Sankt Vith: Difference between revisions

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|align="center"|[[File:s-vith.jpg|center]]  <br/>The arms from 1925  
|align="center"|[[File:s-vith.jpg|center]]  <br/>The arms from 1925  
|align="center"|[[File:st-vith.hagbe.jpg|center]]  <br/>The arms in the [[Koffie Hag Belgium|Koffie Hag/Café Hag albums]] +/- 1930  
|align="center"|[[File:st-vith.hagbe.jpg|center]]  <br/>The arms in the [[Koffie Hag Belgium|Koffie Hag/Café Hag albums]] +/- 1930  
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|align="center"|[[File:st-vith.pol.jpg|center|275 px]]  <br/>The arms on a police badge ([http://blog.seniorennet.be/police_politie_insignes/ source])
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Revision as of 05:50, 20 April 2015


Belgium heraldry portal



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Heraldry of the World

Civic heraldry:



  • Total pages in the Belgium section : 6,380
  • of which images : 5,146

Other heraldry:

SANKT VITH

Province : Liège
Additions : 1977 Crombach, Lommersweiler, Recht, Schönberg

St-vith.jpg

Official blazon

  • (1925) D'argent au lion de gueules à la queue fourchue couronné et armé d'or.
  • (1979) In Silber ein goldgekrönter, blaubewehrter und -bezungter zweischwänziger roter Löwe.

Origin/meaning

The arms were granted on July 3, 1925 and slightly changed on June 8, 1979.

The arms show the lion of the family Fauquemont. The Lords of Fauquemont either descended from the Lords of Heinsberg, who used a silver lion on a red shield, or from the Dukes of Limburg, who used a red lion on a silver field. The oldest known use of the double-tailed lion dates from 1342 on a seal form Jean de Fauquemont. The Lords of Fauquemont were lords of Saint Vith already in the 12th century. Later the town was a possession of the Counts of Vianden and the Princes of Oranje-Nassau.

When the arms were granted the lion was officially described as the lion of Fauquemont-Limburg, and shown as the lion of Limburg.

S-vith.jpg

The arms from 1925
St-vith.hagbe.jpg

The arms in the Koffie Hag/Café Hag albums +/- 1930
St-vith.pol.jpg

The arms on a police badge (source)



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Literature : Servais, 1955