Lutter am Barenberge: Difference between revisions

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The arms below were proposed and adopted by the council in 1949, but were never officially granted.
The arms below were proposed and adopted by the council in 1949, but were never officially granted.
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[[File:lutter2.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]]


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Revision as of 17:10, 29 October 2016




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LUTTER AM BARENBERGE

State : Niedersachsen
District (Kreis) : Goslar (until 1978 Gandersheim)
Additions : Nauen, Ostlutter

Wappen von Lutter am Barenberge

Official blazon

Geteilt von Rot und Gold; oben ein goldener Wolfskopf, unten eine heraldische rote Rose.

Origin/meaning

The arms were granted in 1963.

The colours of the arms are derived from the colours of the arms of the diocese of Hildesheim, to which the village belonged. The local castle has long been the object of wars between the Dukes of Braunschweig and the Bishops of Hildesheim. The wolf and rose are both taken from the arms of the (extinct) Lords of Lutter, who used a (complete) wolf above a rose.

The arms below were proposed and adopted by the council in 1949, but were never officially granted.

Wappen von Lutter am Barenberge

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Index of the site

Literature : Stadler, K. : Deutsche Wappen - Bundesrepublik Deutschland. Angelsachsen Verlag, 1964-1971, 8 volumes.