Origins of the current portuguese national flag (original) (raw)

This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Last modified: 2014-06-29 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: carbonari | [free masons](keywordf.html#free masons) | masonry | error | federalism | [saint john](keywords.html#saint john) | [coat of arms: escutcheons](keywordc.html#coat of arms: escutcheons) | meaning |
Links: FOTW homepage |search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors

image by Vítor Luís and António Martins, 28 Oct 2004
- Origin of the colours See also:
- Flag flown by the ship Adamastor
- Portuguese republican flags (1910ies)
- Proposals for the new portuguese national flag (1910-1911)
- Portuguese historical flags
- Portugal
Origin of the colours
Those who trace the green and red from the 1385 flag or from the (red) Cross of Christ Orderover green banner used during the 1640 revolution are wrong (including Crampton and Wh. Smith— oh well, even the Sun has its spots…).
In fact the red and green found in the republican portuguese flag (in early flags usualy reversed, i.e., red near the hoist) were the colors of theiberian federalism (where they came from I do not know but I doubt it that the major influence was same old portuguese flags…), used since 1891 in Portugal by most “republican clubs” and by the Masonry, who replaced the previous blue and white flag in 1910.
António Martins, 04 Jun 1997
Other interpretations of the 1910 colors, even the contemporary, “official” ones, are pure fantasy and wishful thinking — or sand in the eyes of an after all quite conservative, non-radical people…)
António Martins, 19 Feb 1998