FOTW beschäftigt sich mit der Wissenschaft der Vexillologie (Flaggenkunde).
Alle auf dieser Website dargebotenen Abbildungen dienen ausschließlich der Informationsvermittlung im Sinne der Flaggenkunde.
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Last modified: 2023-03-11 by martin karner
Keywords: arbon | thurgau |
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In white on a green mountain a red tree with crossed main branches and four leaves; then in a green
nest two young and standing an old bird, a fourth falls; all grey (here depicted in black, see picture from the townhall). In the white base are two
blue fish swimming to the left.
The canting flag/coat of arms represents the "happy tree" (Latin: Arbor Felix, from the Roman
settlement with this name) on the shore of Lake Constance.
The Arbon coat of arms was first documented in the 14th century and has been supplemented over the
centuries with fish. There has been much speculation about the number of fish and the falling young bird,
but the significance of these elements has not been conclusively clarified. The tree could be a linden
tree, the birds could be hawks.
At a time in between, a simpler version of the flag/coat of arms was in use (since late 1950s), which was published in 1960 in the book "Die Gemeindewappen des Kantons Thurgau", until the old version was reactivated by the city council in 2001.
In red a white ash leaf.
The name Frasnacht goes back to the time when the Romansh language was predominant in the region.
It comes from the Latin fraxinetum (ash wood), which makes the emblem canting.
The colours refer to the bishop of Constance.
Since 1998 Frasnacht has been part of Arbon commune.
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