Last modified: 2014-06-29 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: portugal | coat of arms: escutcheons | armillary sphere | hope | sacrifice |
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Flag and coat of arms adopted
on 30 June
1911.
Zonomi Kariyasu, 30 Feb 1998
The portuguese national flag is a 2:3 rectangle divided vertically into
green at the hoist (2/5 of the flag’s length) and red at the fly (3/5).
Centered in this partition a coat of arms consisting on an armillary sphere
charged with the traditional portuguese shield.
António Martins, 04 Jun 1997
The portuguese constitution is extremely laconic regarding flags. The only specifically vex info there is in Article 11 (National symbols), paragraph 1. and reads (my translation):
The national flag, symbol of the soveregnty of the Republic and of Portugal’s independence, unity and integrity, is the one adopted by the Republic established by the Revolution of 5 October 1910.And that’s it. The Portuguese constitution, by the way, has 299 articles, some of them quite long.
In fact upon adoption in 1911 by the Constitutional assembly, the flag was described as, and I quote,
bi-partida verticalmente em duas côres fundamentaes, verde escuro e escarlate, ficando o verde do lado da tralha.Wich means «vertically divided in two fundamental colours, dark green and scarlet, with the green in the hoist side.»
Here are the Portuguese flag colours:
My Pantone Book of Color has a 2 + 4 digits reference plus name.
With this one I would point out «Pepper green» (18-5841) as the
best approximation to the 1911 booklet by the flag’s author himself
[cba11] (my copy is in mint state and
apparently not discoloured). Please note this was more or less the tone
that one would constantly see in the early depictions of the flag.
A. S. Marques, 25 Nov 1998
The five escutcheons are in medium or dark blue, never in sky
blue. This is not written anywhere, but is quite traditional.
A. S. Marques, 25 Nov 1998
Flag meant to simbolize Hope (green) + Sacrifice (red)…
A. S. Marques, 25 Nov 1998
About the symbolism, it’s a fairy tale. The
green and red where adopted by the republicans
without this symbolism (rather from
masonic-carbonarian connections), which was
added later to give the flag more “dignity”. It’s
a typical case of symbolism emerging from the design.
Jorge Candeias, 27 Nov 1998
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