Coat of arms of Hamburg

Coat of arms of Hamburg
Versions

Lesser coat of arms of Hamburg

Admiralty coat of arms of Hamburg
Details
Armiger Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg
Crest Three peacock feathers and six banners of the arms and a mantling Argent and Gules.
Escutcheon Gules, a castle triple-turreted Argent.
Supporters Two Lions rampant reguardant Or, langued Gules.
Compartment A postament Or
Other elements A cross Argent atop the central turret, a six-rayed mullet Argent above each outer turret.
Use The greater arms may only be used by the government of Hamburg.

The coat of arms of the German state and city of Hamburg is a kind of a national emblem. The coat of arms and the flags are regulated by the constitution of Hamburg and law. The colors of Hamburg are white and red. One of the oldest versions of the castle is found on a seal in 1245.

Description

All coat of arms show a castle with three towers. The middle tower shows a cross on top. It is believed that the so-called Marian stars on top of the two side-towers and the cross recalls the fact that Hamburg used to be an archbishopric.[1] The towers and the walls with their pinnacles and the closed gate symbolized the determination of the town to defend itself.[2]

Greater Coat of Arms

The Greater Coat of Arms shows the castle, the stars and the church in silver on red ground with two lions standing on a compartment. The top is like the middle coat of arms with a helmet with crest including three peacock feathers and six banners of the arms and a mantling. This coat of arms is protected and only allowed to be used by the Senat and the Diet of Hamburg.[1]

Admiralty Coat of Arms of Hamburg

The Admiralty Coat of Arms of Hamburg is used for official ships of Hamburg.[1]

History

First known seal of 1241 (Replica)

The oldest coat of arms of Hamburg has been retained on city seals of the 12th and 13th centuries. During the centuries the towers, walls, pinnacles and symbols of the coat of arms of Hamburg changed several times, without changing in character. The central castle was shown with opened doors sometimes with closed doors and with a portcullis.[1]

The colors of version of the lesser arms of 2008 are declared by an act of law of the Senate of Hamburg on 14 May 1752.[1] Before the tincture was a red castle on white ground.[3] Since 1952, the coat of arms and the flags are regulated by the constitution of Hamburg. The colors of Hamburg are white and red.[4] In general the use of city seals with the coat of arms was a privilege of the City Council. The city elders had to watch its maintenance. Even now the coat of arms is protected and can only be used under specific circumstances.

Greater Coat of Arms

The coat of arms exists since the 16th century.[1]

Admiralty Coat of Arms of Hamburg

In 1623, a Admiralitätskollegium (lit. admiralty council) was established to oversee the law of sea and the security of shipping, as a port authority.[5] The coat of arms exists since 1642.[1] In 1811 abandoned during the French occupation, the admiralty council was officially disestablished in 1814, and succeeded as a court instance by the Handelsgericht (trade court) and for administrative purposes by the port and shipping deputation (German title: Schifffahrts- und Hafendeputation).[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Flaggen, Wappen und Logos]" (in German). Senatskanzlei. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
  2. "Als sich das Tor zur Welt öffnete" [As the gate to the world opened] (PDF) (in German). Hamburger Abendblatt. 2001-08-21. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  3. Hans Wilhelm Eckhardt (2005). "Wappen, Hamburg". In Kopitsch, Franklin; Tilgner, Daniel. Hamburg Lexikon (in German) (3 ed.). Ellert&Richter. p. 518. ISBN 3-8319-0179-1.
  4. Constitution of Hamburg (Article 5) (German)
    Article 5
    (1) The colours are white-red.
    (2) The coat of arms shows on a red escutcheon a white castle with three towers and a closed gate.
    (3) The flag shows the white castle of the coat of arms on a red field.
    (4) The law determines the details about the flag and the arms.
  5. 1 2 Klaus-Joachim Lorenzen-Schmidt (2005). "Admiralität". In Kopitsch, Franklin; Tilgner, Daniel. Hamburg Lexikon (in German) (3 ed.). Ellert&Richter. p. 518. ISBN 3-8319-0179-1.

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