
Last modified: 2005-04-09 by antónio martins
Keywords: valdivia | saltire | doubt | coat of arms: border | saltire (red) | burgundy cross |
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The province of Valdivia, in the south of Chile, has (or had) its own flag.
It is nearly identical to the St. Patrickʼs
flag that represents Ireland, except for the red edge on the border.
Its origin goes back to the foundation of the Fuerte de Niebla, in the 17th
century. This flags was found as a charge on the
provincial shield.
Sergio Arenas, 14 Dec 2002
(translated by Rob Raeside)
The flag is visible in a photograph
(http://www.munivaldivia.cl/fotos/concejo/concejo2.jpg,
broken link as of 22 Feb 2005, Ivan Sache)
on this webpage
(http://www.munivaldivia.cl/concejo/concejo.html)
I think the flag is in fact identical to the St. Patrickʼs
cross flag from Ireland — the red border is not visible
(although that might be because of the way it hangs). Perhaps the red
border interpreted by Sr. Arenas is an artefact of the red background
to the shield.
Rob Raeside, 14 Dec 2002
I believe that this information is a misinterpretation.
The arms were granted in 1554 and
then they have already the white flag with red cross (I assume that
a Burgundian cross). On the page
http://www.munivaldivia.cl/discursos/archivo/dis-450.html,
the cronist adds: «always was the flag of Valdivia».
Red border is not quoted. A photo of the flag in the site
(http://www.munivaldivia.cl/fotos/concejo/concejo2.jpg),
without border, but is refered to the city
flag, and Mr. Arenas is speaking of Valdivia province flag
(In my humble opinion both are the same flag but I dont have more
info for confirm it or deny it…).
Jaume Ollé, 22 Dec 2002
Adding to the confusion, thereʼs
CSAV, a chilean shipping
company whose logo looks exactly like this…
António Martins, 27 Dec 2002