Last modified: 2012-10-13 by pete loeser
Keywords: kingdom of bavaria | koenigreich bayern | king | lozengy (white-blue) | coat of arms (quartered) | coat of arms (pavilion) | coat of arms (manteaux) | letter: l | number: 2 (roman) | king louis ii |
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1:1 Image by Theo van der Zalm and Santiago Dotor
Flag adopted 1835, abolished 24th February 1914
Square blue-white lozengy of many pieces with greater arms at the center. Illustrated National Geographic 1917, p. 367, no. 997.
Norman Martin, August 1998
I think this standard appears in National Geographic 1917 simply because news of the new 1914 standard did not reach America in the war. As such the standard is correct. It is shown in Ströhl 1897.
Theo van der Zalm, 16 June 2001
1:1 Image by Theo van der Zalm and Santiago Dotor
Flag adopted 1835, abolished 24th February 1914
Ströhl 1897 gives a standard for the royal princes and princesses, similar to the royal standard with a simpler version of the arms.
Theo van der Zalm, 16 June 2001
3:4 | stripes 1+2+1 Image by Theo van der Zalm and Santiago Dotor
Horizontal triband: blue-white-blue. Ratio of stripes 1:2:1. In the center the arms [see also the national flag c.1870].
Norman Martin, August 1998
This standard is shown in Siebmacher 1878. It is not the standard of the king - then Louis II but of the royal house.
Theo van der Zalm, 16 June 2001
If there was a 1835-1914 standard for the princes and princesses, who used this royal family standard in 1878?
Santiago Dotor, 22 June 2001
Good question. I suppose the type with lozenges (Rauten) and Siebmacher's standard for the royal house were not used simultaneously. Another possibility is, that they had not altogether the same function. Sovereigns sometimes used and use different flags on land, on water, on palaces or on coaches and motorcars. And flags used are not always official. Sometimes they can be made just for special occasions.
Theo van der Zalm, 22 June 2001
9:10 Image by Theo van der Zalm, Jorge Candeias, and Santiago Dotor
Blue-white lozengy of 20 pieces (possibly in error as to number of pieces). In the center the crowned monogram L plus small Roman numeral 2 [for Ludwig II].
Norman Martin, August 1998
This simple yet beautiful standard appears in Siebmacher 1878 and Neubecker 1932.
Santiago Dotor, 21 June 2001
King Ludwig II of Bavaria drowned in Starnberger See in 1886. Whether it was an accident caused by his mental disorders or an assassination intended to end the independence of Bavaria remains controversial.
Ivan Sache, 6 May 2002