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![[Sainte-Hélène-de-Bagot flag]](../images/c/ca-qcxhb.gif) image by 
Olivier Touzeau, 7 June 2020
 image by 
Olivier Touzeau, 7 June 2020See also:
Sainte-Hélène-de-Bagot (1,700 inhabitants, 71.4 km²)
Olivier Touzeau, 7 June 2020
White flag with coat of arms and name below (pictures taken in 2009 and 2011)
https://www.google.com/maps
Olivier Touzeau, 7 June 2020
"Per fess, 1a. Azure a ram issuant or, 1b. Azure a tree half-Canadian hemlock 
half-maple proper, 2. Azure a half-sun or charged with a plow argent and gules 
and surmounted by a bull's head sable and argent. The shield surmounted by a 
crown or. The shield supported by two branches made of two pale leaves vert 
separated by a fleur-delis argent.
Beneath the shield a scroll or inscribed 
with the motto "Respect, Liberté, Travail" in letters sable.
The ram 
nascent comes from the arms of Claude de Ramezay, whose descendant Hélène de 
Ramezay was once lord of Sainte-Hélène.
The mixed tree represents the main 
sources of income for the parish's founders: Canadian hemlock's bark, potash and 
sugar maple.
The sun is a source of energy for work and light for spirit. The 
plow and the bull represent Sainte-Hélène's main industries, agriculture and 
cattle-breeding.
The supporters recall the inhabitants' French origin and 
their belonging to the Quebec and Canada communities.
The golden crown 
represents the parish's patron saint, St. Helena.
http://www.saintehelenedebagot.com/municipalite/historique/ 
Municipal 
website
Claude de Ramezay (1659-1724), Governor of Trois-Rivières 
(1690-1699) and Montreal (1704-1714), served as interim Governor of 
Nouvelle-France from 1714 to 1716. He let build Castle Ramezay, one of 
Montreal's historical landmark.
Ramezay was the descendant of the Ramsay 
family, which probably emigrated from Scotland to Burgundy (France) in the late 
15th - early 16th century.
http://www.biographi.ca/fr/bio/ramezay_claude_de_2F.html 
Dictionnaire 
biographique du Canada, Vol. II (1701-1740)
The canting arms of Claude de 
Ramezay are featured on a legal document issued on 1 June 1701, which confirmed 
his nobility title, as "Azure a ram issuant or between four bendlets two gules 
and two or four stars or". This approximate description stirred up a controversy 
among Canadian heraldists, who did not agree on the exact location of the 
bendlets and stars. The modern version of the arms of Claude de Ramezay would be 
"Azure a ram issuant or between two bendlets gules and two mullets in bend all 
within two bendlets between two mullets in bend sinister or".
https://www.heraldicscienceheraldique.com/les-armoiries-de-claude-de-ramezay.html
Auguste Vachon. Les armoiries de Claude de Ramezay.
Ivan Sache, 
12 June 2020