Niederschönenfeld: Difference between revisions
Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "/Arms of " to "/Arms (crest) of ") |
Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "{{media}}" to " {{de1}} {{media1}}") |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
The bars are derived from the arms of the Counts von Lechsend-Graisbach, the village was a longtime possession of the Counts of Graisbach. The mermaid is derived from the arms of Abbess Euphemia Fatiga of the Niederschönenfeld convent. She rebuilt the convent after it was destroyed during the 30 years war. The mermaid holds three wheat-ears, symbolising the village of Feldheim. | The bars are derived from the arms of the Counts von Lechsend-Graisbach, the village was a longtime possession of the Counts of Graisbach. The mermaid is derived from the arms of Abbess Euphemia Fatiga of the Niederschönenfeld convent. She rebuilt the convent after it was destroyed during the 30 years war. The mermaid holds three wheat-ears, symbolising the village of Feldheim. | ||
{{ | |||
{{de1}} | |||
{{media1}} | |||
[[Civic Heraldry Literature - Germany|'''Literature''']]: Image obtained from http://www.vg-rain.de | [[Civic Heraldry Literature - Germany|'''Literature''']]: Image obtained from http://www.vg-rain.de |
Revision as of 11:16, 26 December 2022
This page is part of the German heraldry portal Deutsche Wappensammlung |
Heraldry of the World |
German heraldry:
|
Selected collector's items from Germany:
|
NIEDERSCHÖNENFELD
State : Bayern
District (Kreis) : Donau-Ries (until 1972 Neuburg an der Donau)
Additions : 1978 Feldheim
German |
Gespalten; vorne fünfmal geteilt von Gold und Blau; hinten in Blau eine golden gekrönte natürliche Meerjungfrau mit goldenem Fischschwanz und goldenen Haaren, in den Händen drei goldene Ähren haltend. |
English | No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation |
Origin/meaning
The arms were granted on March 4, 1982.
The bars are derived from the arms of the Counts von Lechsend-Graisbach, the village was a longtime possession of the Counts of Graisbach. The mermaid is derived from the arms of Abbess Euphemia Fatiga of the Niederschönenfeld convent. She rebuilt the convent after it was destroyed during the 30 years war. The mermaid holds three wheat-ears, symbolising the village of Feldheim.
Literature: Image obtained from http://www.vg-rain.de