Last modified: 2021-05-02 by rob raeside
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"Proceso", 21 November 2005, reports the end of the
campaign for the general elections (for the President of the
Republic, the Vice-President of the Republic, 128 MPs and 298
Mayors), scheduled for 27 November. Only the two dominant parties
have a chance to win the Presidency, the National Party and the
Partido Liberal. The flags of these two parties are shown on:
Pictures from electoral meetings shown by "Proceso"
confirm our images:
- Partido Nacional: Blue with a white star
- Partido Liberal: Horizontally divided
red-white-red (In one of the images of "Proceso", there
seems to be something in the white stripe of some of the flags,
maybe the party emblem).
"Proceseo" shows three more flags in the heading of the
article:
- a white flag with a circulat red and green emblem
- a yellow flag with UD in red and something unreadable below
- a green flag with a white triangle charged with a white
triangle and circle outlined in green
The article mentions three smaller parties: Unificación
Democrática (left), Innovación y Unidad-Social Demócrata y
Democracia Cristiana. The flag with UD is most probably the flag
of Unificación Democrática. I don't know how to separate the
names of the two last parties: "Innovación" and
"Unidad-Social Demócrata y Democracia Cristiana", or,
"Innovación y Unidad-Social Demócrata" and
"Democracia Cristiana".
Source: www.proceso.hn.
Ivan Sache, 25 November 2005
Süddeutsche Zeitung (23 Nov 2005, p.9) also shows a colour
photo of a Partido Liberal: rally. I was very
surprised about the abundance of "Austrian" flags,
until I looked it up at this page. It is not too far-fetched, In
my opinion, to assume that the editor who included the photo in
the newspaper, was also struck by the allusion to the Austrian
national flag, and therefore put the photo there.
M. Schmöger, 3 December 2005
"El Proceso", 26 November 2005, shows a cartoon and
text allowing identification of all the party flags:
Partido Nacional - Blue flag with the white star
Partido Liberal - "Austrian" flag
Unificación Democrática (UD) - Yellow flag with UD in red
Innovación y Unidad (PINU) - White flag with the emblem in the
middle
DC - Green flag with the white triangle.
Source: www.proceso.hn.
Ivan Sache, 7 December 2005
image by Ivan Sache, 25 November 2005
Flag in use (see above)
image by Ivan Sarajcic, 16 November 2005
Flag according to Statute
In Statute of the Christian-Democratic Party of Honduras (El
Partido Democrata Cristiano de Honduras) at
www.pdch.hn
there is article about flag.
Quote:
Articulo 4)
"Forman el simbolo permanente del P.D.C.H. una bandera color
verde esmeralda, representativa de la esperanza nacional ante la
actual sociedad injusta, en cuyo interior se encuentran las
siglas DC signivican DEMOCRATIA CRISTIANA, simbolizando la pureza
del poder popular en su lucha por alcanzar el poder politico y
construir una sociedad de hombres y mujeres libres."
Ivan Sarajcic, 16 November 2005
image by J.A. Sommansson, 24 January 2005
This is the flag of Fuerza Universitaria Revolucionaria (FUR),
in Honduras. FUR surged after the Sandista revolution in
Nicaragua. It was the university students wing of the underground
Fuerzas Populares Revolucionarias Lorenzo Zelaya.
Today its the university students wing of Partido Unificación
Democrática.
J.A. Sommansson, 24 January 2005
image by Ivan Sache, 7 April 2021
Partido Anticorrupción de Honduras (PAC) was established on 17 March 2012 by
Salvador Nasralla.
The flag of PAC is white with the party's emblem.
Photos
https://proceso.hn/faccion-de-nasralla-elige-su-consejo-nacional-en-pac/
http://diariotiempo.mx/color-politico/juramentan-a-marlene-alvarenga-como-la-nueva-presidenta-del-pac/
https://proceso.hn/faccion-de-nasralla-elige-su-consejo-nacional-en-pac
Ivan Sache, , 7 April 2021
The Liberal Party of Honduras use an horizontal red-white-red
flag as appear at www.partido-liberal.hn (defunct).
Dov Gutterman, 11 October 1999
image by Phil Nelson, 12 September 2000
image by Eugene Ipavec, 12 January 2010
In a Yahoo-news photo,
partisans of the deposed president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya,
can be seen waving red flags with a black outline portrait of a
somewhat ticked-looking Zelaya in a cowboy (or vaquero) hat.
Eugene Ipavec, 12 January 2010
image by Ivan Sache, 7 April 2021
Unificación Democrática (UD) was established on 29 September 1992 as the
merger of four former, clandestine leftist parties: Partido para la
Transformación de Honduras, Partido Revolucionario Hondureño, Partido
Morazanista de Liberación Nacional, and Partido Renovación Democrática (former
Partido Comunista de Honduras).
The flag of UD is yellow with red italic
letters "UD".
Photos
https://www.facebook.com/Unificación-democrática-115607339873935/photos/117506763017326
https://proceso.hn/unificacion-democratica-victima-de-sus-propias-ambiciones/
Ivan Sache, 7 April 2021
I found a copy of an article from the heraldist prince George
Ypsilanti in 1943 in "Boletin de la Bibliotea y Archivo
Nacional" Año III, n° 6, dated 31 October 1943, where are
quoted some XIX century party flags in Honduras. All party flags
are described and there are 11 parties (according text from 1821 to
1943). All are bicolored or monocolored flags.
There are three parties that have well known flags:
The federal party has as flag the B-W-B horizontal that remained
as national and that in 1821 was the one of the Federal Republic
of Central America. The Nationalist party and Liberal party have
same flags as today.
There are more parties that I need to search more on them:
- The Gasista (Colonial) Party
- The Peoples Party
- Cotorro Party (Guardiolist Party)
- Fiebres Party
- Policarpist Party
- Anexionist Party
- Separatist party
- Servil or Moderate party
According a presentation signed by Dr. Louis J. Joest, Ypsilanti
was a great expert in heraldry and lived in Honduras (was living
in 1943) Perhaps more articles from heraldry or vexillology were
wrote by Ypsilanti in Honduras in the years around 1943.
Jaume Ollé, 29 January 2004