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Grabow city (Germany)
Stadt Grabow, Ludwigslust County, Mecklenburg-West Pomerania
Last modified: 2009-08-08 by jarig bakker
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3:5
image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Jul 2009
adopted ?
See also:
Grabow city
City of Grabow (Ludwigslust county; Mecklenburg-Westpomerania)
Description of flag: The ratio is 3:5. It is a vertical triband divided
into blue-yellow-blue with ratio 1:2:1. In the centre of the yellow stripe
is the coat of arms of the city.
Description of coat of arms: In a blue field is a golden, waxing crescent
having a face and accompanied by three golden 6-point stars in triangular
constellation.
The chief is a red mural crown, masoned black, having three red, embattled
torrets and a closed golden gate in gothic style.
Meaning: The crescent is visibly wane but heraldically waxing, which
is mentioned expressis verbis in the description given by the municipality.
During the phase of waxing the crops in the fields have been said to grow
better and enterprises have been said to succeed better. Therefore the
three stars are said to represent fortune, honor and fame. The coat of
arms was first mentioned in1667 and was adopted as coat of arms of Grabow
in 1991.
Source: city
website. I spotted this flag on 19 July 2007 in Hamburg-Moorfleet,
hoisted upon a small vessel named “IRENE”, which was registered in Grabow.
The flag perfectly matched the description given in www.kommunalflaggen.de
(Eintrag no.13054037).
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 26 Jul 2009
In heraldic term a star is a 'mullet' (or possibly 'estoille'),
that a vertical crescent is a "moon" and that if the horns are towards
the sinister (as these are) then the term to use is either "decrescent"
or "decrement". When a crescent moon is shown with its horns
towards the dexter it is termed increscent or increment, when towards the
sinister decrescent or decrement, when however, it is shown full (usually
with a face) the term used is per complement.
A crescent with a face is not unknown in European heraldry.
Christopher Southworth, 26 Jul 2009
CoA
3:5
image from city
website.
adopted 1991