Last modified: 2015-10-25 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: afonso henriques | cross (blue) | escutcheons | plates |
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2:3 image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 21 May 1997 |
2:3 image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 31 May 2009 |
This is the heraldic banner of King Afonso Henriques, a blue throughout cross on a silver background (left image above).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 21 May 1997 / 31 May 2009
The blue cross on white of the portuguese arms (bezanted in 1143 and broken into escutcheons in 1185) is also said to have apeared from heaven to King Afonso Henriques during the battle of Ourique, in 1139 (note the date inconsistency!). This legend (among many others) was popularized by romanticizing 16th century authors (and later), grossly overestimating the importance of the battle (wich is not even mentioned in contemporary arab documents and only briefly, as a minor squermish, in christian records) and by placing it in nowadays Ourique commune (more than 200 km south of the reconquista border of the time (!); most likely, it happened in other Ourique, a village in Cartaxo municipality). Similar nonsense about the meaning of the five sets of five plates (as the 30 coins of Judas, or the five moor kings from Sevile, Badajoz, Elvas, Evora and Beja, all deafeted in the battle) was also spreaded by the sames sources...
Naturally the apocriphity of this legend is proven also on pure heraldic and vexillological reasonss, not only historical: It is widely known that the number of platess was fixed much later, only in 1578, and that the blue cross on white was Count Henrique’s personal coat of arms — which was inherited by his son, as Count, and later (first) King, of Portugal.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 19 Oct 1998
The Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira shows this flag with the cross not touching the flag borders (right image above / like Switzerland). In any case it is a reconstruction of a supposed flag.
Mario Fabretto, 22 May 1997
Yes — that vexillological error is widely known to be restricted to that particular source. All other agree about "de prata cruz firmada de blau", as in my picture. But, being a reconstruction, maybe everybody is simply perpetuating an error…. On the other hand, crosses stretched till the edge were much more common these days (and nowadays…).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 22 May 1997
So, in the time of Afonso Henriques (1143-1185) it was just a blue cross semy of plates. Only a practical (or maybe aestethical or mystical-symbolic) reason could account for the positioning of those silver nails in five distinct areas. Later, when Afonso Henriques died, the old shield (which, out of battle proudness, was not repaired in those days) had lost all of the blue cross material (dyed leather), remaining only attached the parts covered with the nails. Hence the escutcheons…
António Martins-Tuválkin, 8 Oct 1998
back to Portugal - historical flags click here