Last modified: 2024-05-11 by ian macdonald
Keywords: america | star (white) | star: 5 points | globe | motto | southern cross | legislation | law | coat of arms | sphere |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
7:10
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 26 April 2018
Flag adopted by
Law No 8421 of 11 May 1992; basic design by Decree No 4 of 19 November
1889
In the Brazilian Government's
website
is the full text of the law on the Brazilian flag and other symbols.
Guilherme Simões Reis, 6 October 1999
In Album des
Pavillons, 2000 the construction
details are given as (51+54+210+54+51):(51+144+210+144+51) which looks correct.
Željko Heimer, 21 March 2001
[in English below.]
ART. 5 - A feitura da Bandeira Nacional obedecerá às seguintes regras
ART. 5 - The construction of the national flag will conform to the following rules.
translated by Joseph McMillan, 29 August 2005
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics (Flags
and Anthems Manual London 2012) provides recommendations for national flag
designs. Each NOC was sent an image of the flag, including the PMS shades, for
their approval by LOCOG. Once this was obtained, LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm
version of the flag for further approval. So, while these specs may not be the
official, government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the NOC
believed the flag to be.
For Brazil: PMS 355 green, process yellow, 280
blue. The vertical version is simply the flag turned through 90 degrees
clockwise. Both sides are identical.
Ian Sumner, 10 October 2012
Brazilian flag historians attribute the original lozenge design, adopted for
the Kingdom of Brazil in 1822, to a French painter and designer named Jean-Baptiste Debret, who was active in
Brazil between 1816 and 1831. It is thought that the design was inspired
by the lozenges on pre-1812 Napoleonic military colors.
Joseph McMillan,
3 March 2005
The "EFE" agency, 18 August 2010, reports the theft of the original painting of
the Brazilian flag.
"The original design painting of the Brazilian flag,
a 19th century canvas by painter Décio Villares, was stolen from the church
where it had been kept in Rio de Janeiro, O Estado de Sao Paulo newspaper said.
It is thought that the thieves may have stolen the picture taking advantage of
the powerful storm that lashed the region last April and caused part of the roof
of the Humanity Temple, home of Rio's Positivist Church, to collapse. [...]
The Brazilian flag, adopted in 1889 by the new republican regime, was
designed by the positivist philosophers Raimundo Teixeira Mendes and Miguel
Lemos and painted for the first time by Villares. The original design of the
flag is composed of a green rectangle, a yellow rhombus and, in its centre, a
blue sphere in which are 21 stars, one for each Brazilian state in 1889, and the
slogan 'Order and Progress'. [...]"
http://sify.com/news/thieves-steal-original-painting-of-brazilian-flag-news-international-kisradaiicb.html
A photo of the stolen painting can be seen on this blog:
http://notasedestaques.blogspot.com/2010/08/tela-com-desenho-original-da-bandeira.html
The painter Décio Villares (1851-1931) studied in Italy and France,
where he was introduced to republicanism and positivism. Back to Brazil in 1881,
Villares produced several paintings, sculptures and caricatures. After his
death, his window set up a blaze in his workshop, destroying most of his
paintings.
http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Décio_Villares
Ivan Sache, 24 August
2010
I borrowed an original 1939 Flaggenbuch recently, and
I read 96:132 (=24:33, or 7.27:10) as the ratio for the Brazilian flag. Looking more closely
at the construction scheme, it started from the lozenge in the center, which had a proportion of
2:3 (72:108). The distance to the upper and lower edges and to the hoist and fly was equal all
around (12 units each), resulting in the unusual ratio of 7.27:10.
Marcus Schmöger, 20 March 2003
Federal Decree-Law no. 4545, of 31 July 1942, provided for the 7:10 ratio, stipulating that
(a) the desired width of the flag should be divided into 14 equal parts, each of
the parts being considered one module; and (b) the length would be 20 (twenty) modules.
Joseph McMillan, 3 April 2003
There is no official description of the colours in RGB terms. They are loosely
described as "verde-bandeira" (flag-green), "amarelo-ouro" (golden-yellow) and "azul-celeste"
(sky blue). However, the drawings on this page
http://asnovidades.com.br/2009/desenho-da-bandeira-do-brasil have colours
quite similar to what you find when you buy a Brazilian flag here in Brazil, at
a proper flag making company.
Rudnei Cunha, 14 December 2010
According to the Piraquê Club website (www.piraque.org.br), no longer on line,
on 7 September 1822, after demanding "Independence or Death," Prince Regent Pedro (later Emperor Dom
Pedro I) removed the Portuguese blue-and-white cockade from his hat and exclaimed, "From now on we will
have another ribbon-knot (laço), green and yellow. These will be the national colors."
On 18 September, Pedro signed three decrees that were the first acts of independent Brazil.
