Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
Keywords: waterland | swan |
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Shipmate Flagchart : http://www.flagchart.net
adoption date: unknown
Granted 30 Jul 1993
Three horizontal stripes, red, white, blue. In the centre of the white
stripe is a square with a white bird sitting on a green base, with blue
"sky" behind it. Around three sides of the flag (all except hoist) are
three borders of red-white-blue, red at top and towards the fly.
(Source: Dutch atlas made by Delisle in 1739)
James Dignan, 14 Nov 1996
Most famous village (vexillologically speaking) is Broek in Waterland,
the flag of which is shown on many old flag-charts.
Broek in Waterland was also known as "Scheteldoecxhaven", because
sailors at sea could sea a mass of white diapers behind the harbour (scheteldoeck
= s***-kerchief)
Sierksma's Nederlands Vlaggenboek, 1962 [sie62]
has this:
"Three equally wide stripes of red, white and blue, with on the white
stripe a divided field of green and blue (or: blue and green), of which
the lowest has wavy lines, while in the top a white swan is swimming, the
whole border with three stripes red-white-blue.
This was the flag of the Hoogheemraadschap (polderboard) Waterland,
a continuation of the Baljuwschap (bailiffship) Waterland in its greatest
extension. The flag can be found in at least 19 old sources, and there
are quite a few variations. It was mentioned as "Waterland flag", and later
incorrectly "corrected" to "Broek in Waterland flag".
The flag has been giffed by Jaume Ollé after Steenbergen (1870) in two variations. One doesn't fit the description of Sierksma, while the other has the swan swimming towards the fly, while Sierksma has it towards the hoist. I have slightly changed Jaume's gif.
I have just sent this to the Benevex-mailing list, and at Hans van Heijningen's
suggestion I've changed the light blue color of the water the swan is swimming
to the same shade of the other blue color. And Gerard Kuipers sent me a
scan of a page of the book of Derkwillem Visser's "Gemeente vlaggen
en wapens van Nederland", which has:
"C. 1858 there was already a flag for the town or municipality of Waterland.
In a famous flagbook of M. A. Le Gras it reads: Pavillon de la Ville
de Waterland." - note that this can be interpreted as blue sky
and green sea...
"Description of the old "Hoogheemraadschap Waterland" flag: nine stripes
in proportions 1:1:1:3:3:3:1:1:1 in the colors red-white-blue, etc., and
on the central stripe a rectangle green-blue, wavy , and in green a white
swimming swan; along the fly small stripes red-white-blue.
Decided by the board of directors of the Hoogheemraadschap; date unknown."
That image is too dim to discern the swan. However it appears that the field is c. 1/5 of the white field, at 2/5 of that field.
Incidently: the incorrect "correction" was probably inspired by the
non-existence of a city or municipality by the name of Waterland, while
Broek in Waterland was existing, although hardly a town (and may it remain
the pleasant neat village it is right now!).
Jarig Bakker, 6 May 2003