Last modified: 2015-01-17 by francisco gregoric
Keywords: tree: double trunk | doubt | treasury seal |
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image by Željko Heimer, 30 Oct 2002 (clipart source: CorelDraw) |
According to [alv86],
the 1812 flag became a model for the
first codified flag of the Paraguayan Republic introduced by the
General Congress on November 25,
1842, which paid tribute
officially to the ideals of the French
Revolution.
Chrystian Kretowicz, 15 May 2002
The image in [gmc17] (page 369;
flag #501, as «Paraguay Ensign») matches very well the ratio for the
period, 333:500.
Željko Heimer, 06 Oct 2002
Shown in the Flaggenbuch [neu92]
as «National Flag, Naval and Merchant Ensign, Diplomatic Offices’ Flag».
Željko Heimer, 28 Oct 2002
image by Željko Heimer, 30 Oct 2002 (clipart source: CorelDraw) |
Shown in [gmc17], as image #504
«Merchant Ensign»: similar to the contemporary ensign,
but with the emblem off-set much to the hoist. The look of the emblem is
similar to the treasury seal, but in the text
it is described as «the seal of the department having to do with merchant
marine matters». What would be the department, and what would the seal
look like? There is no mention of different obverse here. Do we have any
other source describing such merchant ensign? If there was indeed such,
it must have been abandoned until WWII, Flaggenbuch
[neu92] does not mention it any more.
Željko Heimer, 06 Oct 2002
Laurie’s flag chart, of 1842, [Lri42]
shows red,white and blue horizontal 3 stripes (1:1:1) with emblem of twisted
tree with green leaves and brown trunks in the center of white stripe.
Similar image in 1848 Norris and Hobb’s chart Maritime Flags of All Nations
[noh48], in 1862 German Flaggen Atlas
by Brommes [bmm62], and 1897 British flag
chart The flags of All Nations [fan97]
(Incidentally the latter’s chart sister version of The Arms of All Nations
published by same company does not show arms of Paraguay; I assume they are not
sure the tree emblem is an official coat of arms).
I know Paraguay star/wreath emblem was already adopted in 1842 but the twisted
tree is so different in shape from star/wreath.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 21 Jan 2001, 22 Jan 2001 and 15 Mar 2001
Maybe someone had misunderstood the words «a palm and an olive twined
to one crown…» to draw two trees instead of branches. In some languages
the head of a tree is named crown, so this error or misinterpretation can
be understood. And then the difference between the trees and the wreath
is not so big, as those words were not only in the 1842 description but
even in that of 1812 [alv86]. Maybe Laurie
[Lri42] had heard of the arms or had heard
a description from anyone. Possibly the bishopric had used two trees?
Ralf Stelter, 23 Jan 2001
Anything below this line was not added by the editor of this page.