Seeblatt

Seeblatt ([ˈzeː.blät], German for 'lake leaf', plural Seeblätter; Danish: søblad; West Frisian: pompeblêd; East Frisian: Pupkeblad) is the term for the stylized leaf of a water lily, used as a charge in heraldry.[1]

Seeblatt bendwise sinister
The natural water lily leaf

This charge is used in the heraldry of Germany, the Netherlands and Scandinavia, but not so much in France and Britain. Seeblätter feature prominently on the coat of arms of Denmark as well as on Danish coins.

In West Frisian, the term pompeblêd is used. The name is used to indicate the seven red lily leaf-shaped blades on the Frisian flag. The seven red pompeblêden (leaves of the yellow water lily and the European white waterlily) refer to the medieval Frisian 'sea districts': more or less autonomous regions along the Southern North Sea coast from the city of Alkmaar to the Weser River. There never have been exactly seven of these administrative units, the number of seven bears the suggestion of 'a lot'. Late mediaeval sources identify seven Frisian districts, though with different names. The most important regions were West Friesland, Westergo, Oostergo, Hunsingo, Fivelingo, Reiderland, Emsingo, Brokmerland, Harlingerland and Rüstringen (Jeverland and Butjadingen).

Examples

gollark: I change it lots.
gollark: Also, CPU usage is basically nonexistent, and RAM is mostly good too. I expect it's worse around the 5-minutely updates.
gollark: Okay, apparently all dragons in the hatchery are non-sick, which is good.
gollark: I haven't checked, but it runs fine on a cheap server with a 4-core Xeon and 4GB of RAM.
gollark: Yes.

See also

  • Flag of Friesland (province)
  • Heart (symbol)
  • Cardioid, a geometrical curve resembling the outline of a seeblatt

References

  1. Mistholme: Seeblatt, retrieved on 18 Feb. 2015
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