Abbey of Murbach: Difference between revisions

From Heraldry of the World
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Text replacement - "Literature :" to "'''Literature''':")
 
(15 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{religion}}
'''  {{uc:{{PAGENAME}}}} ''' (Abbaye de Murbach)
'''  {{uc:{{PAGENAME}}}} ''' (Abbaye de Murbach)


Line 16: Line 14:
|-
|-
|'''French'''
|'''French'''
|  
| D'argent au lévrier rampant de sable, accolé et bouclé du champ.
|-
|-
|'''English'''  
|'''English'''  
| {{blazon wanted}}
| blazon wanted
|}
|}


===Origin/meaning===
===Origin/meaning===
{{missing}}
The abbey arms are known since the 14th century.
 
The origin of the dog is not known, but several theories exist. One states that it was the banner of Abbott Hugo von Rothenburg, 1216–1236. No evidence thereof exist though. Another legend states that it refers to a large greyhound dog that defended the village Wattwiller in 1525. That (local) legend ignores that the greyhound was already used before 1525...
 
===Image gallery===
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
File:Abbey of Murbach17.jpg|alt=Arms of Abbey of Murbach|The arms in a 17th century manuscript
File:Abbey of Murbach.jpg|alt=Arms of Abbey of Murbach|The arms in Hozier (1696)
File:Abbey of Murbach.hes.jpg|alt=Arms of Abbey of Murbach|The arms in the [[Wapen- en Vlaggenboek Hesman|Wapen- en Vlaggenboek]] van Gerrit Hesman (1708)
</gallery>


{|align="center"
|align="center"|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}.jpg|center|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>The arms in Hozier (1696)
|align="center"|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}.hes.jpg|300 px|center|Arms of {{PAGENAME}}]]<br/>The arms in the [[Wapen- en Vlaggenboek Hesman|Wapen- en Vlaggenboek]] van Gerrit Hesman (1708)
|}


====Arms of Abbots====
====Arms of Abbots====
Line 39: Line 42:
No image|[[Georg von Masmünster]] (1513–1542 )
No image|[[Georg von Masmünster]] (1513–1542 )
No image|[[Johann Rudolf Stoer von Stoerenberg]] (1542–1570)
No image|[[Johann Rudolf Stoer von Stoerenberg]] (1542–1570)
No image|[[Johann Ulrich von Raitenau]] (1570–1587)
File:Murbach-raitenau.jpg|[[Johann Ulrich von Raitenau]] (1570–1587)
No image|[[Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau]] (1587)
No image|[[Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau]] (1587)
File:Konstanz-osterreich.jpg|[[Andreas von Österreich]] (1587–1600 )
File:Konstanz-osterreich.jpg|[[Andreas von Österreich]] (1587–1600 )
Line 55: Line 58:
</gallery>
</gallery>


'''[[Literature]]''':
[[Heraldic literature - Ecclesiastical heraldry|'''Literature''']]:


{{religion}}
{{fr}}
{{media}} Image from Armorial Général de France by Hozier, 1696
{{media}} Image from Armorial Général de France by Hozier, 1696


[[Category:Ecclesiastical heraldry of France]]
[[Category:Ecclesiastical heraldry of France]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic abbeys]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic abbeys]]

Latest revision as of 12:45, 25 December 2023

ABBEY OF MURBACH (Abbaye de Murbach)

Country : France
Denomination : Roman Catholic
Order: Benedictan

Established : 727
Abolished : 1789

Arms (crest) of Abbey of Murbach
Official blazon
French D'argent au lévrier rampant de sable, accolé et bouclé du champ.
English blazon wanted

Origin/meaning

The abbey arms are known since the 14th century.

The origin of the dog is not known, but several theories exist. One states that it was the banner of Abbott Hugo von Rothenburg, 1216–1236. No evidence thereof exist though. Another legend states that it refers to a large greyhound dog that defended the village Wattwiller in 1525. That (local) legend ignores that the greyhound was already used before 1525...

Image gallery


Arms of Abbots

Literature:


Religious or Ecclesiastical heraldry portal



This page is part of the
Ceh.jpg
Ecclesiastical heraldry portal


Logo-new.jpg
Heraldry of the World

Catholic heraldry


Other Christian churches


Other religions


  • Total pages in the Ecclesiastical section : 18,920
  • Total images in the Ecclesiastical section : 17,910

French heraldry portal



This page is part of the
France.jpg
French heraldry portal


Logo-new.jpg
Heraldry of the World

French heraldry:

Overseas territories:



  • Total pages in the French section : 52,990
  • of which images : 30,730

Selected collector's items from France:


Contact and Support

Partners:

Your logo here ?
Contact us



© since 1995, Heraldry of the World, Ralf Hartemink Ralf Hartemink arms.jpg
Index of the site Image from Armorial Général de France by Hozier, 1696