Coal Weave
Coal Weave
Coat of Arms depicts a brown bear with a right front paw, over the bears three black hunting horns (trumpets) in silver hardware, in a triskelion arrangement.
The coat comes from John Casimir from 1651, is mentioned in the privileges of the weed granted to the city by the ruler. Three trumpets in the system in the mite come from Trąby, ancestral coat of the long-standing owners of Wewrowa - Radziwiłł. The coat was used until the partition of Poland; During the partitions, the emblem was replaced by the national emblem, as in other Polish cities.
The coat of arms was returned to the Second Polish Republic. In the 1930s, the Wawer Township issued stamps of stamp duty with the wrong image of the Coat of Arms - the bear had his left hand lifted instead of the right. This error was also duplicated in the arms and other publications, among others in the work "Polish cities in the millennium."
The pattern of the present Coat of Arms, consistent with the historical tradition, was established by the City Council by Resolution XVII / 118/95 of November 15, 1995. Bibliography
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