Last modified: 2002-05-10 by santiago dotor
Keywords: lower saxony | niedersachsen | papenburg | stadt papenburg | kreis emsland | emsland county | coat of arms (lion: black) | coat of arms (lion: rampant sinister) |
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3:5
by Stefan Schwoon
Flag adopted ca.1807
See also:
Yellow-red-blue with the arms in the red stripe. Sources: Stadler 1970, Keyser 1939-1974 and the Delfzijl (Netherlands) website (translated in the Emden 18th-19th Centuries section).
Stadler says that until 1803 the city belonged to the diocese of Münster, and that until then the arms of the diocese were used in place of the current arms. The arms of the diocese showed a red fess in a golden field. In 1803 the city came to the duchy of Arenberg and thus the arms were replaced with those of Arenberg. Today, Papenburg is in the county of Emsland.
Stefan Schwoon, 29 March 2001
Stadler 1970, p.65, says:
Papenburg: (...) Um 1807 hielt man für das Ortswappen den schwarzem Löwen im Rot, den die Herren von Papenburg geführt haben sollen. Man wollte ihn anstatt des Arenberger Schildes in die Schiffsflaggen setzen. (...) Papenburger Seeflagge war bis 1803 die des Fürstbistums Münster (Gelb, Rot, Blau mit dem Balkenschild). Nach dem Wechsel des Landeshoheit belegte man diese Streifen mit dem herzoglich arenbergischen Wappen.I believe this translates as:
Papenburg: (...) The black lion on red, which the Lords of Papenburg are supposed to have used, was used around 1807 for the municipal arms. These were intended to replace the Arenberg arms [*] on the ensigns. (...) The Papenburg ensign was until 1803 that of the Principality-Bishopric of Münster (yellow, red, blue with the fess arms [**]). After the change of power these stripes were charged with the Arenberg ducal arms."No information about today's (i.e. 1970's) flag. So it appears that the yellow-red-blue flag bore: