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image from <www.provincia.teramo.it>
See also:
Teramo is in Teramo province, Abruzzi region. There is another
variation at <www.inyourlife.com>.
Dov Gutterman, 8 August 2001 and 8 December 2004
An interesting article (in Italian) on the history of Teramo's
flag is at <www.delfico.it>.
The article, by Francesco Savini, is from 1933.
The article concentrate, first, on the four ward flags visible
behind the municipal arms, also appear on the variation above. The picture
at Savini's article show flag or gonfanon apparently divided
vertically white and red, this division also appearing in the shield which should in fact
be completely red (gules). The colours of the ward flags behind
the shield have seriously aged or they may have not been very
accurate in the first place.
As to the earlier town flag(s) used, Savini mentions various
appearances in the 14th and 15th centuries but has to admit its
shape and colour(s) are uncertain. If I understand him
correctly, he and other scholars come to the conclusion that it
must have been red and
white, divided vertically, the red nearest the staff.
Old sources mention the use of district or ward banners but these
are unknown although medieval heraldic consciousness must have
shaped them. The local festival of St Anne was an
occasion for display from about 1550 to the eighteenth century;
in those days, there were six wards. The colours used
appeared in the festival uniforms, or vice versa; the festival
ended with a display of flags.
Savini pieces together scanty information from various sources,
one of which is a description found in the municipal archives and
has been edited, in the sense of applying the laws of heraldry,
by him in other words, reasoned conjectures.
Ward of St George:
vertically divided red and white (red next to the
staff). Red winged dragon, standing and facing the
hoist details of the design are lacking but red (gules;
colour) is supposed to have been placed on white (silver;
metal). Also, red was used by the Romans.
Ward of Our Lady:
vertically divided black and red (black next to the staff),
originally an elephant bearing a tower on a black field (here
facing the hoist); now it appears as white on red as it alludes
to one of the titles of Our Lady (Tower of Ivory) and
is heraldically proper.
Ward of St Leonard:
red, bearing a yellow seven-oared galley with the prow facing the
fly. Here again, yellow (gold; metal) is chosen for
heraldic reasons to appear on red (gules; colour).
Ward of the Holy Ghost:
vertically divided yellow, white and green (yellow next to the
staff), a rectangular (sic) tower in the
centre. Green, the outermost colour in the flag, has
been chosen because the other colour yellow (gold) must not be
used on the white (silver) section. The tower is
thrice embattled and has an open gate and two windows.
More information about the town symbols at <www.turiteramo.it>.
Jan Mertens, 18 June 2009
image from <www.araldicacivica.it>