This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

Market-Town of Wartenberg (Erding County, Bavaria, Germany)

Markt Wartenberg

Last modified: 2004-12-29 by santiago dotor
Keywords: bavaria | wartenberg | markt wartenberg | erding county | coat of arms (dragon: yellow) |
Links: FOTW homepage | search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors



[Market-Town of Wartenberg (Erding County, Bavaria, Germany)] by Marcus Schmöger
Flag used since c.1990, since c.1955 without arms
Coat-of-arms adopted 1955


See also:


Other sites:


Description

Since about 1470 the Markt (market-town) Wartenberg has used its own seal, the first imprint dates from 1514. Although varied over time, at the beginning of the 20th century the drawings of the arms returned to the original description [blazon]: Gules, a dragon Or, langued Argent. The flag is red-yellow and is derived from the arms. It is used since about 1955, since 1990 it is also used with the arms on it. Before 1955 and even today flags in the colours green-red have been in use.

Marcus Schmöger, 3 April 2001

From Ralf Hartemink's International Civic Arms website:

The arms show a dragon, that is probably derived from a Roman tympanum in the local St. Nicholas church. The town became a Markt in 1310, but seals are not known until 1514. This seal already shows the dragon. In the 17th and 18th centuries the dragon gradually changed to a basilisk with a cock's head, standing on a mountain. In the 19th century this changed again to a normal cock. The present arms are granted in 1955 and are based on the old seal of the town. The colours are the oldest known colours, dating from 1565.

Literature: Stadler 1964-1972.

Santiago Dotor, 12 April 2002


Variant without Coat-of-Arms

[Market-Town of Wartenberg, variant without Coat-of-Arms (Erding County, Bavaria, Germany)] by Marcus Schmöger
Flag used since c.1955

Flag used unofficially before 1955, occasionally nowadays

[Market-Town of Wartenberg, variant without Coat-of-Arms (Erding County, Bavaria, Germany)]
by Marcus Schmöger
Flag used unofficially before 1955, occasionally nowadays

Before 1955 (unknown since when) and even today flags in the colours green-red have been in use. These are probably derived from erroneous colours of the arms used before 1955 (on a red field a green dragon, or a yellow dragon on a green triple mount).

Marcus Schmöger, 3 April 2001