke, Hessler, Hüllen, Schalke, Ückendorf; 1924 Rotthausen, 1928 Horst, Buer

Wappen von Gelsenkirchen

Official blazon

Origin/meaning

The arms shown above were granted in 1954 and show the church and tools from the old arms, see below as well as a lion for Horst and a linden tree for Buer.

The arms are slightly different from the previous arms, granted in 1932:

Wappen von Gelsenkirchen

The oldest arms of Gelsenkirchen date from 1877, after the town had become a city in 1875.

Wappen von Gelsenkirchen

The arms were rather complicated; the arms showed a church, with in the gate the miner's tools, and on each side of the tower a small shield, one with the Prussian eagle, and one with the arms of the Counts of the Mark (in gold a bar, chequered of red and silver). The town developed rapidly the last century due to the mining. The church is canting (Kirche=church), the two shields represent the oldest rulers (Mark) and the rulers in 1875 (Prussia).


Seal of Gelsenkirchen

Seal from around 1900
Wappen von Gelsenkirchen

The arms in the Continentale Verlags-Anstalt album, +/- 1910
Arms (crest) of Gelsenkirchen

The arms in the Abadie albums

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Literature : Stadler, 1964-1971