Last modified: 2020-11-28 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: wasserburg(inn) | lion(red) | crowned | orle | chequered | bannerhead |
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In the centre is the coat of arms without shield, surrounded by an orle chequered of silver (= white) and red.
Source: Joe Schmöger spotted this flag on 6 September 2001 on top of Brucktor, a city gate in Wasserburg, confirmed by Stefan Schwoon on 14 September 2002.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 6 Apr 2014
It is a red-white vertical bicolour. The banner head displays the square flag mentioned above.
Source: Gunnar Staack spotted this banner in 1985 in front of a local city hall.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 6 Apr 2014
It is a red-white vertical bicolour.
Source: Wasserburger Stimme Online (a newspaper), July 2013, photo no. 81
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 6 Apr 2014
Shield Argent a lion rampant Gules, crowned and armed Or.
Meaning:
The lion is interpreted as Palatine-Bavarian and thus alluding to the dukes from the Wittelsbach kin, local rulers since 1248. But Otto Hupp (1912) and others claimed, it was taken from the shield of the Counts of Wasserburg, who had been local rulers before. The oldest seal - probably made around 1250, the first existing print dated from 1292 - displays a crowned lion with a circumscription "SIGILLVM CIVITATIS IN WAZZERBVRCH". The tinctures varied during the centuries. The reason was that the tinctures of the counts were not known.
Source: Stadler 1968, p.90
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 6 Apr 2014
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