Diocese of Belleville

From Heraldry of the World
Revision as of 08:37, 26 December 2022 by Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "{{media}}" to "{{rel}} {{media}}")
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Religious or Ecclesiastical heraldry portal



This page is part of the
Ceh.jpg
Ecclesiastical heraldry portal


Logo-new.jpg
Heraldry of the World

Catholic heraldry


Other Christian churches


Other religions


  • Total pages in the Ecclesiastical section : 19,195
  • Total images in the Ecclesiastical section : 18,310

DIOCESE OF BELLEVILLE (Dioecesis Bellevillensis)

Country : United States
Denomination : Roman Catholic

Established : 1887

Arms (crest) of Diocese of Belleville

Official blazon

Origin/meaning

The hill has a dual significance; it refers to Compton Hill, the name of Belleville until 1814, and to Cahokla Mounds near which bishop Laval of Quebec established the the first mission serving the Cahokla Native Americans in 1699.

On the top of the hill is a castle which is the traditional symbol fort a city (ville). It is rendered in the precious color of gold (for ´Belle-´). Rising above the castle is a gold cross with fleur-de-lis ends to honor the French missionaries who served the Native Americans of Southern-Illinois.

Above the castle is an arched silver bar, taken from the arms of pope Leo XIII, who erected the diocese of Belleville in 1887.

The keys are the symbol of St. Peter, the patron saint of the cathedral of Belleville.

This arms appeared at first in the arms of the 3th. Bishop of Belleville, mgr. Albert Zuroweste.

Arms of Diocese of Belleville

Entrance to the cathedral

Arms of Bishops

Arms of Auxiliary Bishops

Literature:


This page is part of the
Ceh.jpg
Ecclesiastical heraldry portal

Perth-foley.jpg

Catholic heraldry

Bathurst-hurford.rel.jpg

Other Christian churches

Shaarhashomayim.rel.jpg
Other

  • Total pages in this section : 19,195
  • Total images in this section : 18,310

Contact and Support

Partners:

Your logo here ?
Contact us



© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink Ralf Hartemink arms.jpg
Index of the site diocesan website 4-4-2018