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Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
Keywords: roggel en neer |
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adopted 14 Jul 1992.
Granted 15 Sep 1992.
Neer is a former municipality in Limburg province, since 1991 part of
the new municipality of Roggel en Neer, a little east from Weert city.
Flag: three stripes per flydiagonal, proportioned 17:2:17 red - wavy
yellow against red and red against yellow - yellow.
adopted 30 Aug 1982 by municipal resolution.
"Neer" means down
The Neerbeek flows through Neer from southwest to northeast - the direction
shown on the flag.
Nickname: "Kuus" - pigs, held here, or people not caring overly
for cleanliness.
"Kwibussen" - foolish or daft people.
Source: Derkwillem Visser's "Gemeentevlaggen en Wapens Koninkrijk
der Nederlanden", 2001.
Groot Schimpnamenboek van Nederland, by Dirk van der Heide, 1998.
Jarig Bakker, 23 Apr 2005
Arms: or a Gothic church with a Gothic rose window over the entrance, and with a central spire with three windows and two small side-spires, all gules joined noir, every spire surmounted by a cross gules; in an inescutcheon or three posthorns gules armed argent, placed two and one.
The inescutcheon is the arms of Horn (no posthorns, but hunting horns),
because Neer is in the Land of Horn. Already in 1485 the Court of aldermen
showed this arms.
Jarig Bakker, 23 Apr 2005
Roggel is a former municipality in Limburg province, since 1991 part
of the new municipality of Roggel en Neer, a bit east of Weert city.
Flag: two stripes white-red with over all of 1/4 flagheight a yellow
cross bordered blue, with the vertical arm at 1/3 flaglength; in tophoist
a fork in the form of a horse-iron; in bottom-hoist a turned white horn.
adopted 18 Dec 1979 by municipal resolution.
The fork's handle in the form of a key refers to St. Peter, the main element of the municipal arms. (the fork maybe used for the harvesting of asparagus?) The hunting horn refers to the Land of Horn, to which Roggel belonged.
Nickname: "Kinderkes" - children, who go to church two by two.
"Puineschudders" - "Puin" is a weed, hard to kill. Puineschudders
are people who use a reek to fetch the weed out of the soil and then shake
it.
Source: Derkwillem Visser's "Gemeentevlaggen en Wapens Koninkrijk
der Nederlanden", 2001.
Groot Schimpnamenboek van Nederland, by Dirk van der Heide, 1998.
Jarig Bakker, 23 Apr 2005
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