Tarascon (Bouches-du-Rhône): Difference between revisions

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m (Text replacement - " {{media}} Literature : Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr" to " '''Literature''': Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr {{media}} ")
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{{fr}}
{| class="wikitable"
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|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}.jpg|center|350 px|alt=Blason de {{PAGENAME}}/Arms (crest) of {{PAGENAME}}]]
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'''Country''' : France [[File:france-flag.gif|60 px|right]]<br><br><br>
'''Département''' : [[Bouches-du-Rhône]][[File:Bouches-du-Rhône.jpg|60 px|right]]


''' {{uc:{{PAGENAME}}}} '''
{{#display_map:43.8047,4.6586|width=250|height=250|zoom=7}}
 
|}
Département : [[Bouches-du-Rhône]]
 
[[File:{{PAGENAME}}.jpg|center|300 px|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]]


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|'''French'''
|'''French'''
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| Coupé: au 1er de gueules au château donjonné de trois tourelles d'argent, ouvert (du champ), ajouré et maçonné de sable, posé sur la partition , au 2e d'azur à la tarasque d'or avalant un homme d'argent.
Coupé: au 1er de gueules au château donjonné de trois tourelles d'argent, ouvert (du champ), ajouré et maçonné de sable, posé sur la partition , au 2e d'azur à la tarasque d'or avalant un homme d'argent.
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|'''English'''  
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According to the legend the king of Nerluc had attacked the Tarasque with knights and catapults to no avail. But Saint Martha found the beast and charmed it with hymns and prayers, and led back the tamed Tarasque to the nearby city. The people, terrified by the monster, attacked it, but the monster offered no resistance and died there. Martha then preached to the people and converted many of them to Christianity. Sorry for what they had done to the tamed monster, the newly Christianized townspeople changed the town's name to Tarascon.
According to the legend the king of Nerluc had attacked the Tarasque with knights and catapults to no avail. But Saint Martha found the beast and charmed it with hymns and prayers, and led back the tamed Tarasque to the nearby city. The people, terrified by the monster, attacked it, but the monster offered no resistance and died there. Martha then preached to the people and converted many of them to Christianity. Sorry for what they had done to the tamed monster, the newly Christianized townspeople changed the town's name to Tarascon.


{|align="center"
<gallery widths=250px heights=200px perrow=0>
|align="center"|[[File:{{PAGENAME}}-tr.jpg|center|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>The arms in Traversier (1842)
File:Tarascon1.jpg|The tarasque in the town
|align="center"|[[File:Tarascon.frba.jpg|250 px|center|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]]  <br/>The arms on a postcard by [[Blasons adhésif (Villes et Provinces de France)|Kroma]]
File:Tarascon (Bouches-du-Rhône)-tr.jpg|alt=Blason de Tarascon/Arms (crest) of Tarascon|The arms in Traversier (1842)
|-
File:Tarascon1895.jpg|alt=Blason de Tarascon/Arms (crest) of Tarascon|The arms in a publication from 1895
|align="center"|[[File:Tarascon1.hagfr.jpg|center|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]]  <br/>The arms in the  [[Café Sanka : La France Héraldique|Café Sanka album]] +/- 1932  
File:Tarascon1.hagfr.jpg|alt=Blason de Tarascon/Arms (crest) of Tarascon|The arms in the  [[Café Sanka : La France Héraldique|Café Sanka album]] +/- 1932  
|align="center"|[[File:Tarascon1.jpg|250 px|center|Blason de {{PAGENAME}}]] <br/>The tarasque in the town
File:Tarascon.frba.jpg|alt=Blason de Tarascon/Arms (crest) of Tarascon|The arms on a postcard by [[Blasons adhésif (Villes et Provinces de France)|Kroma]]
|}
</gallery>


[[Civic Heraldry Literature - France|'''Literature''']]: Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr
[[Civic Heraldry Literature - France|'''Literature''']]: Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr; legend and image of statue from Wikipedia


{{fr1}}
{{media}}
{{media}}
; legend and image of statue from Wikipedia


[[Category:French Municipalities T]]
[[Category:French Municipalities T]]
[[Category:Bouches-du-Rhône]]
[[Category:Bouches-du-Rhône]]

Revision as of 13:32, 10 December 2022

Blason de Tarascon (Bouches-du-Rhône)/Arms (crest) of Tarascon (Bouches-du-Rhône)
Country : France
France-flag.gif



Département : Bouches-du-Rhône
Bouches-du-Rhône.jpg
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Official blazon
French Coupé: au 1er de gueules au château donjonné de trois tourelles d'argent, ouvert (du champ), ajouré et maçonné de sable, posé sur la partition , au 2e d'azur à la tarasque d'or avalant un homme d'argent.
English (Bouches-du-Rhône) No blazon/translation known. Please click here to send your (heraldic !) blazon or translation

Origin/meaning

The arms show in the lower half a Tarasque, a fearsome legendary dragon-like mythological hybrid from the Provence, tamed in a story about Saint Martha. The legend of the Tarasque is reported in several sources, but especially in the story of St. Martha in the Golden Legend.[2] The creature inhabited the area of Nerluc in Provence, France, and devastated the landscape far and wide. The Tarasque was a sort of dragon with a lion's head, six short legs like a bear's, an ox-like body covered with a turtle shell, and a scaly tail that ended in a scorpion's sting. He hid in the river where he took the life of all passers-by and submerged vessels.

According to the legend the king of Nerluc had attacked the Tarasque with knights and catapults to no avail. But Saint Martha found the beast and charmed it with hymns and prayers, and led back the tamed Tarasque to the nearby city. The people, terrified by the monster, attacked it, but the monster offered no resistance and died there. Martha then preached to the people and converted many of them to Christianity. Sorry for what they had done to the tamed monster, the newly Christianized townspeople changed the town's name to Tarascon.

Literature: Image from http://www.armorialdefrance.fr; legend and image of statue from Wikipedia

Template:Fr1


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