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Baton Rouge's first city flag (1968–1995) The city adopted its first flag on December 11, 1968, by recommendation of a flag committee established by mayor W. W. Dumas. It consisted of an emerald green field with the city seal in the center, which included a castle for Spain, a lion for England, and the fleur-de-lis for France.
Baton Rouge: 19: Cushman House: Cushman House: February 20, 1991 : 1606 Main Street: Baker: Now hosting the Baker Heritage Museum. 20: Downtown Baton Rouge Historic District: Downtown Baton Rouge Historic District
The Portuguese House of Burgundy was the Portuguese cadet house of the House of Burgundy, founded by Henry, Count of Portugal in 1093. The senior legitimate line went extinct with the death of King Ferdinand I of Portugal in 1383, but two illegitimate lines, the Houses of Aviz and Braganza, continued to rule in Portugal, with interruptions, until 1910 and later Brazil until 1889.
The former Frankish Kingdom of Burgundy had been divided into an East and West Frankish part by the 843 Treaty of Verdun.While the eastern part evolved to the Kingdom of Burgundy-Arles that included the Free County of Burgundy and was incorporated into the Holy Roman Empire in 1032, the western Duchy of Burgundy, established about 918 by Richard the Justiciar, became a fief of the French royal ...
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English: Former flag of Baton Rouge designed by a committee established by the mayor, W. W. Dumas and adopted officially on 11 December 1968. Date 11 December 1968
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The flag of Baton Rouge flies on a cloudy day. By the end of the 2000s decade, Baton Rouge was one of the largest mid-sized American business cities and one of the fastest-growing metropolitan areas with populations under 1 million — with 633,261 residents in 2000 and an estimated 750,000 in 2008.