Céret: Difference between revisions
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Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - ". ===Origin/meaning===" to ". |- |'''English''' | {{blazon wanted}} |} ===Origin/meaning===") |
Knorrepoes (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "===Official blason=== *(fr) " to "{| class="wikitable" |+Official blazon |- |'''French''' | ") |
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[[File:ceret1.jpg|center|300 px|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]] | [[File:ceret1.jpg|center|300 px|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]] | ||
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|+Official blazon | |||
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|'''French''' | |||
| D'azur à deux clefs d'argent passées en sautoir et reliées par une chaîne du même ; au chef d'or chargé de quatre pals de gueules. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|'''English''' | |'''English''' |
Revision as of 17:11, 4 July 2022
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CÉRET
Département : Pyrénées-Orientales
French | D'azur à deux clefs d'argent passées en sautoir et reliées par une chaîne du même ; au chef d'or chargé de quatre pals de gueules. |
English | No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation |
Origin/meaning
The arms show the crossed keys of St. Peter, the local patron saint and a chief of Roussillon, the region in which the town is situated. Until the 1990s (?) the town used in the chief a fleur-de-lys for France instead of the Roussillon arms.
The arms in Traversier (1842) |
The arms in the Café Sanka album +/- 1932 |
The arms by Robert Louis, 1949 |
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