- Source: Flag of Sergipe
The civil and state flag of the Brazilian state of Sergipe consists of four alternating green and yellow horizontal stripes with a square blue canton featuring five white five-pointed stars. It was officially adopted on 3 December 1952.
History
The flag design came into being when José Rodrigues Bastos Coelho, a late 19th century merchant from Sergipe, needed a flag to identify the state of origin of his ships, and designed the flag, originally with only four stars to represent four estuaries in Sergipe. The flag quickly became identified with Sergipe, and was officially adopted as the flag of the state on 19 October 1920, with five stars to more accurately represent Sergipe's five estuaries. In 1937, under the leadership of Getúlio Vargas, all state symbols were banned under the Brazilian Constitution of 1937. In 1951, the flag was reinstated with 42 stars to represent Sergipe's 42 municipalities at the time, but this was changed the following year to the original design on 3 December 1952.
Symbolism
The five stars represent the five estuaries of Sergipe; in the 1952 declaration, the rivers that were represented were the Sergipe, São Francisco, Real, Vaza-Barris, and Japaratuba. However the state government site also lists the Piauí as one of those represented. The green and yellow represent integration with Brazil.
Gallery
See also
List of Sergipe state symbols
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Alagoas
- Flag of Sergipe
- Sergipe
- List of Brazilian flags
- List of flags by color
- Flag families
- Associação Desportiva Confiança
- Flag of Brazil
- List of Sergipe state symbols
- Canton (flag)
- Aracaju