Kematen am Innbach: Difference between revisions

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m (Text replace - "|}<seo title="Wappen von Österreich" />" to "|}<seo title="|}<seo title="Wappen, Gemeindewappen, Stadtwappen, Marktwappen, Österreich" />" />")
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|width="70%" align="center" |'''Heraldry of the World<br>Civic heraldry of [[Austria]] - [[Austria|Österreichische Gemeindewappen]]'''
|width="70%" align="center" |'''Heraldry of the World<br>Civic heraldry of [[Austria]] - [[Austria|Österreichische Gemeindewappen]]'''
|width="15%"|[[File:Austria.jpg|50 px|right]]
|width="15%"|[[File:Austria.jpg|50 px|right]]
|}<seo title="|}<seo title="Wappen, Gemeindewappen, Stadtwappen, Marktwappen, Österreich" />" />
|}<seo title="|}<seo title="Wappen, Gemeindewappen, Stadtwappen, Marktwappen, Österreich" />


'''KEMATEN AM INNBACH'''
'''KEMATEN AM INNBACH'''

Revision as of 17:39, 12 January 2014

Austria.jpg
Heraldry of the World
Civic heraldry of Austria - Österreichische Gemeindewappen
Austria.jpg

KEMATEN AM INNBACH

State : Oberösterreich
District : Grieskirchen

Kemateni.jpg

Origin/meaning

The arms were granted on June 11, 1620 by Emperor Ferdinand II.

The shield with the bars is taken from the arms of the Pollheim family, the most important of the local noble families. The escutcheon is a very strange device. In German an escutcheon is a Herzschild, or heart-shield. It is taken a bit too literally in these arms !

The G is the initial of Lord Gundaker of Pollheim, who applied for the town rights in 1620. The arms were granted at the same time as the town rights.

Kematen-krems.hagat.jpg

Het wapen in de Coffee Hag album +/- 1932

Literature : Baumert, H.E. : Oberösterreichische Gemeindewappen, Linz, 1996.