Sobral de Monte Agraço Municipality (Portugal) (original) (raw)

This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Concelho do Sobral de Monte Agraço, Distrito de Lisboa
Last modified: 2014-08-09 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: [sobral de monte agraco](keywords.html#sobral de monte agraco) | [cork oak](keywordc.html#cork oak) | rock | bordure | towers(11) |
Links: FOTW homepage |search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors
[
](../images/p/pt-sma.gif)2:3 image by André Serranho, 16 Dec 2003
- About the flag
- Presentation of Sobral de Monte Agraço See also:
- Sobral de Monte Agraço Communes
- Portugal External links:
- Page about Sobral de Monte Agraço at the Portuguese Municipalities’s Association website (incl. image of the arms)
reported by António Martins, 18 Nov 2001
About the flag
It is a quite typical portuguese municipal flag, with the coat of arms centred on a field quarterly (meaning town rank) of of white and green.
António Martins, 16 Dec 2003
Coat of arms
[.gif)](../images/p/pt-sma%29.gif)image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 4 Aug 2014
The coat of arms is argent on an earthy rocky mound proper a cork oak tree proper on a bordure sable eleven towers argent with port and windows gules. Mural crown argent with four visible towers (town rank) and white scroll reading in black upper case letters "VILA DO SOBRAL DE MONTE AGRAÇO" or simply "SOBRAL DE MONTE AGRAÇO".
Meaning:
"Monte" means "hill" and "sobral" is "cork oak wood", so the arms are fairly canting. (No idea about an "agraço" is.) The towers, I guess, relate to the presence in this municipality of some of the fortresses of a line erected in the early 19th century to defend Lisbon from Napoleon’s attempted invasions.
António Martins, 16 Dec 2003
Presentation of Sobral de Monte Agraço
Sobral de Monte Agraço municipality had 9051 inhabitants in 2000 (7160 in 1990), and it is divided in 3 communes, covering 52 km2. It belongs to the District of Lisbon, to the old province Extremadura and to the would-be region Lisboa e Setúbal.
António Martins, 16 Dec 2003
back to Municipalities of Portugal click here