Due to the early practice of marshalling by dividing the marshalled arms through the middle of the charge (called "dimidiation"), some charges took on the appearance of being themselves divided, such as the arms of Hochtaunuskreis.
German | German language | German Empire | German people | Wilhelm II, German Emperor | German reunification | German Army | German Academic Exchange Service | German literature | German Navy | German battleship Tirpitz | William I, German Emperor | German cuisine | Middle High German | heraldry | German Archaeological Institute | Revolutions of 1848 in the German states | Imperial German Navy | German (language) | German Emperor | German battleship Gneisenau | Frederick III, German Emperor | Low German | German Peasants' War | German East Africa | German Confederation | German battleship Scharnhorst | German Air Force | Old High German | German Shepherd |
The “mount” is described in the German blazon as a Dreiberg, but it does not have the shape that this charge usually takes in German heraldry (for examples within this same district, see Kerpen’s and Birgel’s coats of arms).