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Last modified: 2017-11-11 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: saxe-meiningen |
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20:27 | 5 m × 6.75 m;image
by Theo van der Zalm and Santiago Dotor
Flag adopted ca. 1826, abolished 1918
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Ströhl 1897 shows a standard (5 m × 6.75 m) with all the quarters of the shield from the greater arms of the duchy. Around the crowned shield of Saxony proper are arranged:
Ströhl 1897 claims this standard was
the largest of all the contemporary German sovereigns standards at 5 m
× 6.75 m. It gives the dimensions of the armorial canton as 3.86 m × 3.35
m. The first four rows of quarters measure 3.86 × 4/6 = 2.573... m high,
so they do not match the height of the top (green) stripe (2.5 m).
Santiago Dotor, 4 July 2002
Neubecker 1933 gives also a 'lesser standard'
(Kleine Herzogsstandarte) four stripes of green and white with in
the canton the ancient arms of the duchie of (Upper) Saxony, also used
by the other branches of the house of Wettin in Thuringia, blazon:
Barry of ten Sable and Or, a crancelin ('Rautenkranz') bendwise Vert.
Theo van der Zalm, 15 June 2001
Neubecker 1933 shows the crancelin (Rautenkranz)
on the canton as a curved one. This standard is very similar to the late
19th century standard of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha,
differing basically in the arrangement of the stripes on the Saxon armorial
canton, which starts with a yellow one in the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha one, following
the Duke's personal arms, but unlike all other contemporary Saxon arms
and flags which showed the black stripe first. Also the ratio appears to
be different (ca. 1:2 for the Saxe-Meiningen one, ca. 5:7 for the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
one). Anyway there was possibly no opportunity for confusion, since the
lesser standard of the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen was probably adopted after
Duke Charles Edward of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha adopted a new
one (a square banner of the Saxon arms with a canton showing his arms
as British prince) in 1900 or 1902.
Santiago Dotor, 4 July 2002
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