Last modified: 2024-10-05 by martin karner
Keywords: switzerland | obwalden | key | canton | half-canton | german |
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Per fess gules and argent, overall a key in pale ward up
countercoloured.
Divided horizontally into equal parts, the upper red and the lower
white, with superimposed a key white in the red part of the field and
red in the white part of the field with its ward turned toward the
hoist.
T.F. Mills, 16 October 1997
[The coat of arms with the one-bearded key is taken from the old state seal, with which the oldest federal letter from 1291
and the following federal letters were sealed. This seal was made around 1240 for the "lower valley" (Nidwalden).
By supplementing the inscription with the addition "et vallis superioris" ("and the upper valley") it became
the state seal of the entire Unterwalden canton after 1291. Since the middle of the 14th century, when Nidwalden had its own
seal, this seal was also used as the status seal of Obwalden. The respective Landammann (governor) used
to keep it in his home until very recently. Today it is kept in the Obwalden
State Archives (source). –
Banner of Obwalden, carried in the Burgundian Wars (1474–77) (source: [b7b42]). –
Julius Banner (1512), with apostle Peter on the upper red half,
holding two keys (or a double-key) upright (probably referring to the legend of the Unterwalden keys).
Peter turns his face towards the Crucifixion scene in the upper corner at the hoist.
The inscription along the borders of the banner was added some decades later (some suppose in 1552),
it was the same text as on the Julius Banner of Nidwalden. For the wording and translation of the
inscription and the legend behind it see the picture section on the
Nidwalden page. (source: [b7b42])]
Simple rectangular cantonal flag, as shown in Mader (1942) (So-called
colour flag [Farbenfahne in German]).
Martin Karner
See also: STATE COLOURS in Dictionary of Vexillology
Flaggen, Knatterfahnen and Livery Colours |
|
images by Pascal Gross |
Flaggen are vertically hoisted from a crossbar in the manner of gonfanon, in ratio of about 2:9, with a swallowtail that indents about 2 units. The chief, or hoist (square part) usually incorporates the design from the coat of arms – not from the flag. The fly part is always divided lengthwise, usually in a bicolour, triband or tricolour pattern (except Schwyz which is monocolour, and Glarus which has four stripes of unequal width). The colours chosen for the fly end are usually the main colours of the coat of arms, but the choice is not always straight forward.
Knatterfahnen are similar to Flaggen, but hoisted from the long side and have no swallow tail. They normally show the national, cantonal or communal flag in their chiefs.
Željko Heimer, 16 July 2000
See also: HANGING FLAG, VERTICALLY HOISTED FLAG, LIVERY COLOURS in Dictionary of Vexillology