Trammel hook

The boiler hook and the Kesselring found in heraldry as common figures in the blazon or field their place as a crest or herald image. The boiler pliers is used in heraldry. For fiddling with the hot boiler, it was much used utensils. Many other names are used for these three equipment depending on the region. The boiler hook is also called boiler iron, Ketelhaken, Hal or Hahl ( Ndl Haal ). It was a device for suspending the boiler in an open furnace, especially in large fireplaces or open fire. Other terms for the same facts: Hähl, Haul, Pott hollow. He has, as always shown in a coat of arms, teeth. These are used for adjustability. Then drink vessel or the boiler is called Rinken ring, which is a handle to the vessel. An occupied with boiler Rinken cross is called Church clasp. The forceps was used for lifting the boiler. The term gorgeous as the name of Kesselring could not be found in the literature, although it is used in descriptions of Arms ( Blazon ). The tripod cooking pot is often known Grapen.

The boiler hook as a symbol

In a farmhouse, the hearth was the focal point of the building. But from here went out of heat. Here was boiled and fried.

For cooking you needed the boiler hooks. He belonged in earlier centuries, the equipment of the hearth fire. You could use the boiler hook introduce the pot or the kettle closer to the fire or away from it. When the farmer returned from field work, he needed to say only the farmer's wife, "Put ' times a tooth! " Then the cooking or heating process was through the lowering of the pot accelerated. So the proverbial saying arose.

The boiler hook was right historically its meaning. The transition of a house from one owner to another, the landlord took off the kettle hook and gave it to the buyer in the hand. Then he poured out the fire.

Partly it was the custom that the young farmer gave his bride a magnificently crafted Hahl and her symbolically entrusted the authority over kitchen and stove.

Representation - Boiler hook on the emblem of places and families

In heraldry, the boiler hooks appear in different forms.

In the simplest variant, only a part of the overall boiler hook, namely a flat, serrated metal rod, called the " rack ", which usually ends in a rounded, circular or semi-circular loop at the upper end and the lower end appears in a round bent hooks or something comparable. They appear mainly in one- or three- number, possibly components following large castle chimneys in which sometimes side by side hung three racks on a rack.

  • Rack of boiler hook

Speth of Zwiesel

In Gold side by side three fallen black shell hook ( " Kräuel " or " Craile " ) Crailsheim

Crossed helical boiler hook ( Kräuel ) and rafter hook ( Schwäbisch Hall )

Two faces away, toppled racks ( Bieselsberg )

Gelre

Crechem

A different form of the hook is adjacent to the boiler heraldic rack additionally a flat iron, which is connected to the rack via metal tracks. The upper rail is usually used to guide the lower to stop, by setting it a notch of the rack.

  • Alvesse ( Edemissen ) right boiler hook
  • Leveste left a kettle hook
  • Marxen left a kettle hook
  • Hörden am Harz a boiler hook
  • Rechtenfleth at Bremen
  • Schwalmtal (Hessen) upper left, the boiler hook
  • Römstedt bottom right boiler hook

Samtgemeinde Hemmoor

Gustedt

Three ( 2:1) black shell hook Deersheim

Brandlecht ( nobility ), striking the lower hooks are curved in the same direction

Memorial Stone " 800 years Sierße " with boiler hook Arms

Besides the above mentioned forms of boiler hook knows the heraldry more, partially complex.

Bent boiler hook Belém in Osnabrück

Altengeseke

Deferred maintenance, open boiler hook Barons of Twickel

Counts of Zieten

  • More coat of arms with kettle hook without picture in the arms of places: Borstel in Achim, Sierße in the community Vechelde the district of Peine.
  • In the arms of families of Duhn, pits black kettle hook, Hadeln, by Knuth (Mecklenburg and Denmark), Waldvogel, of Zerssen.

Representation - Similar symbols in the emblem of places

  • Kesselring ( Rinke )

Korntal in Ludwigsburg

Nufringen in Böblingen

Östringen between Karlsruhe and Heidelberg

Wimsheim in Pforzheim

Kesselring polninschen Ancestral Arms Nowina

  • Church clasp ( Rinke Cross)

Ötlingen ( Kirchheim unter Teck )

Gundelsheim

Affoltern (district)

Kappel am Albis

  • Boiler pliers (French: paire de tenailles de chaudron; engl: pair of tongs for the kettle. ) Is in the heraldry ostensibly a common figure.

The boiler forceps is a device for lifting a kettle from the fire:

"Boiler pliers (Plate XXVII. Figure 82 ) is an instrument by means of which one raises the glowing become boiler from the fire. "

Maximilian Gritzner and Walter Leonhard call and show in their writings the subject and Gert Oswald points out that the boiler pliers

" ( ..) As a coat of arms often in the northern German coats of arms found "

To what extent this might present a misinterpretation regarding the subject, more in-depth research must demonstrate. In fact, the term " boiler pliers " in German is rare. Neither they will be listed in Grimm's dictionary nor in other leading encyclopedias or dictionaries. Coat of arms, the show according to the relevant literature supposedly a boiler tongs, place partly represents a very different form of pliers (see the section below).

  • Demarcation

The tank gun is confused in some sources with a "tree pliers," as used in forestry. The latter appears for example in some northern European coats of arms or crest in from regions that operate intensive forestry.

  • Tree Pliers

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