Coat of arms The municipality's
arms might be described thus: Per pale Or and sable a double-headed Imperial Eagle displayed counterchanged armed, beaked and langued gules. The
double-headed eagle motif seen in today's arms goes back to a 15th-century court seal and a municipal seal from 1531. Both these seals showed a one-headed eagle, however. The eagle stood for Schwabenheim's – then still known as Sauer-Schwabenheim – membership among the Imperial Villages of the
Ingelheimer Grund that passed in 1407 to the
Electorate of the Palatinate. From 1761, the double-headed Imperial Eagle is seen in the seal. Given that the
Grand Duchy of Hesse took over Schwabenheim in 1816, and that the
National Socialists seized power in 1933, Schwabenheim's arms have been changed a few times. After the
Second World War, the municipality bore the old
Electorate of the Palatinate arms. This
escutcheon, however, satisfied nobody. The unanimous opinion was that the Imperial Eagle belonged back in the arms. At two
Wiesbaden state archive councillors’ suggestion in 1983, arms that were party per pale (that is, split down the middle), gold on the dexter (armsbearer's right, viewer's left) side and black on the sinister (armsbearer's left, viewer's right) side with the double-headed Imperial Eagle “counterchanged” (that is, on each side taking the
tincture of the field on the other side; this is called
in verwechselten Farben – in changed colours – in
German) were put forth for approval and later the same year, the approval was granted.
Former coats of arms The municipality's oldest coat of arms bore an Imperial Eagle on a golden field. In 1742, this was replaced with the arms borne by Elector Karl Philipp of the Palatinate. The double-headed Imperial Eagle is witnessed in the municipal seal beginning in 1761.
Town partnerships •
Chambolle-Musigny,
Côte-d'Or,
France since 1966 •
Schmerbach,
Gotha district,
Thuringia since 1991 •
Minerbe,
Province of Verona,
Veneto,
Italy since 2001 == Culture and sightseeing==