Flag of Peru
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The flag of Peru was created by José de San Martín and adopted by the government of Peru in 1825. It is a vertical triband with red outer bands and a single white middle band. Depending on its use, it may be defaced with different emblems, and has different names.
June 7, the anniversary of the Battle of Arica, is celebrated as Flag Day.
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[edit] Variants
[edit] National (civil) flag
The national or civil flag (Spanish: Bandera Nacional) is used by citizens. It has no additions to the common form. It was changed several times; before 1950 it looked like the current national flag and was used as both the civil and state flag, when General Manuel A. Odría removed the coat of arms from the national flag and created the state and war flags.
[edit] National ensign (state flag)
The national ensign or state flag ('Pabellón Nacional'), used by state institutions, is defaced with the coat of arms of Peru ('Escudo de Armas'). It is used during ceremonies in which the flag is hoisted in the presence of spectators (as opposed to a static, permanent flag). A form of this flag, the national standard ('estandarte nacional') is used indoors by official and private institutions.
[edit] War flag
The war flag (Bandera de Guerra), similar to the state flag, is defaced with the national shield (Escudo Nacional). It is flown by the Peruvian military and national police, and is typically inscribed with the service, name and number of the unit flying it.
[edit] Naval jack
The naval jack (bandera de proa) is not based on the triband; it is a square flag, consisting of a white square with the coat of arms (Escudo de Armas) on a red field. It is used on battleships, usually with the ensign of the highest-rank officer on board above it.
[edit] History
[edit] Proposed flag, 1820During the Viceroyalty of Peru, the Spanish flag was used in the colonial era. In 1820, during the struggle for independence, British General William Miller, hoisted the first flag attempting to represent the emerging country, in Tacna. It was a navy blue flag with a golden sun (possibly Inti). This flag was lost, but the description survived. | Image:Flag of Peru (1820 proposal).svg Image:FIAV proposal.png Flag hoisted by Admiral Miller in October 1820. |
[edit] 1820 flagThis design was created by General José de San Martín and decreed as the national flag on 21 October 1820. Two diagonal lines joining opposite corners divide the flag into four fields. The top and bottom ones were white, the other two were red. There was an oval-shaped laurel crown at the center, inside of which there was the sun rising behind mountains by the sea. The origin of the flag is not certain, but speculations exist. A literary tradition, wrote by Abraham Valdelomar in 1917, tells that San Martín, having arrived to the coast of southern Pisco, was inspired by the colors of parihuanas, red-and-white flamingos. Historians of the early Peruvian Republic, such as Leguía y Martínez and Pareja Paz Soldán, give a different explanation: San Martín took the red from the flag of Chile and the white from the flag of Argentina, in recognition of the origin of the men in the liberating army. A major difficulty in the adoption of this flag was the difficulty of its construction. With no standardized measurements in place, it was very difficult to build a triangular-part flag then. | Image:Flag of Peru (1821 - 1822).svg Image:FIAV historical.png First republican flag, created by General José de San Martín. |
[edit] March 1822 flagIn March 1822, José Bernardo de Tagle, Marquis of Torre Tagle and Supreme Delegate of the Republic, who replaced San Martín provisionally when the latter traveled to Guayaquil, decreed a new design for the flag. This consisted of a horizontal triband, with a white band between two red ones, and a golden sun at the center, similar to the flag of Argentina. This modification was justified, according to Torre Tagle, by the inconvenients in the construction of the previous version, among other issues. A problem came up on the battlefields: the resemblance with the Spanish flag, especially from far away, made the distinction between the armies difficult, which led to a new change to the flag. | Image:Flag of Peru (1822).svg Image:FIAV historical.png Second design, by Torre Tagle. |
[edit] May 1822 flagOn 31 May 1822, Torre Tagle changed the design again. The new version was a vertical triband, with red outer bands and a white middle band, with a golden sun at the center. | |
[edit] 1825 flagOn 25 February 1825, during Simón Bolívar's administration, the Constituent Congress changed the design of the flag through a law of national symbols. The sun was changed for the new coat of arms, designed by José Gregorio Paredes and Francisco Javier Cortés. | Image:Flag of Peru (1825 - 1950).svg Image:FIAV historical.png Fourth flag, created in 1825. |
[edit] Flags of the Peru-Bolivian Confederation era, 1836-9
From 1836 to 1839, Peru was temporarily dissolved into the Republics of South Peru and North Peru, which joined Bolivia to form the Peru-Bolivian Confederation.
The South was formed first, thus adopting a new flag: a red vertical band on the left, with a golden sun and four small stars above (representing Arequipa, Ayacucho, Cusco and Puno, the four Departments of the republic), and the right side divided into an upper green band and a lower white one. The North kept the currency and all symbols of the dissolved Peru, including its flag.
The flag of the Peru-Bolivian Confederation showed the coats of arms of Bolivia, South and North Peru, from left to right and slanted at different angles, on a red field, adorned by a laurel crown.
After the dissolution of the Confederation, the old Republic of Peru was restored to its 1836 composition, as well as its national symbols.
[edit] 1950 flag
In 1950, General Odría modified the national flag to its current form, removing the coat of arms from the civil flag, since it was used de facto, being easier to make. The national ensign and war flag were created for exclusive uses, each with a variant of the coat of arms, which was also changed slightly. These remain as the official flags today.
Flags of South America | ||
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| Sovereign states | Argentina · Bolivia · Brazil · Chile · Colombia · Ecuador · Guyana · Panama* · Paraguay · Peru · Suriname · Trinidad and Tobago* · Uruguay · Venezuela | Image:South America.png |
| Dependencies | Aruba* (Netherlands) · Falkland Islands (UK) · French Guiana (France) · Netherlands Antilles* (Netherlands) · South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (UK) | |
| * Territories also in or commonly reckoned elsewhere in the Americas (North America). | ||
National flags and coats of arms | |
|---|---|
| National flags | Sovereign states · Dependent territories · Unrecognized states · Formerly independent states |
| National coats of arms | Sovereign states · Dependent territories · Unrecognized states |
Image:Flag of Peru (state).svg National symbols of Peru |
|---|
Flag · Coat of Arms · National Anthem · Cockade |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Peru at Flags of the Worldbs:Zastava Perua
bg:Национално знаме на Перу de:Flagge Perus el:Σημαία του Περού es:Bandera del Perú eu:Peruko bandera fr:Drapeau du Pérou hr:Zastava Perua bpy:পেরুর ফিরালহান it:Bandiera peruviana he:דגל פרו lt:Peru vėliava hu:Peru zászlaja nah:Incatlān pāntli nl:Vlag van Peru ja:ペルーの国旗 nn:Det peruanske flagget pl:Flaga Peru pt:Bandeira do Peru ru:Флаг Перу sk:Vlajka Peru fi:Perun lippu sv:Perus flagga zh:秘鲁国旗

