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Hornstein (Burgenland, Austria)

Last modified: 2026-07-11 by martin karner
Keywords: hornstein |
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image by Martin Karner, 10 July 2026

photo source

Croatian: Vorištan; Hungarian: Szarvkő

The official colours are red-white-red. While the white stripe covers 50 percent of the flag width, the two red stripes cover each 25 percent. The municipal council officially established these colours on 31 January 1990 (information from the municipal administration; see also model flag, provided by the municipal administration).
Beside these official flags there are also used incorrect versions with red-white (photo) and three equal red-white-red stripes (photo | presumption: they were ordered erroneously and are being used anyway for reasons of economy).
Martin Karner, 10 July 2026


See also:


Coat of Arms


(source)

Gules issuant from a mount Sable a tower embattled ajouré with (raised) portcullis Argent masoned of the Second and in chief a bugle horn of the Third.
Christopher Southworth

The arms are canting with the bugle horn.
The tower on the coat of arms stands for the Hornstein castle from the 14th century, of which only ruins remain today (photo source). Due to its exceptionally strategic location at the western end of the Leitha Mountains, where the important Vienna–Ödenburg (Sopron) road ran, Hornstein soon became a crucial pillar of Hungarian border defense. The road via Hornstein was significant because, in the Middle Ages, the route of substantial Levantine trade from Venice to Vienna, due to the difficult terrain, did not go over the Semmering Pass, but instead followed the old Roman road via Steinamanger (Szombathely) and Güns to Ödenburg. From there, a branch road led via Hornstein and Wimpassing to Vienna.
(Hornstein castle: then and now, German)
Martin Karner, 10 July 2026


750 Years Jubilee Flag (2021)


(picture)