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Stein (The Netherlands)

Limburg province

Last modified: 2006-12-09 by jarig bakker
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Stein municipality Shipmate Flagchart : http://www.flagchart.net
Adopted 30 Jan 1970

Other Stein pages: See also:

Stein municipality

Number of inhabitants (1 Jan 2003): 26.603; area: 22,77 km². Settlements: Stein (seat), Berg a/d Maas, Catsop, Elsloo, Maasband, Meers, Nattenhoven, Urmond.
In 1982 the present municipality of Stein was formed by the merger of the former municipalities of Elsloo, Stein, and Urmond.
Flagdescription: diagonally divided from hoist-bottom to fly-top by a black stripe; in the yellow hoist-corner a red lozenge, the fly is red.
Adopted 30 Jan 1970 by municipal resolution.
The black stripe symbolizes the black horse of St. Martin. The red lozenge the lords of Stein, who had seven lozenges on their arms.

Stein CoA

[Stein CoA] from the Stein municipal website.
Granted 12 Aug 1982.

St. Martin is the patron saint of the old parishes of Stein and Urmond. The representants of Urmond used in 1673 a seal with the horseman St. Martin. On the municipal arms is also the CoA of the lords of Elsloo, consisting of seven lozenges, known since the beginning of the 12th century. The lords of Stein had the same origin as those of Elsloo, and used the same arms.


Urmond former municipality

[Urmond flag] by Jarig Bakker, 1 Sep 2003

Urmond is a former municipality in Limburg province; in 1982 it merged with Elsloo and Stein to form the new municipality of Stein. Urmond was named in the 12th century Overmounte = over the mountain, later it became Urmond; the brook flowing through the village was named after it: Ur, but popular etymology made Urmond named after the Ur. It is west of the agglomeration Sittard-Geleen, and had in 1968 4.200, living in Urmond (seat), and Berg and Nattenhoven.
Flagdescription: rectangular, consisting of a yellow field with in the center a black lion, armed red. Top and bottom are narrow blue stripes.
Adopted 30 Nov 1961 by municipal resolution.
Source: Derkwillem Visser's Gemeentevlaggen en wapens Koninkrijk der Nederlanden, Jun 2001.
Jarig Bakker, 1 Sep 2003