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Donkerbroek (The Netherlands)

Ooststellingwerf municipality, Fryslân province

Last modified: 2003-09-27 by jarig bakker
Keywords: donkerbroek | griffin |
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[Donkerbroek villageflag] by Jarig Bakker, 26 Sep 2003
Design: P. Bultsma See also:

Donkerbroek village

Donkerbroek (meaning: dark brook) is a village in Ooststellingwerf municipality in Fryslân province, with (1958) 1946; (1974) 1582 inhabitants, with the small hamlets of Petersburg, Moskou, Leidijk, Het Hogezand, and Het Koeland. Although Ooststellingwerf has its own dialect (closely related to Low German), 86 % of the Donkerbroekers speak Frisian. The little industry of the dairy-factory and the Artificial Insemination station have been dissolved, while also the re-allotment did not promote a population-explosion.
Nickname: "Takkemigers" (branch-handwashing) - Donkerbroek is in a forested environment, and the inhabitants were known to do what they had to do in the forest.
CoA: in green a gold chevron, with lefttop a silver ramshead, and in base a square fortress of gold, surrounding a green field; the plan of the fortress is parallel to shield-top; a border of counter-ermine and a free quarter of silver, on which a red griffin facing sinister; between the feet a red ball, on which a sixpointed golden star.
Flag: Three stripes of green and yellow, proportinaed 2:1:2, with a black hoisttriangle, charged with a red griffin.
The name Donkerbroek means: dark marsh or mound in a marsh. The division of the shield points at that. Counter-ermine represents dark marsh, with the white cotton-grass, which grew on it. The green field and the ram's head symbolize the agricultural character of the village. The ram's head also symbolizes the old dike, named the "Schaopedrift". That dike does still exist, which in olden times ran through heatherfields. The yellow chevron symbolizes the old military road. The village was built
on both sides of it. The fortress (schans, schaan in Stellingwerfs) is the Breebargschans which was at the end of the 16th century built by Ús Heit (Prince Willem Lodewijk) to protect us form the Spaniards in Grins.
The relationship with the municipality is represented by the canton with the griffin.
The flag is a simplification of the arms. The griffin shows that Donkerbroek is an Ooststellingwerf village, even though it is on the
wrong side of the mighty Kuinder river.
Design: P. Bultsma
Source: Genealogysk Jierboekje 1980.
Encyclopedie van Friesland, 1958.
Jarig Bakker, 20 Sep 2003

This reminded me of a flag joke I am being told by my friend every time we drink beer and the conversation topic comes to flags (and  believe me, flags come often to be recounted of when I drink beer, or otherwise :-)
It is a story about the Stellingwerf people and their well known good heartetness. They even live their mothers-in-law, even so that they have put one on their flag!
Zeljko Heimer, 20 Sep 2003

Griffins (or gryphons) have the front parts of an eagle and the hind parts of a lion, with all feet matching the eagle's feet.. These are almost always found winged. In Britain, however, the term "male griffin" is used for a wingless griffin which looks similar to the European heraldic "panther". In both cases the body is feathered on the chest and furred on the back and tail.
PS - by descent, my de facto mother in law *is* a griffin (that was her mother's maiden name!)
James Dignan, 21 Sep 2003

I alerted the Fire Brigade before showing this to my wife (who of course is my daughter's husband's mother-in-law), but she just smiled and asked where the barbeque was.
David Prothero, 21 Sep 2003

I tried this on my mother-in-law over dinner this evening, and unfortunately (if you will excuse the English phrase), 'it went down like a lead balloon' with her (although I thought that it was very funny and my wife was suitably amused).
Christopher Southworth, 21 Sep 2003

Therefore the Russians not only copied the Dutch flag, they also borrowed Friesian village names for their cities :-)
The white cotton-grass is of course not cotton plant (unless the Americans borrowed it and acclimatized it in Louisiana) but a member of the genus Eriophorum, family Cyperaceae (sedges). The name Eriophorum means in Ancient Greek "wool-bearing". These plants are called in French "linaigrette" or "jonc à coton" (cotton sedge). There are several European species of Eriophorum, all of them living in marshes and peat bogs. You may want to find a new one somewhere in Friesland, so that Marcus Schmöger could describe it properly and publish it under the name "Eriophorum bakkeri".
Ivan Sache, 21 Sep 2003

I went to the original flagchart I scanned for the Shipmate image of the Ooststellingwerf flag. The top half of the griffin is of an eagle, the bottom half of a lion; the wings are feathered, not scaled.
Yesterday a huge pile of books fell down, and out popped "De Grijpvogel", a collection of stories from the Stellingwerven. There is a description of the griffin:
"The upperpart of the body is of an eagle, the lower part of a lion. Before the grifin came to the Stellingwerven the lower part of the body was of a bull. It is known for its sagacity, power, judgment, care, and insight. The eagle's brain is paired to lion's might. It is stronger than most other animals, except for the lion and the elephant. Its colors are beautiful: On its back are jet-black feathers. Its breast is red. It has white feathers and glowing blue neck-feathers. Its eyes are fiery coals. It lives invisisible in lindentrees. It is the child of the Teutonic goddess Frya. It lives in the lindentree, because there of old law was administered.
Every first Friday of the month it leaves the lindentree, spreads its mighty wings and flies over all the Stellingwerf lands. Nothing escapes his sharp eyes. In the old days he was more active: during every courtsession he flew over the place where judgment took place, and that is why in the CoA of Oost- and Weststellingwerf the seal of the wise judge Solomon was placed under his body: a double silver triangle in a red ball. It is said that he can influence the wheather, to ward of calamities, such as the invasion of Bomm'n Berend in 1673.

Here is again the Donkerbroek flag - long may the griffin protect this village and the Stellingwerven! (and it certainly doesn't
look like my mother-in-law!).
Jarig Bakker, 26 Sep 2003


Donkerbroek CoA

[Donkerbroek CoA]  from Genealogysk Jierboekje 1980.