Oberissigheim: Difference between revisions

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The arms date back to the French occupation. At the time the two villages of [[niederisNieder]]- and Oberissigheim were separated. The village of Niederissigheim was situated in rather marshy lands, whereas the village of Oberissigheim was on dry grounds. Both villages adopted arms with the French fleur-de-lis and a letter. For Niederissigheim this was the N for 'noyer' (French for flooded), for Oberissigheim this was the S for 'sèche' (French for dry).
The arms date back to the French occupation. At the time the two villages of [[niederisNieder]]- and Oberissigheim were separated. The village of Niederissigheim was situated in rather marshy lands, whereas the village of Oberissigheim was on dry grounds. Both villages adopted arms with the French fleur-de-lis and a letter. For Niederissigheim this was the N for 'noyer' (French for flooded), for Oberissigheim this was the S for 'sèche' (French for dry).


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[[Civic Heraldry Literature - Germany|'''Literature''']]: Image provided by the Bruchköbel council; background by Stefan John.  
[[Civic Heraldry Literature - Germany|'''Literature''']]: Image provided by the Bruchköbel council; background by Stefan John.  

Revision as of 11:54, 26 December 2022




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OBERISSIGHEIM

State : Hessen
District (Kreis) : Main-Kinzig Kreis (until 1973 Hanau)
Incorporated into : 1972 Bruchköbel

Wappen von Oberissigheim/Arms (crest) of Oberissigheim
Official blazon
German
English No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation

Origin/meaning

The arms were officially granted on ??-??-19??.

The arms date back to the French occupation. At the time the two villages of niederisNieder- and Oberissigheim were separated. The village of Niederissigheim was situated in rather marshy lands, whereas the village of Oberissigheim was on dry grounds. Both villages adopted arms with the French fleur-de-lis and a letter. For Niederissigheim this was the N for 'noyer' (French for flooded), for Oberissigheim this was the S for 'sèche' (French for dry).


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Literature: Image provided by the Bruchköbel council; background by Stefan John.