Anonymous ID: a9d871 April 27, 2021, 10:45 a.m. No.13525212   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13525070

 

ty, anon. been posting that article for last day or two. think there's a gold mine to dig on in there, even if it rambles at points.

 

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Coat of Arms

 

Shield Argent, a panther rampant Azure tongued Gules.

 

Meaning:

Ingolstadt gained city rights in the13thcentury. The oldest known seals from the13thcentury displayed St. Maurice, patron saint of the local church. The saint was displayed alone on the first seal with prints since 1294 and on the second seal, known since 1314, he holds an inescutcheon, charged with the panther. Since 1340 the panther alone is displayed on seals and arms of the city. The origin of the panther is not known precisely. Perhaps the panther is derived from the seal and arms of the Niederalteich Convent, which had close relationships with the city in the13thcentury. Others say the arms had been granted after the battle of Gammelsdorf in1313,where Duke Ludwig IV of Upper Bavaria from the Wittelsbach kin defeated his opponent Friedrich the Fair from the Habsburg kin. Due to a mismatch of tinctures others say, the panther is taken from the arms of the Palatine-Counts of Ortenburg from the Spanheim kin, which had been an alternative coat of arms of the Wittelsbach kin.

 

Source: Stadler 1965, p.80

Santiago Dotor, 1 Feb 2002

 

and Klaus-Michael Schneider, 6 June 2019

 

https://www.crwflags.com/fotw/Flags/de-by-in.html

 

Bavaria coat of arms is also blue & white. (wikipedia)

 

A Rothschild-Wittelsbach connection is the Rothschild Prayer Book:

 

The contents of the book, which has extra mass texts and prayers beyond those usually found in a book of hours, contain distinctive elements that relate it to the Chartreuse des Dunes, near Bruges. By 1500 the printed book of hours had largely replaced manuscript ones, except for luxury books like this, which were restricted to the higher nobility and royalty. The manuscript belonged to the princely Wittelsbach family in the 16th century, and then to the library of the counts palatine in Heidelberg, leaving that collection before 1623. Its history is then unknown until it reappeared in the collection of the Viennese branch of the Rothschild family in the late 19th century

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rothschild_Prayerbook