About the town crest
The small town of Zdar was constructed immediately after the foundation of the
monastery in 1252. It used the emblems from the crest of the Lords of Lichtenburk
and of Lipe on its seal and then also in its coat-of-arms. These emblems were two
crossed, rough-hewn trunks with four knots and a floating carp turned to the
right above it. The rough-hewn were originally painted black on a gold coat-of-arms.
When Cardinal Frantisek of Dietrichstein gave Zdar tows status with a document
dated 11th June 1607, he improved this crest, with patritioned coat-of-arms with a diagonally divided bottom half. He put six white or
silver “pyramides“ in a red field into the bottom right section, representing the coat-of-arms of the
parish church in Olomouc. Then there was the original crest of
the black, crossed, rough-hewn trunks in gold (the carp was omitted) in the
bottom left section. The top half of the coat-of-arms was diagonally divided into
a gold red background. Two wine-knives, iron in colour, with golden handles and
their edges turned up and out,
were placed below and a golden royal crown (the coat-of-arms of the Lords of Dietrichstein).
The sign was improved again nearly one hundered years later by Emperor
Leopold I in a document dated 21st May 1704, confirming the town's privileges
and also improving the town's seal. The crest was improved by the Moravian Regional
Presidency on 8th July 1706 and Emperor Josef I, confirmed this in a special
document on 22nd February 1707. The crest is composed of a quartered coat-of-arms in
the right half of which there is the original design from 1607 with the
additing of the coat-of-arms of the abbot of the monastery of Zdar on the left
side.

Contact
Zizkova 227/1, 591 31 Zdar nad Sazavou
telephone 566 688 111, fax: 566 621 012
e-mail meu@zdarns.cz hours of attendance
Monday, Wednesday from 8am till 5pm
Tuesday, Thursday, Friday from 8am till 2.30pm
6,5 °C

