Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
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image by Michael B.Simakov, 11 May 2010
adopted 27 Dec 2000
This design is remarkably similar to one of the famous Benderia Prutenorum,
the captured teutonic banners described by Jan Duglosz - what is the factual
connection?
António Martins-Tuválkin, 31 Mar 2002
Here is the official law of Kwidzyn (PL) County Flag.
"Council of Kwidzyn County decided on Dec.27, 2000 that: the flag of
Kwidzyn County is of rectangular shape in the proportions (of length to
width) 5:3, of red color, on which the eagle of St.John the Baptist (armorial
eagle of Kwidzyn County) is seen, placed between two gold and vertical
stripes."
The eagle of St.John the Baptist is a fixture in Kwidzyn's arms for
over 700 years, so that's why António found it co-related to the symbols
of the 1410 Battle of Grunwald (Tannenbaum) era.
Jens Pattke, 31 Mar 2002, translated by Chrystian Kretowicz.
On the page devoted to Kwidzyn county (Poland) we can see description
of the flag:
"... the eagle of St.John the Baptist (armorial eagle of Kwidzyn County)
is seen, placed between two gold and vertical stripes."
So I have changed the image of the flag (the source is pl.wikipedia).
Michael B.Simakov, 11 May 2010
Actually, the symbol of the eagle with halo is the eagle of Saint John
the Evangelist, one of the four symbols from the prophesy of Ezekiel (1:10),
which are said to represent the four Gospels. Luke is the face of
a man or angel, John is the face of an eagle, Mark is the face of a lion
and Matthew is the face of a bull.
John Udics, 11 May 2010