The second decree created a new national cockade: "The Brazilian national bow-knot (laço),
or cockade (tope) will be composed of the emblematic colors: green for spring and yellow for gold...."
Joseph McMillan, 15 April 2001
A site called Bandeiras do Brasil says that the Ministry of Culture specifies Pantone 356 CV (green), 3945CV (yellow), and 286CV (blue) as the official colors of the Brazilian flag. The problem is that the webmaster seems to cite Flags of the World as the source of this, and we have no such information.
Among official sites, there are a couple that give Pantone and/or
CMYK values for the "mark" of the Federal Government, used on
publications and websites, stating that the colors are to be the same
as those used in the national flag. These sources do not agree
completely, so I'll cite that of the
Presidency for the Pantones. The
Ministry of Development, Industry, and External Commerce (MDIC)
uses the same Pantone values and gives CMYK equivalencies.
PMS | CMYK | |
Green | 355 | 100-0-100-0 |
Yellow | Yellow | 0-10-100-0 |
Blue | 280 | 100-70-0-20 |
Other sources for colors:
The Flag Manual - Beijing 2008 gives PMS 355
(green), PMS Yellow, and PMS 280 (blue).
The Album des Pavillons 2000 [pay00]
(Corr. No. 6.) gives approximate colors in Pantone and CMYK systems:
Green:
Pantone 355c, CMYK 100-0-100-0
Yellow: Pantone N/A, CMYK 0-10-100-0
Blue:
Pantone 280c, CMYK 100-70-0-20
White: Pantone N/A, CMYK 0-0-0-0
Flags
and Anthems Manual London 2012 [loc12] gives
PMS 355 (green), PMS Process Yellow, and PMS 280 (blue).
The Album des
Pavillons 2023 already specifies the colors of the flags in three color systems.
Blue: Pantone 287c, CMYK 100-84-26-6, RGB 0-53-128
Yellow Pantone 7408c, CMYK
3-25-95-0, RGB 248-193-0
Green Pantone 355c, CMYK 84-12-100-1, RGB 0-149-48
Vexilla Mundi gives colors in Pantone
system: PMS 355C (green), PMS Yellow C, PMS 280C (blue), and PMS White.
Wikipedia gives the
following color values: (retrieved from downloadable files from
Government website):
Green: RGB 0-156-59, Hex: #009c3b, CMYK 100-0-100-0
Yellow: RGB:
255-223-0, Hex: #ffdf00, CMYK 0-13-100-0
Blue: RGB: 0-39-118, Hex:
#002776, CMYK 100-67-0-54
White: RGB: 255-255-255, Hex: #fff fff, CMYK
0-0-0-0
Zoltan Horvath, 23 April 2024
According to Christian Fogd Pedersen, The International Flag Book, (1979),
pp 217-8, "The symbol of the scroll and the celestial globe were inspired
by the armillary sphere in the Arms of Portugal". I am not sure about this
reference to the "arms" since I'm not familiar with the pre-1910 arms of
Portugal (other than those used on the 1830 flag). The armillary sphere
has, however and of course, been a symbol used on Portuguese flags since at
least the 17th Century.
Christopher Southworth, 6 October 2003
Yes. They both trace their common ancestry to the flag of the
United
Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarve, which featured an armilliary
sphere as supporter for the Portuguese coat of arms of the time, and which in turn was
apparently used earlier as a symbol of the caravelles that sailed for Brazil. So yes, our
[Portuguese and Brazilian] common history is reflected in our flags.
Jorge Candeias, 7 October 2003
The influence is not direct but via the pre-republican
Brazilian flag. Like the modern Portuguese flag, the imperial
Brazilian flag also had an armillary sphere on it as the central
charge in the imperial coat of arms.
One Brazilian astronomer
contends that, since an armillary sphere is itself basically a
schematic representation of the heavens, the celestial sphere on the
modern Brazilian flag is essentially just another form of the
armillary sphere.
Joseph McMillan, 7 October 2003
According to www.piraque.org.br (page no longer available), the white band across the celestial
sphere has been the object of much speculation, with some saying it represents
the ecliptic, others the celestial equator, and others the belt of the
zodiac. In fact, the white band has nothing to do with the celestial sphere,
but merely provides a place to inscribe the motto, Order and Progress,
which is attributed to the French positivist philosopher Auguste Comte,
who had many followers in Brazil, including Professor Teixeira Mendes,
who conceived the basic design of the flag.
Joseph McMillan, 12 April 2001
Unlike the stars on the American flag, each particular star on the Brazilian
flag represents one particular state.
Herman De Wael, 20 January 1998
For details on the constellations on the flag and the correspondence between the stars and the states, see Astronomy of the Brazilian Flag.
