Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
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Do you mean (French) Kachoubes? It is said that their flag is yellow
and black in two strips, but: is there any serious source for it? And:
are there still many Kachoubes in Poland?
Pascal Vagnat, 30 July 1999
From the "Flag of Aspirant Peoples" chart: Kashubia (Kashubians) - North Poland. Horizontal black-yellow.
Kashubia [Kaszuby] is a hilly region (the "Kachubian Swiss") located in the provinces of Gdansk and Slupsk. "Kashubian is the most differentiated dialectal form of Polish, and is considered in Poland as a regional language, now at risk of extinction." Source: Encyclopaedia Universalis CD-ROM)
The German writer Günter Grass has popularized the Kashubians and their
language in his so-called "Dantzig trilogy" (Die Blechtrommel / Maus und
Katz / Die Hundejahren). See also the movie "Die Blechtrommel" directed
by V. Schloendorff, from Grasś book (and after having seen it, you will
NEVER be able to eat eels :-)
Ivan Sache, 1 Aug 1999
For a long time Kashubians have lived in a small strip from North to
South, west of Gdańsk in marshy lands. c.1900 there were about 56.000 Kashubians,
most of whom had been 'germanized' (assimilated with Germans) in the two
previous centuries. Before 1945 there were c. 140.000 Kashubians and Slowinzen
(Kashubians with a different vernacular) and at present they are considered
a minority in Poland (No data available). Their customs had already nearly
vanished in 1900.
Jarig Bakker, 28 Dec 2000
This is Flage Zrzeszenia Kaszubsko-Pomorskiego (flag of the Kashubian-Pomeranian
Society) - a yellow field with a Coat of Arms bordered black with a yellow field
in which a crowned griffin. Below the Coat of Arms is written in black: KASZËBË.
Jarig Bakker, 28 Dec 2000
This is the Banner of Arms of the Kashubians.
Jarig Bakker, 12 Oct 2001