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Sergipe (Brazil)

Last modified: 2002-11-09 by joe mcmillan
Keywords: sergipe (brazil) | brazil | star (white) | stars: 5 |
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[Flag of Sergipe (Brazil)]2:3 by Joseph McMillan
Officially adopted 19 October 1920, restored 3 December 1952

See also:

Flag of the State of Sergipe

The flag of Sergipe is based on a design of José Rodrigues Bastos Coelho, and is called the "Sergipano." It was designed around the end of the nineteenth Century and adopted officially on 19 October 1920. The first design was modified with respect to number of stars and their arrangement in the blue rectangle by a decree of 30 October 1951. Initially the stars represented the rivers of the state, but after the 1951 decree they represented the municipalities. A decree of 3 December 1952 reestablished the original design, in which the stars represent the state's river estuaries: Aracaju (or Sergipe), São Francisco, Real (or Estância), Vassa Barris (or São Cristovão), and Japaratuba.
Jaume Ollé 2 July 1996

As a factory owner and businessman, Coelho felt the need for a decoration to his vessels that would identify the state they came from. He therefore created the flag that was later made official by law no. 795 of 19th October 1920. The current law is no. 458 of 3 December 1952. The flag has the colors of the national flag.
Jens Pattke, 27 December 2001, translated by Jorge Candeias


Former Flag of Sergipe, 1951-52 (Reconstruction)

[Reconstructed Flag of Sergipe 
(Brazil), 1951-52]2:3 by Jaume Ollé

In 1937, all state flags and symbols were abolished by the dictatorship of Getúlio Vargas, but the ban was lifted in 1946. In 1951, when the Sergipe legislature got around to restoring the state symbols, it decided to change the canton to contain a star for every municipality in the state. In 1952, the flag reverted to the five star design of 1920.
Joseph McMillan, 15 August 2002

There were 42 municipalities in the state at this time, and so the most logical arrangement of the stars is 6 x 7, but this is not certain; the stars could also have been arranged in some other way.
Falko Schmidt, 15 August 2002


19th Century Merchant Ship Pennant

19th Century Ship Distinguishing 
Flag, Sergipe (Brazil)by Joseph McMillan

Some states had old maritime ensigns in the 19th century, including Sergipe.
Jaume Ollé, 8 December 1999

The French Navy's Album de Pavillons of 1858 shows a set of galhardetes (normally translated pennants) flown by Brazilian merchant ships to indicate their province of origin. The galhardetes were rectangular, approximately 1:6. They were all simple geometric patterns, more or less like signal flags.
Joseph McMillan, 17 April 2001