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Flag of Pas-de-Calais - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 28 October 2024
See also:
Code: 62
Region: Hauts-de-France (Nord-Pas de Calais until 2014)
Traditional provinces: Artois,
Picardy
Bordering departments: Nord,
Somme
Area: 6,671 km2
Population (2015): 1,470,725 inhabitants
Préfecture: Arras
Sous-préfectures: Béthune,
Boulogne-sur-Mer,
Calais, Lens, Montreuil-sur-Mer, Saint-Omer
Subdivisions: 7 arrondissements, 39 cantons, 891 municipalities.
The department is named for Pas de Calais, the French name of the Strait of Dover.
On 1 January 1971, the municipality of Ytres was transferred from the department of Somme to the department of Pas-de-Calais. On 1 January 1974, the municipality of Beauvoir-Rivière, transferred from Somme to Pas-de-Calais, merged with Wavans-sur-l'Authie to form the municipality of Beauvoir-Wavans.
Ivan Sache, 14 April 2019
In June 2022, the Department of Pas-de-Calais adopted a new logo and
graphic charter.
According to the official website "new communication media (social
networks, videos, etc.) have appeared in recent years. The Department
has therefore chosen to adapt its graphic charter to these new
communication media. Moreover, certain departmental public policies,
platforms and systems: MonJob62, Ressources62, Jeunes du 62, etc.,
already use the 62 attached to the name of the system, as well as the
profile photo of departmental social networks. Thus, the 62
illustrates a territory and a sense of belonging and therefore becomes
an integral part of the departmental logo. It replaces the triangle
used since the end of the 1980s."
The fonts are Helvetica bold (Pas-de-Calais - Département), Mark my
words (Mon), Bauhaus bold (62) [source: official website]
The new flag is dark blue with the logo in white: photo (2024).
Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
Former flag of Departmental council of Pas-de-Calais, three versions - Images by Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
The flag used by the Departmental Council of Pas-de-Calais (photo) is blue with the new version of the Council's logo, monochromous with a different font, adopted in June 2016. Another version of the flag (photo) shows the graphic part in bigger size with the wording beneath.
Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
Flag of General council of Pas-de-Calais, 2009-2015 - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
In 2008, the Council's original logo was modernized: the blue lines were integrated inside the green triangle and the font was changed. In 2009, the words "Conseil général" were replaced by "Le Département". In 2009 the flag of the then General Council (photo, photo) was white with the logo, in which the words "Conseil général" were replaced by "Le Département".
Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
Former flag of the General Council of Pas-de-Calais, two versions - Images by Ivan Sache, 17 October 2009, and Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019, respectively
The former flag of the General Council was white
with the Council's former logo.
The former logo was made of a green triangle representing a highly stylized map of the department, flanked on its left by six hatchings representing the sea.
"PAS.DE.CALAIS" is written in blue letters below.
In a previous version, the logo had a different shape with straight basis of
the triangle.
Pascal Vagnat & Olivier Touzeau, 2 May 2019
Flag of the Firefighters Departmental Corps - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 27 December 2020
The flag of the Firefighters Departmental Corps (photo, photo) is white with the corps' emblem.
Olivier Touzeau, 27 December 2020Flag of the Diocese of Arras - Image by Ivan Sache, 29 December 2008
France is divided in Ecclesiastic Provinces of the Roman Catholic church, itself divided in Dioceses. Upon request of the French bishops, the Provinces were restructured in 2002 (Decree of Pope John Paul II, 8 December 2002) to better match the French administrative divisions, especially the Regions (for the Provinces) and the Departments (for the Dioceses). The Ecclesiastic Province of Lille (Cambrai before 2008), matching Region Nord-Pas-de-Calais, is made of the Dioceses of Lille (Metropolitan Archbishopric), Cambrai (Archbishopric) and Arras. The Diocese of Arras, formally known as "Diocese of Arras, Boulogne-sur-Mer and Saint-Omer" and matching the Department of Pas-de-Calais, is made of 94 parishes grouped in 10 decanates.
The flag of the Diocese of Arras (photo, World Youth Day 2005) is pale yellow flag with the logo of the diocese in the middle.
The photographer writes on his blog: "[...] our yellow flag of the
Diocese of Arras [...], the colours depend on the buses."
I understand that the managers of the group from Arras designed flags
with different coloured background to be able to identify the group
members and to load them in their respective buses. The flag has, most
probably, no official character.
The logo of the diocese was designed in 1999 by the graphist Alain
Crépin for the celebration of the Jubileaum A.D. 2000. It is made of a stylized, multicoloured cross, with blue (W), yellow (N), red (E) and
green (S) branches, surrounded by fragments of circles, red (NW),
green (NE), blue (SE) and yellow (SW). A white dove is placed in the
middle of the cross. "DIOCÈSE / D'ARRAS" is written in white letters
on a red rectangle placed near the lower left part of the logo, the
"D" being on the green branch of the cross.
Crépin explains that he represented a cross
similar to those erected in the local countryside, not to be seen as a
torture and pain device but as a wooden cross bending under the
western wind. A bird is resting in the middle of the branches of the
cross. More than a cross, this cross is a communication forum located
at the crossroads of men and ideas.
The green branch of the cross represents the countryside, the vitality
of the plants and of the rural part of the diocese.
The blue branch of the cross represents the sea and the West,
vacation, tourism and the hard job of seamen.
The red branch represents the eastern part of the diocese, the former
mining and industrial district; here red represents science and
technology but also blood, tears, illness, loneliness, unemploiement
and exclusion. The sharp angles of the red branch are like daggers or
bad words symbolizing sin, the hardness of the human heart and the
refuse to be kind and welcoming.
The yellow branch of the cross represents the highness of the soul and
the heights of heavens, as well as the ascending road to life and
God's voice.
The circle looks like a clock with needles never stopping turning,
every moment being God's gift. The circle also means that nobody can
stay still and that we all should meet each other.
The dove announces the end of the Deluge, of bad weather, of unhappy
events. In the center of the logo, the colour is bright like the sun,
mystery and God, calling for concentration and prayer.
[Diocese of Arras]
Ivan Sache, 29 December 2008