Langgöns: Difference between revisions
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The two crossed swords are taken from the arms of the medieval Lords of Göns, who ruled the village until 1587. The base shows the local Hüttenberg hill. | The two crossed swords are taken from the arms of the medieval Lords of Göns, who ruled the village until 1587. The base shows the local Hüttenberg hill. | ||
The Hessisches Wappenbuch still | The Hessisches Wappenbuch (1956) and a local postal cancellation from 1961 still showed different arms: | ||
{|align="center" | {|align="center" | ||
|align="center"|[[File:langgons.jpg|center|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>The arms in 1956 | |||
|align="center"|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}p.jpg|center|400 px|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>Postal cancellation 1961 | |align="center"|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}p.jpg|center|400 px|Wappen von {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>Postal cancellation 1961 | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 05:44, 18 September 2017
This page is part of the German heraldry portal |
Heraldry of the World |
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LANGGÖNS
State : Hessen
District (Kreis) : Giessen (until 1976 Wetzlar)
Additions : 1971 Niederkleen, Oberkleen; 1977 Cleeberg, Dornholzhausen, Espa
Official blazon
(de) In Gold über einem grünen Kleeblatt mit zwei Griffen nach oben gelegte schräggekreuzte rote Schwerter.
Origin/meaning
The arms were granted in 1954.
The two crossed swords are taken from the arms of the medieval Lords of Göns, who ruled the village until 1587. The base shows the local Hüttenberg hill.
The Hessisches Wappenbuch (1956) and a local postal cancellation from 1961 still showed different arms:
The arms in 1956 |
Postal cancellation 1961 |
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© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink
Index of the site
Literature : Hessisches Wappenbuch, 1956