Last modified: 2016-02-14 by ivan sache
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Flag of the General Council of Yvelines - Image by Ivan Sache, 17 March 2015
See also:
Code: 78
Region: Île-de-France
Traditional provinces:
Île-de-France,
Orléanais
Bordering departments: Eure,
Eure-et-Loir,
Essonne,
Hauts-de-Seine,
Val-d'Oise
Area: 2,284 km2
Population (2005): 1,395,000 inhabitants
Préfecture:
Versailles
Sous-préfectures: Mantes-la-Jolie, Rambouillet,
Saint-Germain-en-Laye
Subdivisions: 4 arrondissements, 39 cantons, 262 communes.
In the Middle Ages, the big forest located in the south of Paris was
called silva equalina, aquilina, evelina, acquilina... The main remains of this forest are the forests of Fontainebleau, Rambouillet
and Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
The word aquilina comes from Latin aqua, "water". The forest was watered by several rivers and was rich in sources, marshes and ponds.
The Law of 10 July 1964 on the reorganization of the region of Paris, with effect on 1 January 1968, suppressed the departments of Seine and Seine-et-Oise. The department of Yvelines was made of 262 municipalities from Seine-et-Oise.
General de Gaulle wanted to name the new department "Versailles". The
National Assembly rejected this proposal, as well as the name of "Val-de-Seine". In 1962, the poet Jehan Despert, born in Versailles in 1921,
proposed to add an "S" to the name of the legendary forest. The new name
was adopted by the National Assembly upon proposal by Jean-Paul
Palewski, Deputy and President of the General Council of Seine-et-Oise.
In November 1997, the place des Yvelines - Jehan Despert was
inaugurated in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, in the presence of the poet. The square is located on the municipalities of Guyancourt and Montigny-le-Bretonneux.
In 1969, the municipalities of Châteaufort and Toussus-le-Noble were transferred from Essonne to Yvelines.
Ivan Sache, 14 November 2009
The flag of the General Council of Yvelines is white with the logo in the middle. The flag was hoisted in front of the National Velodrome of Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines during the UCI Track Cycling World Championships.
The logo (presentation) is made of a fuchsia pink disk charged with a white "Y" and " ' ", flanked on its right by a thing gray vertical line and the gray writing "Yvelines / Conseil général", Yvelines in bolder and darker letters.
The logo was unveiled on 18-19 May 2008, during the celebration of the
40th anniversary of the establishment of the department of Yvelines.
The round is the shape of an ensemble, symbolizing union. Its
sweetness, most feminine, symbolizes the strong connection between the
institution and the citizens. The circle is open at the three ends of
the "Y".
The "Y", the initial of the department's name, is "rare". Infrequently
used, this letter forms a rallying point, while offering opening to
the outer of the disk that surrounds it. The original shape of the "Y"
expresses impetus and dynamism while conferring to this classical
letter an innovating character, not to say upper class.
The " ' ", "prime", qualifies and highlights the "Y", Yvelines
"prime". The prime is a character of dynamism, increasing its
evolution and balancing the "Y" in the logo.
Fuchsia is a warm, dynamic and modern colour. Unusual in the
traditional graphic universe, it highlights the General Council.
The typography of the writing is first of all legible, highlighting
the word "Yvelines". It simply expresses a perennial and accessible to
al institution.
Details for the construction of the logo are given in the Graphical Chart, last amended in April 2014.
The diameter of the disk is 4x. The vertical line is located x from
the disk and from the writing.
The vertical proportions of the writing are as follows (x = y + z):
Space from top 2x "Yvelines" (small letters) z Space y "Conseil général" (small letters) z Space from bottom y
The pink colour is prescribed as:
Pantone 214 C CMYK (%) 0-100-0-10 RGB 210-0-114
The fonts are prescribed as:
Swiss 721 BT Roman Black 100% Swiss 721 BT Black 100%
Ivan Sache, 17 March 2015
Former flag of the General Council of Yvelines - Image by Philippe-Pierre Darras, 6 July 2000