Incorrect Depictions of the Portuguese National Flag
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Last modified: 2024-11-23 by
klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: error | armillary sphere | wheel (yellow) | bordure |
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image by Vítor Luís and António Martins-Tuválkin, 23 Sep 2004
- Introduction
- Arms oversized or undersized
- Wheel-like sphere
- Fimbriated sphere
- With bicoloured bordure
- Blue-red bicolour
- Triangular bezants
- Bigger quinas
- Version from Corel Clipart
- Reverse
- Flag with white edge
- Flag with arms in green partition
- Flag Art Installation with Greyscale in 2013
- Flag-inspired Portuguese Government Campaign for local Production Promotion
Introduction
The official design that ever existed is the one still in use, with two parts of green on the hoist and three parts on the fly, and always with the coat of arms (centred on the partition line, half the flag’s height in diameter). Given the relatively complexity of these specifications, however, simplifications and incorrect versions abound, though.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 2 Jan 2002
Arms oversized or undersized
Oversized arms

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 11 Feb 2016
Incorrect depiction of the Portuguese national flag with extra large emblem. This can of course be due to mismeasurement or over innovative designers, but in most cases of actual cloth flags of this design we're witnessing, what was once a regular flag that got damaged somehow (usually wind ripped at the fly) and whose owner decided to trim around in order to spare the relatively expensive and hard-to-create emblem patch.
Usually this is done on flags with a hoisting sleeve for a handheld staff. I've seen myself several of these, and heard accounts that these were once much more common, before cheap printed flags on synthetic cloth became common place. To be found usually at sporting events or political rallies, their users are usually private citizens without big concerns for protocol.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 11 Feb 2016
Undersized arms

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 11 Feb 2016
Incorrect depiction of the Portuguese national flag with extra small emblem. The same concerns and conditions apply as those for the big-emblem version; this design arises when the owner of a smaller flag decided to add extra green and red cloth around to enlarge it - again this is worth the trouble because the emblem is easily deemed to complex or expensive to embroider or patch on.
All this reminds me of the first flag I ever manufactured of actual cloth (and I did manufacture many): It was a ~20×30 cm² hand waver and was made
for the 10 November 1993 soccer game against Portugal (see: here - why did I decide to render my sartorial support to the visiting team instead of to my own country? Not only because I do favour the underdog, but also because sewing along three ribbons of cloth is (or was, back then) way simpler than secure a printed or embroidered patch with the Portuguese national emblem.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 11 Feb 2016
Wheel-like sphere

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 20 Oct 2003
I got this from a toy packaging with multi-language instructions: the Portuguese national flag in a fair enough arrangement of both main panels (approx. 2:3 instead of the frequent mistakes 1:1 or 1:2), but quite amiss about the central emblem:
In place of the armillary sphere a wheel like contraption, with a circular rim and eight rays converging to the center; on it a shield, indeed white and bordered red but without the castles and with the 1+2+1 escutcheons replaced by a single couped cross.
This is an acceptable simplification, perhaps even satisfactory for the non-portuguese and the non-vexillologist/heraldrist. But the same packaging had also a Spanish national flag with a lot more of accurate detail (the only obvious mistake being in the Leon quarter).
This means that whoever could find clipart a decent Spanish national flag could not found for a portuguese one — the Portuguese Government made a mistake in 1911 by accepting for the new national flag such an overtly complex design (and, unlike the Spanish case, unsimplifiable), by never supporting and publicizing clear specifications, they have been worsening that mistake ever since.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 20 Oct 2003
Fimbriated sphere

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 21 Feb 2016
And here's he again caught next to incorrect versions of the national flag, this time with the U.S. Department of State to be blamed for the error: Paulo Portas, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Portugal visiting his homologous U.S. official, State Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton, on 27 September 2011, in Washington, D.C. Two flags of each country are shown in the background, presumably provided by the Department of State, and the flags of Portugal, identical, show a thick black fimbriation all around the central emblem. Photos of this scene were widely published in social and mass media in Portugal at the time. (These flags exhibit a further detail error: Open doors, shown red, on the castles - that will be treated separately, when we analyze detail heraldic errors.)
Sources: this photo and English WIKIPEDIA
António Martins-Tuválkin, 21 Feb 2016
With bicoloured Bordure

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 20 Oct 2003
Another incorrect version of the Portuguese national flag: The bordure is vertically divided green and red (per pale Vert and Gules), along with the background -- this hoisted for years now, at the elite historical Hotel Avenida Palace, in Lisboa!
António Martins-Tuválkin and Santiago Dotor, 3 Mar 2005
Blue-red bicolour

image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 12 Feb 2016
This is not as much an usual error, even though it might happen as a typographical accident that creates an image of the national flag of Portugal with blue for green: Not as a human error due to the specs complexity, as in towers for castles, or as in 2/3 instead of 2/5 for the width of the hoist side panel), but merely as a happenstance. Further note that green is the simplest colour of the national flag of Portugal, used only for one element (i.e. conceptually, even if no visually).
This alternative version of the national flag of Portugal, replacing with blue (intentionally a very dark shade - FotW/FIAV's, see here and B+++ , the green on the hoist side panel, was circulated among members and supporters of P.N.R., a Portuguese far right party, around the end of the 2000s, having been used in demonstrations and other public events - both depicted on posters and stickers as well as in the cloth (at least one printed nylon flag). It was however not really popular, even among that crowd, and lies now in obscurity. (Inf. subject to corr. from the proponent.)
On top of using the colour of P.N.R. itself (which in turn got them from some Spanish far right factions), the replacement of green is the elimination of the "new" colour introduced in 1910-1911, seen as bourgeois and masonic (curiously more so than red, used f.i. on the royal flag - replaced by the green presidential flag), and as the restoring of the blue hoist side panel of the pre-1910 kingdom's flag (leaving aside the fact that that flag had been, back in 1830, not less "revolutionary"), colour which in 1910-1911 had been replaced by green as "national colour", f.i. on naval positional flags.
This version of the flag is/was intended not as much as a flag of P.N.R. as a proposal for a new national flag, or at least a symbol of national "renewal" (as in the party's name). Given this party's scarce results in the