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Bad Breisig Associated Municipality (Germany)

Verbandsgemeinde Bad Breisig, Landkreis Ahrweiler, Rheinland-Pfalz

Last modified: 2023-06-30 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: bad breisig(vg) | bad breisig | brohl-luetzing | goennersdorf | waldorf |
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[Verbandsgemeinde Bad Breisig flag] 2:3 image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 Jan 2023

See also:

Bad Breisig Associated Municipality / (Verbandsgemeinde Bad Breisig)

Bad Breisig Associated Municipality Flag

It is a white-red horizontal bicolour with centred coat of arms.
Source: Klaus Günther:"Neue Flaggen von Rheinland-Pfalz" in "Der Flaggenkurier Nr.40/2014", pp.15-19
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 29 June 2023

Bad Breisig Associated Municipality Banner

[Verbandsgemeinde Bad Breisig banner] image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 Jan 2023

It is a white-red vertical bicolour. The coat of arms is shifted towards the top.
Source: this online catalogue
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 Jan 2023

Bad Breisig Associated Municipality Coat of Arms

Shield parted per fess, above Argent two arrows Gules with arrowheads Azure in saltire, flanked by six huerts ordered 1:2:2:1, beneath lozengy of Or and Gules, orle in counterchanged tinctures.
Meaning:
Administration seat is Bad Breisig City. The upper half of the arms is a differentiation of the arms of the Lordship of Breisig, to which also Brohl-Lützing and Gönnersdorf belonged. The lordship belonged to the Essen Imperial Abbey, a nunnery, for centuries, until the abbey was secularised in 1803. Each huert (blue roundel) is representing one village of the lordship. The arrows are symbolising hunting. The lower half displays the arms of the Burgraves of Rheineck, who had been reeves of the lordship.
Source: German WIKIPEDIA
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 Jan 2023

The date of approval of the symbols is unknown.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 17 Jan 2023


Bad Breisig City

Bad Breisig Banner

[Bad Breisig city banner] 2:1 image by Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

It is a red-blue vertical bicolour with centred coat of arms.
Source: Klaus Günther:"Kommunalflaggen von Rheinland-Pfalz", CD
Jörg Majewski, 19 Jan 2009

Bad Breisig Coat of Arms

Shield parted per pale, at dexter Vert a fountain with bowl Gules spitting water Argent, at sinister Argent two arrows Gules in saltire with arrowheads Argent and surrounded by six balls Azure ordred 1:2:2:1.
Meaning:
Bad Breisig is seat of the namesake associated municipality. Since 1747 the country around Breisig had been a condominion of the Dukes of Jülich and the Essen Imperial Nunnery, until it was occupied by France in 1798. The upper half of the arms is a differentiation of the arms of the Lordship of Breisig, to which also Brohl-Lützing and Gönnersdorf belonged. The lordship belonged to the Essen Imperial Abbey, a nunnery, for centuries, until the abbey was secularised in 1803. Each blue ball is representing one village of the lordship. The pattern was also used on seals of the abbesses. In the 17th century it also appeared on the village seals of Oberbreisig and Niederbreisig. The fountain is symbolising the status af a mineral spa, which existed since 1914. The prefix "Bad" was added to Niederbreisig in 1958. The current municipality was established by a merger of both villages and the village of Rheineck on 7 June 1969. The new entity gained city rights on 2 May 1970.
Source: Stadler 1966, p.15
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Feb 2023

The banner was approved on 24 February 1970. The arms were approved in 1958 to Bad Niederbreisig and later adopted in 1969 by Bad Breisig.
Jörg Majewski, 19 Jan 2009


Brohl-Lützing Municipality

Brohl-Lützing Banner

[Brohl-Lützing municipal banner] 2:1 image by Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

It is a green-white vertical bicolour with centred coat of arms.
Source: Klaus Günther:"Kommunalflaggen von Rheinland-Pfalz", CD
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

Brohl-Lützing Coat of Arms

Shield parted per fess; above Or a demi-lion rampant issuant Sable, armed and tongued Gules; beneath Sable two arrows Gules in saltire with arrowheads Argent and surrounded by six balls Or ordered 1:2:2:1.
Meaning:
The upper half is a differentiation of the family arms of the Dukes of Jülich, who had been reeves of the country around Breisig since the late Medieval. The lower half is a differentiation of the arms of the Essen Imperial Nunnery, to which the village belonged since 974 in times of Abbess Mathilde II, a granddaughter of Emperor Otto I, until 1794.
Source: German WIKIPEDIA
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Feb 2023

The date of approval of the banner is unknown.
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009


Gönnersdorf Municipality

Gönnersdorf Banner

[Gönnersdorf municipal banner] 2:1 image by Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

It is a green-yellow vertical bicolour with centred coat of arms.
Source: State Archive Koblenz in Klaus Günther:"Kommunalflaggen von Rheinland-Pfalz", CD
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

Gönnersdorf Coat of Arms

Shield parted per fess, above parted per pale, at dexter Or a bladed wheel Sable with hub Gules, at sinister Vert parted by a bend sinister wavy Argent; beneath Argent a church Sable on top of a mount of the same.
Meaning:
The wheel is an attribute of St. Catherine, the local co-patron saint. The bend sinister wavy is a representation of the Vinxtbach, a local creek. The lower half displays the local parish church, dedicated to Sr. Stephan, the other local co-patron saint.
Source: municipal webpage
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Feb 2023

The banner was approved on 11 March 1985.
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009


Waldorf Municipality

Waldorf Banner

[Waldorf municipal banner] 2:1 image by Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

It is a red-white vertical bicolour with centred coat of arms.
Source: State Archive Koblenz in Klaus Günther:"Kommunalflaggen von Rheinland-Pfalz", CD
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009

Waldorf Coat of Arms

Shield parted by a bar wavy Azure; above Or a wolf passant Sable, armed and tongued Gules and carrying a crozier of the same in bend sinister; beneath parted per pale, at dexter Argent parted by a centred cross Sable, at sinister gyronny of 12 of Argent and Gules.
Meaning:
The blue bar wavy is symbolising the Vinxtbach, a creek, which marked the border between the Roman Provinces of Lower Germany (Latin: Germania inferior) and Upper germany (Latin : Germania superior). It had also been the border of between the lower and upper German languages. Wolf and crozier are attributes of St. Remaklus, the local patron saint. The lower half displays the arms of the Archbishooric of Köln at dexter and those of the Barons Walpott of Bassenheim at sinister.
Source: German WIKIPEDIA
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Feb 2023

The banner is in use since 1988.
Jörg Majewski, 24 Jan 2009


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