Last modified: 2023-09-30 by olivier touzeau
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Flag of Versailles - Image by Olivier Touzau, 27 September 2023
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Versailles (83,583 inhabitants; 2,618 ha) is a commune and the
prefecture of the department of the Yvelines, in the western suburbs
of Paris.
Versailles is renowned worldwide for the Château and the gardens of
Versailles, designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
A new town founded at the will of King Louis XIV, Versailles was the de facto capital of the Kingdom of France for over a century, from 1682 to 1789. Today, the Congress of France – the body created when both houses of the French Parliament, the National Assembly and the Senate, meet – gathers in the Château de Versailles to vote on revisions to the Constitution.
Olivier Touzau, 27 September 2023
The municipal coat of arms is "Argent three fleurs-de-lis or a chief argent a double-headed rooster issuant proper". The shield is surmounted by a mural crown composed, in turn, of three towers and two fleurs-de-lis.
According to GASO, the coat of arms of Versailles was adopted in September 1789. The double-headed roaster issuant symbolizes the burgeoning freedom.
Fleurs-de-lis were logically added in chief since Louis XVI was still
King of France when the arms were adopted. The coat of arms was
painted on the flag used by the National Guards in Versailles. The actual coat of arms was designed by the French heraldist Robert Louis.
Ivan Sache, 23 April 2010
The current flag of Versailles is white with the logotype-like rendition of the coat of arms in full colours. It can be observed on the flag flown in front of the city hall, since at least 2010 (photo, 2017; photo, 2016; photo, 2010), while before 2010 a traditional and heraldically correct representation of the arms was in use.
Olivier Touzeau , 27 September 2023
A new municipal flag, with the coat of arms placed on a plain white field, appeared on 18 April 2010 in front of the town hall of Versailles.
Ivan Sache, 23 April 2010
Blue variant flag of Versailles - Image by Ivan Sache, 26 December 2021
In early December 2021, the small-sized municipal flags hoisted on poles in different places of the downtown of Versailles, formerly white with the municipal coat of arms, were changed to blue flags with the blue and white coat of arms already used on the town's logo.
Ivan Sache, 26 December 2021
Former flag of Versailles, heraldically correct version (left) and the most recently used version (right) - Images by Pascal Vagnat, 18 June 2004
The former flag of Versailles is horizontally divided white-blue (c. 1:3) with the municipal coat of arms in the middle.
The colours of the flag are those of the coat of arms.
There are in fact slightly different versions of the municipal
flag:
- the greater flag, hoisted in front of the town hall, has no black
border betweem the shield and the main field.
- the smaller flag, hoisted in various places in the town, has a
rather thick black border.
- on the greater flag, the mural crown surmounting the coat of arms is the only part
of the coat of arms to be placed into the white stripe of the flag. On
some flags, however, a more or less big portion of the shield is also
placed into the white stripe.
Some of the municipal flags recently seen in Versailles have the upper part of the coat of arms light blue instead of white. This is the case on the greater flag hoisted in front of the city hall. We guess that several flags were recently changed together. Why light blue instead of white? It might be a manufacturer's mistake or someone's choice in the municipal administration.
Vincent Morley, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 18 June 2004
Unofficial flag of Versailles - Image by Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 23 April 2010
The white flag with coat of arms has already been spotted, hoisted over a hotel, but certainly not with an official status.
Ivan Sache, 23 April 2010
Flag of CNV - Image by Ivan Sache, 17 December 2005
The rowing club Cercle Nautique de Versailles (CNV; website) was founded in 1908. Its
members row on Grand Canal, in the park of the palace of
Versailles. Grand Canal, inaugurated in 1670, is made of two perpendicular arms
of 1,650 x 62 m and 1,070 x 80 m. The buildings located near the
Grand Canal are called Petite Venise (Little Venice). The Venitian
seamen in charge of Louis XIV's flotilla (gondolas and scale models of
civil and warships) lived there; the flottila was mostly used during
the water festivals organized during the first part of Louis XIV's
reign (until 1683 and his secrete marriage with the severe Madame de
Montespan).
The club house of the CNV is housed in one of the buildings of the
Petite Venise. The club organizes the famous Régates de Versailles on Grand Canal.
The flag of CNV is vertically divided white-red-white with the letters CNV counterchanged (red-white-red). There is probably a club burgee of the same design.
Ivan Sache, 17 December 2005