The Representative Chico Alencar (PSOL / Rio de Janeiro) has initiated a
proposal of amending the motto on the national flag from "Ordem e Progresso"
(Order and Progress) to "Amor Ordem Progresso" (Love Order Progress). The
proposal is backed up by an online petition, showing an image of the amended
flag.
http://incluaamornabandeira.org - "Include 'love' on the flag" petition
website
The proposal was defended, quite unexpectedly, during the session
of the National Congress held on 19 December 2012 by Senator Eduardo Suplicy (PT
/ São Paulo). There seems to be very little hope to have this proposal seriously
considered.
http://br.noticias.yahoo.com/blogs/vi-na-internet/suplicy-defende-inclusão-da-palavra-amor-na-bandeira-230734798.html
- Report by Charles Nisz, 19 December 2012
Ivan Sache, 7 January
2013
Brazilian military regulations provide for the staffs on which colors are
mounted to be covered in spiral striped cloth, green and yellow for the national
flag, other color combinations for unit flags. This custom may well be copied by
civilians as well. Many flagpoles in Brazil (the big outdoor kind) are also
painted with spiral stripes in the predominant colors of the flag flown on the
pole--green and yellow for the national flag, blue and white for the Rio state
flag, etc.
Joe McMillan, 21 September 2004
The page entitled Simbolos Nacionais--Bandeira, Hino, Armas e Selo Nacional (National Symbols--Flag, Anthem, Arms, and National Seal] at the official Brazilian government site quotes in full the laws governing all the symbols. That for the arms says, translated into English:
The National Arms were instituted by Decree No. 4 of 19 November 1889, with alteration made by Law No. 5443 of 28 May 1968 (Annex No. 8) The making of the National Arms should conform to the proportions of 15 units of height by 14 of width and take into account the following provisions:The name on the scroll was changed from Estados Unidos do Brasil by Law No. 5389 of 22 February 1968.
I - The round shield will be composed of a sky-blue [azul-celeste] field containing five silver [prata] stars arranged in the form of the Southern Cross, with the bordure [bordura] of the field outlined in gold and charged with silver stars equal to the stars existing in the National Flag (Modification made by Law No. 8421 of 11 May 1972).
II - The shield will be placed on a star parted gyronny of ten pieces, green [sinopla] and gold, bordered by two strips, the inner red [goles] and the outer gold.
III - All placed on a sword in pale, pommelled gold, hilted blue [blau], except for the center part, which is red [goles] and contains a silver star, all upon a crown formed by a branch of coffee fruited on the dexter side and another of flowering tobacco on the sinister side, both in proper colors, tied blue [blau], the whole assembled on a splendor of gold, the contours of which form a star of 20 points.
IV - On a blue [blau] scroll, placed over the pommel of the sword, inscribed in gold the legend República Federativa do Brasil in the center, and also the phrases 15 de Novembro on the dexter end and de 1889 on the sinister end.
Knowing how (non-)promptly the stars on the national flag
were changed with the change of the actual number of the states in
Brazil, I am wondering how well the coat of arms followed the changes. This is
of particular interest since it is the main feature on the presidential
flag, too. So that flag was changed (I guess) as many times as the
coat of arms.
Željko Heimer, 21 March 2001
In the Süddeutsche Zeitung of 28 June 2002 (p. 12) there is a report on
the Brazilian coat of arms.
Evidently they are currently discussing a change in the coat of arms, more
specifically the tobacco leaves on the sinister side. Senator Jefferson Peres
(PDT) wants to replace the unhealthy tobacco with a twig of guaraná.
Marcus Schmöger, 29 June 2002
Title: Nossa Bandeira: formação, usos, funcionalidade (in English:
Our Flag: formation, uses, functionality)
Medium: book
Main author(s): Joaquim
Redig
Edition (publisher: place): Frahia: Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)
Language: Portuguese
Edition date: 2009 (1st ed.)
Catalogue codes: ISBN
978-85-85989-27-9
Pages: 324
Format: 210×297(×20) mm (Horizontal A4)
As the title implies, the book is divided in three main sections (all in
full color): formation, uses, functionality. The formation part tells
a very detailed history of the Brazilian National Flag, from the times of the
Portuguese colonial flags to independence, imperial flags, and the Republic.
The proposals for a republican flag are also explained, and the evolution of
the finally adopted National Flag of Brazil is shown in full details.
The second part deals with the uses of the Brazilian national flag. This
includes information about official use, but also the people's use, and the way
the flag is shown in advertisement and merchandising in Brazil. In the
third part (functionality) the author makes a very detailed analysis of the
graphic elements and colors of the flag. He explains how these elements work.
He also proposes which changes could be done in the flag, to make the design
work better.
The author Joaquim Redig is a very important industrial
designer from today's Brazil. This is reflected in the whole book, that has a
very deep and detailed graphic analysis of the Brazilian National Flag.
Francisco Gregoric,
4 September 2010