Last modified: 2013-06-22 by francisco gregoric
Keywords: f.a.a.u. | faau | frente amplio | fa | broad front | otorgués (fernando) | seregni (liber) | vázquez (tabaré) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
The Frente Amplio (Broad Front) is a leftist coalition formed
in Uruguay some 30 years ago. They chose one of the first
known Artigas flag as
their own emblem and have used it ever since.
Obviously when the Frente Amplio followers
adopted this flag and design, they were evoking the
times of the Patria Vieja,
(the Old Fatherland).
Jorge Cajarville, 16 Jun 1999
The flag adopted by Frente Amplio is the
Artigas flag hoisted in Montevideo in march 26, 1815. The leftist
coalition Frente Amplio had its first public meeting in march
26, 1971. The electoral coalition called
Encuentro Progresista was founded
in 1994 by the Frente Amplio and other
minor left parties, and still exists currently.
Rodolfo Tizzi, 10 Jul 2002
The Frente Amplio uses a tricolor flag (red-blue-white horizontal stripes) known as "Otorgués' Flag", because it is the same design aparently raised in Montevideo on March 1815 when Artiguist forces commanded by Fernando de Otorgués entered inside the city.
Francisco Gregoric, 5 Sep 2004
Courrier International 472 (18 November 1999) shows a colour picture of a street demonstration in Montevideo celebrating the victory on 31 October.
The "white flag with an emblem and letterings «...ENTE ...
QUIERDA»" mentioned, could be a flag of Corriente de Izquierda (Leftist Trend), a political group with former Tupamaros inside it.
The other flag mentioned: yellow field with a V, black 77, "La Ver..." probably was a flag from a political party inside the Frente Amplio named Vertiente Artiguista (Artiguist Source), list 77. They call their party "La Vertiente" in a kind of familiar way. Mariano Arana, the present day Mayor of the City of Montevideo is a member of that political party.
The last flag mentioned is the Frente Amplio flag with logo.
Francisco Gregoric, 12 Dec 2004
Courrier International 472 (18 November 1999)
shows a colour picture of a street demonstration in Montevideo
celebrating the victory on 31 October. It shows the
F.A.A.U. flag with a yellow emblem on it,
something like an equal sign over a wide A.
Ivan Sache, 21 Nov 1999
There are Frente Amplio flags with the party coalition acronym logo added (an F above an A in yellow letters). I have seen one of these flags in Buenos Aires, at a Newspaper store. Obviously the owner was an Uruguayan follower of the Frente Amplio.
Francisco Gregoric, 5 Sep 2004
At the party website there’s an image consisting of such
a triband superimposed with a big yellow "FA" vertical digraph which
creates a sector from 7 o’clock to 12 o’clock filled with wavy blue stripes
on white.
António Martins, 23 Jun 1999
It’s only a copy of a car-sticker made as a propaganda item for the
elections of 1994 and 1999.
Rodolfo Tizzi, 10 Jul 2002
This design does exist as a flag in 2004. In the funeral of General Liber Seregni (one of the leaders of Frente Amplio) on 1 August 2004, there were a lot of tricolor FA flags, between them, one flag with this composite design.
Francisco Gregoric, 5 Sep 2004
This design appeared again as a flag during the celebrations of victory of the Frente Amplio in the presidential elections of October 2004. In these elections the socialist doctor Tabaré Vázquez was elected as the first president in Uruguay not a member of any traditional party.
Most flags in these celebrations were just plain tricolor flags, but the "logo variants" and this "composite design variant" could be seen too.
Francisco Gregoric, 13 Dec 2004
Some political groups members (and list ballots) of the Frente Amplio use variants of the "Otorgués Flag" with their particular symbols added.
The Movimiento 26 de Marzo (March 26th Movement) uses a Frente Amplio's flag with a red star.
The Espacio 90 (Space 90) uses a Frente Amplio's flag with its logo (a green circle with white numbers).
Francisco Gregoric, 13 Dec 2004