Last modified: 2025-07-26 by martin karner
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Argent a Wyvern rampant Vert armed of the First and langued Gules St Beat Proper habited Sable with nimbus
and book leaves Or bound Gules and holding in his dexter hand a raised stick Sable.
(The basic difference in heraldry between a "wyvern" and an ordinary "dragon", is that a dragon
has four feet whilst a wyvern has only two, but the difference is often (sometimes officially) ignored.)
Christopher Southworth
This is Saint Beat who is fighting a dragon on the canting flag of Beatenberg.
Pascal Gross, 19 February 2002
Beatus of Lungern (d. ca. 112), a hermit who lived and died in a cave on Mount
Beatenberg, Switzerland. His legendary story has him the apostle of Switzerland, baptized in England by St.
Barnabas and ordained in Rome by St. Peter, who sent him to evangelize the Swiss [Helvetians]. His cave became a place of
pilgrimage and his legend has him fighting and slaying a dragon there. Saint's day: 9 May.
Source: Dictionary of Saints, by John J. Delaney, 1980.
Jarig Bakker, 20 February 2002
In spite of the in this case canting name "Beat", it isn't pronounced as the English
"to beat", but as "be-at" (e like French et, a like u in cup).
The name comes from Latin beatus (happy). Ed.