Coat of arms of Rhineland-Palatinate

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search


Coat of arms of Rhineland-Palatinate
Coat of arms of Rhineland-Palatinate.svg
Details
Escutcheon In thirds: A red cross on silver; a silver wheel on red; a golden lion on black
Constituent parts Arms of the Archbishop and Prince Elector of Trier; the Archbishop and Prince Elector of Mainz, and the Prince Elector of the Palatinate.

This article is about the coat of arms of the German state of Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhineland-Palatinate).

Overview

The state flag and the coat of arms were designed in 1947 after this new Land was formed by the authority of the French High Commissioner to Germany. The flag symbolizes the dedication of Rhineland-Palatinate to Germany (therefore the black-red-gold tricolour) as well as the democratic traditions of Germany. These colours were seen first in this combination during the Hambacher Fest, a mass demonstration by German liberals at the ruins of the Hambacher Schloss in 1832. So the Palatinate is very much connected to these colours.

The constituent arms: Trier, Mainz and Palatinate

The coat of arms, which is also an integral part of the state flag, shows the signs of the predominant powers in the region before the French Revolution: the red cross on silver represents the Archbishop and Kurfürst (Prince Elector) of Trier; the silver wheel on red (Wheel of Mainz) represents the Archbishop and Prince Elector of Mainz, and the golden lion on black represents the Prince Elector of the Palatinate.

The Volkskrone (people's crown) consists of vine leaves and shows the importance of this crop for local agriculture.

Legal status

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

§ 1 The state's colors are black-red-gold.


§ 2 The state's coat of arms has the form of a round shield. This is split by an ascending sagging peak and shows on the right side on a silver field a continuous red cross, on the left side red field a silver six spokes wheel and in the ascending black peak a redly crowned and reinforced, gold lion. The coat of arms is covered by a golden people's crown (vine leaves)... ...


§ 4 Decisive for the design of the state’s coat of arms and the state’s flag are the patterns, added to this law.
— State legislature, Landesgesetz über die Hoheitszeichen des Landes Rheinland-Pfalz (Wappen- und Flaggengesetz) in der Fassung vom 7. August 1972 (Fundstelle: GVBl 1972, S. 293) Zuletzt geändert durch Gesetz vom 21.7.2003, GVBl. 2003, S. 167.[1]

References

See also