
Last modified: 2025-08-30 by shreyas tallamraju
Keywords: stange | hedmark | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[Flag of Stange]](../images/n/no-04-17.gif) image by  
Tomislav Šipek, 14 February 2017
 
image by  
Tomislav Šipek, 14 February 2017
See also:
Here is flag and coat of arms of Stange. Administrative center is Stangebyen.
Source: 
https://lovdata.no/dokument/OV/forskrift/1986-06-20-1368?q=flagg
Tomislav Šipek, 29 December 2015
![[COA of Stange]](../images/n/no)04-17.gif) image by Tomislav Šipek, 29 December 2015
image by Tomislav Šipek, 29 December 2015
Blazon: I grønt en sølv ard. In English: Vert a plough argent. 
Approved by the royal resolution o f 20 June 1986 after a drawing by Arne 
Løvstad. [c2j87]
The municipal web site 
http://www.stange.kommune.no/category8192.html recounts that the initiative 
started in 1984 and in 1985 the municipal administration sent invitation to 
local history society, institutions and schools to deliver proposals for design. 
There was little response, but three proposals were received and forwarded to 
the State Archives for opinion. None was good enough to be approved. However, 
one of them, made by Gyda Lahlums, was a stylized representation of 
Thorbjørnsen's* painting "Ploughman" that offered a detail that could have been 
used heraldically - namely the plough.
(* I was unable to find out who the painter was, he is supposedly known enough 
for Norwegian reader to be named simply by surname, but a Wikipedia search for 
it gives only a footballer.)
Anyway, at the same time, it was known that the artist Arne Løvstad from Oslo - 
originally from Hedmark - had studied the plough motive for municipal coat of 
arms that the National Archives had no objections to his proposal. Therefore the 
municipal secretary for culture Terje Moshaug got reserved the subject through a 
letter from the National Archives, and his suggestion to choose plough in that 
design was adopted in the municipal council meeting on 16 October 1985. A 
Hedmark plough is a motive that could have been perceived by the local 
inhabitants without further explanation.
Željko Heimer, 01 January 2016