Last modified: 2019-10-25 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: halberstadt | stripes(16) | wolf-hook(black) |
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3:5 image by Stefan Schwoon, 28 May 2001 |
3:5 image by Thomas Rystau, 4 Aug 2018 |
Halberstadt has about 40,000 inhabitants. In the middle ages it was the seat of a bishopric and one of the most important cities in (Lower) Saxony. The flag dates at least back to the 16th century and has sixteen stripes, alternatingly white and red, superimposed on which is a "wolf hook" one of the more interesting flag designs in Saxony-Anhalt. The position of the wolf hook is either centred or shifted to the hoist and its points changed direction. The flag is shown both in flag and banner form in Günther 1996a. Since 2007 Halberstadt is the seat of Harz County.
Stefan Schwoon, 28 May 2001 and Klaus-Michael Schneider, 29 Aug 2018
5:2 image by Stefan Schwoon, 28 May 2001 |
5:2 image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 25 Oct 2019 |
5:2 image by Thomas Rystau, 4 Jan 2019 |
Besides the 16-stripes banner (see left and right images above) there also existed a simplified form, a white-red vertical bicolour (see central image above), charged with a black wolf trap. This variant had been quasi a banner of arms and had been in use between 1952 and 1989.
Source: letter from City Museum Halberstadt to Erwin Günther on 7 March 1990
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 25 Oct 2019
back to Harz cities and municipalities click here.